Negotiable certificates, issued by the Board of Public Works of
the District of Columbia, redeemed according to law, and cancelled
by the proper officers by stamping in ink across the face words
stating such cancellation, are thereby extinguished, and if a
clerk, who has no duty or authority connected with their redemption
or care, afterwards steals them, fraudulently effaces the marks of
cancellation, and puts them in circulation, the District of
Columbia is not liable to a purchaser in good faith, for value and
before maturity.
This was an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims
against the District of Columbia for $7,750, and interest on
certificates of indebtedness, commonly called "sewer certificates,"
issued by the board of public works of the district, in the
following form, with coupons attached:
"Registered: GEO. E. BAKER, Comptroller"
"
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA"
"
No. 1380"
"
WASHINGTON, July 1st, 1873"
This certifies that for work done under direction of the Board
of Public Works and chargeable to the private property adjoining
and benefited thereby, there is due to the bearer, five hundred
dollars, payable July 1st, 1876, with eight percentum interest,
payable semiannually, as per coupons attached. Issued in accordance
with act of legislative assembly. Secured by pledge to the
commissioners of the sinking fund of assessments made in accordance
with act approved June 26, 1873, against private property benefited
by improvements, and receivable in payment of such assessments.
"Board of Public Works"
"By JAMES A. MAGRUDER, Treasurer"
"Countersigned:"
"Horace J. Frost"
"For Commissioners of Sinking Fund"
"Last six months' interest payable with certificate "
Page 130 U. S. 656
The material facts, as found by the Court of Claims, were as
follows:
On July 1, 1873, such certificates, to the amount of about
$2,000,000, were issued by the board of public works under an act
of the Legislative Assembly of the District of Columbia approved
June 26, 1873, and were paid out to contractors, jobbers, and
laborers, and soon became greatly depreciated in value and were
bought and sold by brokers and speculators.
After the creation of the board of audit by the Act of Congress
of June 20, 1874, c. 337, § 6, most of these certificates,
including those in question, were presented to that board, and
redeemed as provided in that act. 18 Stat. 119.
The certificates so redeemed were cancelled by stamping across
the face in ink, with a ribbon stamp, the words, "Canceled by the
Board of Audit." They were then enclosed in jackets, tied up in
bundles of 50, in numerical order, and placed on a shelf under the
counter in a room in the Treasury Department, occupied by several
clerks employed by the board. The fact of redemption was entered in
a registry book. After the redemption and cancellation of the
certificates, and while they were in the custody of the board of
audit, as above stated, they were stolen, in February or March,
1876, by one George H. Farnham, who was then a clerk in the employ
of the board, and occupying a desk behind the counter under which
the certificates were deposited, but whose duties were not
connected with the redemption or care of the certificates. By the
use of detersive soap, Farnham entirely removed from a large
portion of the certificates the marks of cancellation. From other
certificates, on which some ink marks still appeared, he cut off
the coupons, and pasted them over the partially effaced marks. In
this condition, no signs or marks of cancellation or redemption
were visible on the certificates, but some of them still had a
soiled or stained appearance. The stolen certificates were sold by
Farnham to brokers in Washington, and by them to one Ritchie, and
by him to the claimant, and all the purchasers bought them for
value, in
Page 130 U. S. 657
good faith, and without notice that they had been redeemed or
cancelled, and the certificates were then in the same condition, in
respect of their appearance as to indicating signs or evidences of
cancellation or redemption, as they were at the time they were
first negotiated by Farnham and as they are now. The judgment of
the Court of Claims in favor of the claimant was for the amount of
such certificates as were shown to have been so purchased by him
before their maturity. 20 Ct.Cl. 229.
Page 130 U. S. 658
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
When the maker of a negotiable instrument lawfully cancels it
before maturity, his liability upon it is extinguished, and cannot
be revived without his consent. It is immaterial whether the
cancellation is by destroying the instrument or by writing or
stamping words or lines in ink upon its face, provided the
instrument, in the condition in which he puts it, unequivocally
shows that it has been cancelled.
Scholey v. Ramsbottom, 2
Camp. 485;
Burbridge v. Manners, 3 Camp.
Page 130 U. S. 659
193;
Ingham v. Primrose, 7 C.B. (N.S.) 82, 86;
Yglesias v. Mercantile Bank, 3 C.P.D. 60.
In
Burbridge v. Manners, Lord Ellenborough said: "It is
the duty of bankers to make some memorandum on bill and notes which
have been paid," clearly indicating his opinion that the making of
such a memorandum upon the securities would be sufficient to
protect the bankers from being afterwards held liable to any holder
thereof.
