When the defendant in an action at law denies each and every
allegation in the declaration and puts the plaintiff on his proof,
it is not error to order stricken from the answer special defenses
which may be set up under this general denial.
It has been settled by this Court in
Davenport v. Dodge
County, 105 U. S. 237, and
Blair v. Cuming County, 111 U. S. 363,
that coupons like those sued on in this case are obligations of the
county, and that an action may be maintained against the county
upon them,
This was an action at law against a county to enforce the
payment of coupons on bonds issued by the county. The case is
stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action at law brought by Augustus Frank, a citizen of
the State of New York, for the purpose of enforcing the payment of
the interest coupons on certain municipal bonds alleged to have
been issued by the County of Nemaha on behalf of Brownville
Precinct in said county to aid in the construction of the
Brownville, Fort Kearney and Pacific Railroad in pursuance of an
act of the Legislature of the State of Nebraska. The petition
alleges that by virtue of an act entitled
"An act to enable counties, cities, and precincts to borrow
money on their bonds, or to issue bonds to aid in the construction
or completion of works of internal improvement in this state, and
to legalize bonds already issued for such purposes, "
Page 120 U. S. 42
passed on the 15th day of February, 1869, the Board of
Commissioners of the County of Nemaha issued the special bonds or
written obligations of said Brownville Precinct on the 20th day of
August, 1870, to aid in the construction of the Brownville, Fort
Kearney and Pacific Railroad, and delivered the same to the company
authorized to construct said road; that prior to the issue of said
bonds, the proposition to issue the same was duly submitted to the
voters of said Brownville Precinct in strict accordance with the
provisions of the said act of the legislature, and that a large
majority voted for said proposition; that during the years 1871 and
1872, the said Brownville Precinct and the board of county
commissioners duly paid the coupons then falling due by means of a
tax levied for that purpose, but for the years 1878 and 1879 they
have failed and refused to pay the same or to levy a tax therefor.
The petition also alleges that on or about the 20th of February,
1871, for a valuable consideration, the bonds and coupons were
transferred in good faith to John Fitzgerald and by him to the
plaintiff.
An answer was filed by Nemaha County, as defendant, containing
the following matter:
"The total amount of the bonds so issued and sold, being one
series, under one proposition, amounted to one hundred thousand
dollars. The said bonds and coupons were voted upon the following
contract and conditions, and none other:"
"At the time of the vote for said bonds, certain persons were
attempting to organize a railroad corporation under the name of the
Brownville, Fort Kearney and Pacific Railroad Company, the
identical same organization named in said bonds, with a capital
stock of two million dollars, but were unable to organize it
because unable to obtain a payment on said amount of stock of ten
percent, thereof, as required by law, precedent to the right to do
business. They considered and treated said series of one hundred
thousand in bonds as one one hundred thousand dollar cash
subscription all paid up in cash in advance, and also they treated
and considered bonds of the City of Brownville, situated within the
said precinct of Brownville mentioned in the petition, of the
nominal sum of sixty thousand
Page 120 U. S. 43
dollars, as sixty thousand dollars cash subscription paid up in
cash in advance, all as capital stock of said railroad company,
aggregation one hundred and sixty thousand dollars, so considered
and treated as cash capital stock paid in. But, by considering the
said bonds of the nominal sum of $160,000 as one hundred and sixty
thousand dollars in money paid in on the capital stock, there was
still an insufficient amount paid in to enable the company to do
business, there being no cash paid in except on a few private
subscriptions, and not exceeding ten thousand dollars, so that even
by treating said bonds as money, there was still a deficiency of
thirty thousand dollars of the amount prescribed by law as a
condition precedent to the organization of the company for the
purpose of transacting any of the business for which it was sought
to be organized. Defendant therefore denies that said railroad
company was ever a corporation with power to transact business or
to receive municipal bonds for its aid."
"Defendant therefore avers that neither said precinct nor said
county had any power or authority to aid in the organization of
said railroad company by subscribing its stock or in any other
manner. Defendant further avers that said pretended railroad
company never either filed or recorded its articles of
incorporation, if any it ever had, in any county in the State of
Nebraska, as by law it was compelled to do prior to its existence
as a corporation."
"In the transactions of issuing said bonds by defendant and of
receiving the same by said pretended railroad company, neither the
defendant nor the said company had any power to act, and all the
acts therein on both sides are and ever have been
ultra
vires and null and void."
"The proposition submitted to the voters of said precinct as a
basis of the right to issue said bonds was a proposition to
subscribe by said precinct one hundred thousand dollars in stock
and shares in the capital stock of said pretended railroad company
and pay the same in bonds aforesaid."
