A statement, in the bond of a municipal corporation, that it is
issued under the provisions of the Act of the General Assembly of
Colorado of February 21, 1881, and in conformity with its
provisions; that all the requirements of law have been fully
complied with; that the total amount of the issue does not exceed
the limits prescribed by the constitution of that state, and that
the issue of the bonds had been authorized by a vote of a majority
of the duly qualified electors of the county voting on the question
at a general election duly held, estops the county, in an action by
an innocent holder for value, to recover on coupons of such bonds,
from denying the truth of these recitals.
When there is an express recital upon the face of a municipal
bond that the limit of issue proscribed by the state constitution
has not been passed, and the bonds themselves do not show that it
had, the holder is not bound to look further.
Lake County v. Graham, 130 U.
S. 674, and
Dixon County v. Field, 111 U. S.
83, affirmed and distinguished from this case.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 142 U. S. 356
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action by Andrew Potter, a citizen of Massachusetts,
against the Board of County Commissioners of Chaffee County,
Colorado, on a large number of interest-bearing coupons attached to
certain bonds issued by that county in 1882 for the purpose of
funding its floating indebtedness.
The following is a copy of one of the bonds and coupons:
Page 142 U. S. 357
"
No. ___. $1,000"
"United States of America, County of Chaffee, State of
Colorado."
"
Funding Bond"
"
(Series A.)"
"The County of Chaffee, in the State of Colorado, acknowledges
itself indebted and promises to pay to _____ or bearer one thousand
dollars, lawful money of the United States, for value received,
redeemable at the pleasure of said county after ten years, and
absolutely due and payable twenty years from the date hereof at the
office of the treasurer of said county, in the Town of Buena Vista,
with interest thereon at the rate of eight percent per annum,
payable semiannually on the first day of March and the first day of
September in each year at the office of the county treasurer
aforesaid, or at the banking-house of Kountz Brothers, in the City
of New York at the option of the holder, upon the presentation and
surrender of the annexed coupons as they severally become due. This
bond is issued by the Board of County Commissioners of said Chaffee
County in exchange at par for valid floating indebtedness of the
said county, outstanding prior to August 31, 1882, under and by
virtue of, and in full conformity with, the provisions of an Act of
the General Assembly of the State of Colorado entitled 'An act to
enable the several counties of the state to fund their floating
indebtedness,' approved February 21, 1881, and it is hereby
certified that all the requirements of law have been fully complied
with by the proper officers in the issuing of this bond. It is
further certified that the total amount of this issue does not
exceed the limit prescribed by the Constitution of the State of
Colorado, and that this issue of bonds has been authorized by a
vote of a majority of the duly qualified electors of the said
County of Chaffee voting on the question at a general election duly
held in said county on the seventh day of November, A.D. 1882. The
bonds of this issue are comprised in three series, designated 'A,'
'B,' and 'C,' respectively, the bonds of series A
Page 142 U. S. 358
being for the sum of one thousand dollars each, those of series
B for the sum of five hundred dollars each, and those of series C
for the sum of one hundred dollars each. This bond is one of series
A. The faith and credit of the County of Chaffee are hereby pledged
for the punctual payment of the principal and interest of this
bond. In testimony whereof the Board of County Commissioners of the
said County of Chaffee have caused this bond to be signed by their
chairman, countersigned by the county treasurer, and attested by
the county clerk under the seal of the county, this first day of
December, A.D. 1882."
"________ ________,"
"
Chairman Board of County Commissioners"
"Attest: _____ _______,
County Clerk"
"[County Seal]"
"Countersigned: _____ _______,
County Treasurer"
"
$_____ (Coupon) $_____ "
"The County of Chaffee, in the State of Colorado, will pay the
bearer _____ dollars at the office of the County Treasurer, in the
Town of Buena Vista, or at the banking-house of Kountz Brothers, in
the City of New York, on the first day of being six months'
interest on funding bond."
"No. ___ Series ___. E. B. JONES, County Treasurer"
The plaintiff, as the holder of a large number of the coupons of
each series, alleged in his declaration that all the proceedings
required by the statutes of the state to be taken in the matter of
the issue and registration of the bonds had been taken before the
bonds were put on the market, that the bonds were therefore legal
in all respects as valid obligations of the county, and that, as
the
bona fide holder for value of the interest coupons, he
had presented them for payment at the place required, and payment
had been refused. Wherefore he prayed judgment for the amount of
said coupons, with interest -- in all, $9,648.
Page 142 U. S. 359
The defenses set up in the answer were that the bonds had not
been authorized by a vote of the qualified voters of the county,
and no bonds had been authorized to be exchanged for the warrants
of the county, and the board therefore never had any jurisdiction
to issue them; that the bonds, and each of them, were issued in
violation of § 6, art. 11, of the constitution of the state,
and the debt which they assumed to fund was contracted in violation
of said provision of the constitution, and that the bonds were
issued by the board of county commissioners without any
consideration valid in law, as plaintiff well knew when he received
the coupons sued on.
A demurrer to the answer, on the ground that it was not a
sufficient defense to the action, was sustained by the circuit
court, and, the defendants electing to stand by their pleading,
judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount
of his claim, with interest. 33 F. 614. This writ of error is
prosecuted to review that judgment.