The decision in
Ingham v. Primrose, holding the
acceptor of a bill of exchange, who had torn it in halves and
thrown the pieces into the street, liable to one who afterwards
took it, in good faith and for value, from one who had picked it up
and pasted the pieces together, proceeded upon the ground that the
tearing of the bill into two pieces, as manifest on its face,
"was at least as consistent with its having been divided into
two for the purpose of safer transmission by the post as with its
having been torn for the purpose of annulling it."
And the decision can be maintained, if at all, on that ground
only.
Baxendale v. Bennett, 3 Q.B.D. 525, 532.
In
Baxendale v. Bennett, one who had given his blank
acceptance on stamped paper to another, and authorized him to fill
in his own name as drawer, and received it back from him unfilled,
and put it in the unlocked drawer of his desk, from which it was
afterwards stolen and filled up without his authority by inserting
the name of another person as drawer, was held not liable to an
endorsee for value.
In
State v. Wells, Fargo & Co., 15 Cal. 336, cited
by the claimant, treasury warrants of the State of California had
been once lawfully issued, presented, and paid, but never cancelled
in any way before they were stolen and again put in circulation,
and the suit was not upon the warrants, but was brought by the
state against
bona fide holders who had presented them a
second time, and to recover back the value of bonds which the state
had delivered to them in exchange for the warrants, and which they
in good faith had since parted with.
Much reliance was placed by the claimant upon the case of
Cooke v. United States, 91 U. S. 389, in
which the United
Page 130 U. S. 660
States were held by a majority of this Court to be liable to a
bona fide holder of interest-bearing Treasury notes,
printed by the Treasury Department from genuine plates, and perfect
in form, complete and ready for issue, and never issued by any
authorized officer, but fraudulently or surreptitiously put in
circulation. In the opinion, much stress was laid upon the
considerations that the notes were perfect and complete as soon as
printed, and did not require the signature of any officer, but, as
soon as they had received the impression of all the plates and dies
necessary to perfect their form, were ready for circulation and
use; that in this respect they did not differ from coins of the
mint when fully stamped and prepared for issue, and that these
notes were intended to circulate and take the place of money, to
some extent, for commercial purposes, were made a legal tender for
their face value, exclusive of interest, as between the government
and its creditors, and passed readily fro hand to hand as or in
lieu of money. 91 U.S.
91 U. S.
404.
We are not prepared to extend the scope of that decision, and
the facts of this case as found by the Court of Claims are quite
different.
The certificates in suit, after they had been redeemed according
to law, were cancelled by the proper officers by distinctly
stamping in ink across the face words stating that fact, and in
that condition were made up in bundles and put away on a shelf,
whence they were afterwards stolen by a clerk, who had no duty or
authority connected with their redemption or care and who
afterwards fraudulently effaced the marks of cancellation by the
use of detersive soap, and by pasting coupons over them, and then
put the certificates in circulation.
The provision of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1875, c. 162, §
16, by which officers of the District of Columbia are required to
destroy by burning all redeemed certificates, is in terms and
effect merely directory, and does not make the District liable on
such certificates fraudulently put in circulation after they have
been otherwise unmistakably cancelled. 18 Stat. 505.
These certificates having been lawfully extinguished by
Page 130 U. S. 661
stamping across their face marks of cancellation as clear and
permanent as the original signatures, the liability of the district
upon them as negotiable paper could not be revived by its omission
to take additional precautions against their being stolen and
fraudulently restored to their original condition by such means as
ingenious wickedness might devise.
Moreover, these certificates were in no sense money or the
equivalent of money. Though negotiable instruments, they belonged
to a peculiar class of such instruments, being made by a municipal
corporation and having no validity unless issued for a purpose
authorized by law, and as to which this Court has repeatedly laid
down and acted on the following rule:
"Vouchers for money due, certificates of indebtedness for
services rendered or for property furnished, for the uses of the
city, orders or drafts drawn by one city officer upon another, or
any other device of the kind, used for liquidating the amounts
legitimately due to public creditors, are, of course, necessary
instruments for carrying on the machinery of municipal
administration and for anticipating the collection of taxes. But to
invest such documents with the character and incidents of
commercial paper, so as to render them in the hands of
bona
fide holders absolute obligations to pay, however irregularly
of fraudulently issued, is an abuse of their true character and
purpose."
Mayor v. Ray,
19 Wall. 468,
86 U. S. 477;
Wall v. Monroe County, 103 U. S. 74,
103 U. S. 78;
Claiborne County v. Brooks, 111 U.
S. 400,
111 U. S.
408.
Considering the nature of these certificates, the method in
which they had been cancelled, and the means by which they were
afterwards put in circulation, we are of opinion that there is no
ground for holding the District of Columbia liable to this
claimant.
Judgment reversed.