1.
Hackett v. Ottawa, 99 U. S. 86, cited,
and the doctrines therein set forth reaffirmed.
2. Municipal bonds in Illinois, payable to a person therein
named or bearer, are transferable by delivery without endorsement,
and the holder may sue in his own name to recover their
contents.
3. Where, without express legislative authority, they are
payable at a place in another state,
quaere what law
should govern in determining the rights of the holder who claims
them by delivery only.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 105 U. S. 343
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bonds in suit constitute a portion of the issue of $60,000
referred to in
Hackett v. Ottawa, 99 U. S.
86. Like those held by Hackett, they were purchased
before maturity and without notice of any circumstances or facts
impeaching their validity.
As in that case, so here, the bonds recite that they are issued
in virtue of the power conferred by the charter of the city, upon
its council -- the majority of voters, attending at an election for
that purpose, assenting -- to borrow money on its credit and to
issue bonds, pledging its revenue for the payment thereof, and
also, in pursuance of two ordinances of the city council, one,
passed June 15, 1869, entitled "An Ordinance to provide for a loan
for municipal purposes," duly ratified by popular vote, and the
other, entitled "An Ordinance to carry into effect the ordinance of
June 15, 1869, entitled,
An Ordinance to provide for a loan for
municipal purposes.'" The defense in the Hackett case was
that the bonds were not issued to effect a loan for municipal
purposes, but were issued and delivered as a donation to one
Cushman or to the Ottawa Manufacturing Company, a private
corporation, to be used in aid of a merely private enterprise, and
not for legitimate municipal purposes. Upon that ground it was
contended that they were void for the want of authority to issue
them. Waiving any direct decision of the question, much elaborated
by counsel, as to what, under the constitution of the state, as
interpreted by the Supreme Court of Illinois in numerous cases, is
to be regarded as a municipal or corporate purpose for which the
city can lawfully exercise the power of borrowing money and issuing
bonds, we there adjudged the defense to be insufficient for these
reason: the city council had power, the voters consenting, to issue
negotiable securities for certain municipal purposes; if the
purchaser under some circumstances would have been bound to take
notice of the provisions of the ordinances whose titles were
recited in the bonds, he was relieved from any responsibility or
duty in that regard by reason of the representation, upon the face
of the bonds, that the ordinances provided for a loan for municipal
purposes; such a representation, by the constituted authorities
of
Page 105 U. S. 344
the city, would naturally avert suspicion of bad faith upon
their part and induce purchasers to omit an examination of the
ordinances themselves, and consequently the city was estopped, as
against a
bona fide holder for value, to say that the
bonds were not issued for legitimate or proper municipal or
corporate purposes. Upon these grounds, the main defense in this
suit must also be adjudged insufficient.
There is, however, one question raised in this case which was
not made or determined in
Hackett v. Ottawa. The bonds in
suit are made payable at the St. Nicholas National Bank in the City
of New York to W. H. W. Cushman or bearer, and, without his written
assignment or endorsement, were taken by the First National Bank of
Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the defendant in error. The city paid
the interest maturing on the second days of August, 1870 and
1871.
The contention of counsel is that an assignment or endorsement
of the bonds by the payee named therein, although they are also
made payable to bearer, is, by the laws of Illinois, where the
original contract was made, a prerequisite to pass the legal title
and to authorize a suit by the holder in his own name. This precise
question arose in
Roberts v. Bolles, 101 U.
S. 119, involving the validity of certain municipal
bonds payable to a railroad company or bearer and on which there
appeared no assignment or endorsement by the company. Upon
examination of the decisions of the Supreme Court of Illinois, we
there reached the conclusion that by the repeated adjudications of
the learned tribunal, municipal bonds payable to bearer or to some
named person or bearer were excepted from the rule announced in
Hilborn v. Artus, 4 Ill. 344, and
Roosa v. Crist,
17 Ill. 450, in which it was in effect held that notes payable to a
person or bearer could not be transferred or assigned by delivery
only so as to authorize the holder to sue in his own name.