"The total assessed valuation of all the property in the said
precinct, as shown by the last assessment preceding the issuing of
said bonds, was $920,000, and the issue of $100,000 in bonds was in
excess of the amount allowed by law. "
Page 120 U. S. 44
The plaintiff, having filed a reply, afterwards moved the court
to strike out from the answer of the defendant all the foregoing
matter as immaterial and irrelevant. This motion was sustained by
the court, to which ruling the defendant excepted. Upon the
pleadings as thus amended the cause was tried by a jury, who
returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, on which judgment was
rendered, to reverse which this writ of error has been sued out and
prosecuted.
This ruling of the court striking out this portion of the answer
is alleged as error. For the purposes of the argument, we shall
assume what is claimed by the plaintiff in error -- that the matter
stricken out was material and relevant. The defenses intended to be
raised by it were that in two particulars the bonds in question
were void as not having been issued in conformity with law. The
sections of the statute of 1869 in pursuance of which it is alleged
they were issued are as follows:
"SECTION 1. That any county or city in the State of Nebraska is
hereby authorized to issue bonds to aid in the construction of any
railroad, or any other work of internal improvement, to an amount
to be determined by the county commissioners of such county or the
city council of such city, not exceeding ten percent of the
assessed valuation of all taxable property in said county or city,
provided the county commissioners or city council shall first
submit the question of the issuing of such bonds to a vote of the
legal voters of said county or city in the manner provided by
chapter nine of the Revised Statutes of the State of Nebraska for
submitting to the people of a county the question of borrowing
money."
"SECTION 7. Any precinct in any organized county of this state
shall have the privilege of voting to aid works of internal
improvement, and be entitled to all the privileges conferred upon
counties and cities by the provisions of this act, and in such case
the precinct election shall be governed in the same manner as is
provided in this act, so far as the same is applicable, and the
county commissioners shall issue special bonds for such precinct,
and the tax to pay the same shall be levied upon the property
within the bounds of such precinct. Such
Page 120 U. S. 45
precinct bonds shall be the same as other bonds, but shall
contain a statement showing the special nature of such bonds."
The averments in that portion of the answer stricken out are, in
substance, 1st, that the bonds were illegal and void, because not
issued to a company authorized by the statute to receive them, and
2d, that they were illegal and void because issued in excess of the
amount of ten percent of the assessed valuation of the taxable
property in said precinct. The answer of the defendant, in addition
to the matter stricken out, contains the following:
"Defendant has no knowledge as to whether the plaintiff is a
bona fide holder of said bonds or any part thereof or
whether he purchased them before due or paid any value therefor or
purchased them at all, and therefore, for the purpose of raising
the issued and procuring the proof thereon by compulsory process,
defendant denies the allegations of the petition on that subject,
and also denies each and every allegation contained in said
petition except such as it has herein expressly admitted in this
answer."
This clause in the answer remained, and formed the issue which
was tried. It is a general denial of each and every allegation of
the petition, as no allegation of the petition was otherwise
admitted in the answer. It therefore put the plaintiff upon proof
of every fact necessary to constitute the cause of action set out
in his petition, and embraced a denial of the legality and validity
of the bonds and the lawfulness of their issue and delivery. It
required the plaintiff to show by competent proof that he was the
owner of the coupons sued on, taken from bonds in fact executed by
the defendant, issued in accordance with law and delivered to a
party competent to receive the title. It permitted proof on the
part of the defendant of every fact which tended to establish that
the bonds were illegal and void. It follows, therefore, that every
defense which was open to the defendant under that portion of the
answer stricken out was equally open to it under the answer as it
stood at the trial. The plaintiff obtained no advantage and the
defendant suffered no detriment by the ruling of the court
requiring that portion of the answer to be stricken out. The action
of the court in granting the motion
Page 120 U. S. 46
did not, therefore, prejudice the defendant. It does not appear
from this record what took place at the trial. There is no bill of
exceptions which shows what evidence, if any, the defendant
offered, or whether any that he did offer was rejected. For aught
that appears, the very matters which he might have offered in
evidence, under that portion of the answer stricken out, were in
fact offered and received under the pleadings as they stood at the
time of the trial.
It seems also to be objected to the judgment rendered against
the County of Nemaha that the coupons sued on are not the
obligations of the county. It is said that the bonds are precinct
bonds, issued by the county commissioners of the county, the duty
to pay which rests upon the precinct alone, the mode of payment
being by means of a tax to be levied by the county commissioners
upon the property within the bounds of the precinct. It is
therefore argued that no action will lie against the county in
respect to these bonds and coupons except in case of the refusal of
the county commissioners to levy the tax when it ought to be
levied, when a mandamus is the sole remedy, being the one
prescribed by the statute. This question has been set at rest by
the previous decisions of this Court.
Davenport v. Dodge
County, 105 U. S. 237, and
Blair v. Cuming County, 111 U. S. 363, are
decisions upon the very point arising under the same statute.
There is therefore no error in the record, and
The judgment is affirmed.