Counsel in the present case insist that our ruling in
Roberts v. Bolles resulted from a misapprehension of the
settled course of decisions in the state court, and we are asked to
reconsider the question in connection with some cases in that court
to which our attention was not then called. Those specially relied
on to establish the error of our conclusion in that case are
Page 105 U. S. 345
Garvin v. Wiswell, 83 Ill. 215, and
Turner v.
Peoria & Springfield Railroad Co., 95 Ill. 134.
The first of those cases related to a county order executed by a
board of supervisors directing the treasurer of the county, on a
day named, to "pay to John Murphy or bearer" a certain sum
"out of the funds appropriated for bounties to volunteers, with
interest at the rate of eight percent
per annum from this
date upon the presentation of the annexed coupons,"
an instrument of writing not negotiable in the sense of the law
merchant so as to exclude defenses or evidence of invalidity, even
when held by a
bona fide purchaser.
Wall v. County of
Monroe, 103 U. S. 74.
The case in 95 Ill. relates to a certificate of indebtedness
issued by a receiver appointed in a suit against a railroad
company, and which certificate, the state court expressly held, did
not possess the qualities of negotiable or commercial paper. It
also appears in that case that the certificate was made payable to
a named person "of bearer," when the order of court, printed
thereon, directed it to be made payable to such person "or
order."
The language of those two cases must be construed in connection
with the particular kind of instrument to which the court referred.
While in each may be found general statements which seem to justify
the position of counsel, we do not understand those cases to
determine anything necessarily inconsistent with the conclusion
reached in
Roberts v. Bolles, viz., that by the law of
Illinois, municipal bonds, whether payable to bearer or to some
person or bearer, are negotiable by delivery, so that the holder,
even in the courts of Illinois, can sue thereon in his own name,
although they have not been previously assigned or endorsed by the
named payee.
Notwithstanding the criticism by counsel of the opinion in
Johnson v. County of Stark, 24 Ill. 75, we are not
satisfied that the Supreme Court of Illinois has intended, in any
subsequent case, to qualify what was there said by Walker, J., in
reference to municipal bonds and coupons issued to railroad
companies:
"It seems to be the well settled doctrine that state, county,
city, and other bonds and public securities of this character are
negotiable by delivery only, without endorsement,
Page 105 U. S. 346
in the same manner as bank bills, especially when they are
payable to bearer."
In that case, the coupon was not payable either to order or to
bearer, but the promise was to pay the amount named "on this
coupon." The court ruled that the holder of the coupon could sue
and recover in his own name.
The bonds in suit, it will be observed, are payable at a bank in
New York. According to the general rules of commercial law as
recognized in that state, the holder of negotiable securities
payable to a named person or bearer, whether they are endorsed or
not by such payee, acquires by delivery merely the legal title and
the consequent right to sue thereon in his own name. 3 Kent Com.
78;
Brush v. Administrators of Reeves, 3 Johns. (N.Y.)
439;
Dean v. Hall, 17 Wend. (N.Y.) 214. Whether the nature
and extent of the rights acquired by the bank are determinable by
the law of New York, the place of performance, or whether the
general rule that a contract is to be expounded by the law of the
place where it is to be executed, 6 Pet.
31 U. S. 200;
13 Pet.
38 U. S. 77; 1
How.
42 U. S. 169, can
be applied to an Illinois municipal corporation whose bonds,
without express legislative authority, have been made payable
elsewhere than at its own treasury, 19 Ill. 406; 22 Ill. 151; 24
Ill. 91; 31 Ill. 531; 68 Ill. 535, are questions which need not be
now determined. It is sufficient in this case to say that the
ground first alluded to, upon which the plaintiff denies the right
of the bank, the holder for value of its bonds, to sue in its own
name, cannot be maintained.
Judgment affirmed.