The ground upon which the circuit court based its decision and
judgment was that the county should be estopped by the recitals in
the bonds from pleading the defenses set up in the answer.
The act of the legislature under the authority of which the
bonds were issued is set out in the margin.
* It is the
same
Page 142 U. S. 360
act under which certain bonds were issued by Lake county,
Colorado, which bonds were under consideration in
Lake
Page 142 U. S. 361
County Graham, 130 U. S. 674. The
bonds in that case were quite similar to those now under
consideration, differing
Page 142 U. S. 362
only, as regards their recitals, in this: that the bonds here
contain the additional recital that "the total amount of this issue
does not exceed the limit prescribed by the Constitution of the
State of Colorado," and do not show upon their face, as did those
in that case, how many bonds were issued, or how large each series
was.
The provision of the Constitution of 1876 referred to, both in
this case and in that article 11, sec. 6, is as follows:
"No county shall contract any debt by loan in any form, except
for the purpose of erecting necessary public buildings, making or
repairing public roads and bridges, and such indebtedness
contracted in anyone year shall not exceed the rates upon the
taxable property in such county, following, to-wit: counties in
which the assessed valuation of taxable property shall exceed five
millions of dollars, one dollar and fifty cents on each thousand
dollars thereof; counties in which such valuation shall be less
than five millions of dollars, three dollars on each thousand
dollars thereof, and the aggregate amount of indebtedness of any
county, for all purposes, exclusive of debts contracted before the
adoption of this constitution, shall not at any time exceed twice
the amount above herein limited unless when, in manner provided by
law, the question of incurring such debt shall at a general
election be submitted to such of the qualified electors of such
county as in the year last preceding such election shall have paid
a tax upon property assessed to them in such county, and a majority
of those voting thereon shall vote in favor of incurring the debt;
but the bonds, if any, be issued therefor shall not run less than
ten years, and the aggregate amount of debt so contracted shall not
at any time exceed twice the rate upon the valuation last herein
mentioned, provided that this section shall not apply to counties
having a valuation of less than one million of dollars."
We held in that case that the county was not estopped from
Page 142 U. S. 363
pleading the constitutional limitation, because there was no
recital in the bonds in regard to it, and because also, the bonds
showing upon their face that they were issued to the amount of
$500,000, the purchaser, having that data before him, was bound to
ascertain from the records the total assessed valuation of the
taxable property of the county, and determine for himself, by a
simple arithmetical calculation, whether the issue was in harmony
with the constitution and that the bonds, having been issued in
violation of that provision of the constitution, were not valid
obligations of the county. Our decision was based largely upon the
ruling of this Court in
Dixon County v. Field,
111 U. S. 83. To
the views expressed in that case we still adhere, and the only
question for us now to consider therefore is do the additional
recitals in these bonds above set out, and the absence from their
face of anything showing the total number issued of each series,
and the total amount in all, estop the county from pleading the
constitutional limitation?
In our opinion, these two features are of vital importance in
distinguishing this case from
Lake County v. Graham and
Dixon County v. Field, and are sufficient to operate as an
estoppel against the county. Of course, the purchaser of bonds in
open market was bound to take notice of the constitutional
limitation on the county with respect to indebtedness which it
might incur. But when, upon the face of the bonds, there was an
express recital that that limitation had not been passed, and the
bonds themselves did not show that it had, he was bound to look no
further. An examination of any particular bond would not disclose,
as it would in the
Lake County case and in
Dixon
County v. Field, that, as a matter of fact, the constitutional
limitation had been exceeded in the issue of the series of bonds.
The purchaser might even know-indeed it may be admitted that he
would be required to know -- the assessed valuation of the taxable
property of the county, and yet he could not ascertain by reference
to one of the bonds and the assessment roll whether the county had
exceeded its power, under the constitution, in the premises. True,
if a purchaser had seen the whole issue of each series of bonds,
and
Page 142 U. S. 364
then compared it with the assessment roll, he might have been
able to discover whether the issue exceeded the amount of
indebtedness limited by the constitution. But that is not the test
to apply to a transaction of this nature. It is not supposed that
any one person would purchase all of the bonds at one time, as that
is not the usual course of business of this kind. The test is what
does each individual bond disclose? If the face of one of the bonds
had disclosed that, as a matter of fact, the recital in it with
respect to the constitutional limitation was false, of course the
county would not be bound by that recital, and would not be
estopped from pleading the invalidity of the bonds in this
particular. Such was the case in
Lake County v. Graham and
Dixon County v. Field. But that is not this case. Here, by
virtue of the statute under which the bonds were issued, the county
commissioners were to determine the amount to be issued, which was
not to exceed the total amount of the indebtedness at the date of
the first publication of the notice requesting the holders of
county warrants to exchange their warrants for bonds at par. The
statute, in terms, gave to the commissioners the determination of a
fact -- that is, whether the issue of bonds was in accordance with
the constitution of the state and the statute under which they were
issued -- and required them to spread a certificate of that
determination upon the records of the county. The recital in the
bond to the effect that such determination has been made and that
the constitutional limitation had not been exceeded in the issue of
the bonds, taken in connection with the fact that the bonds
themselves did not show such recital to be untrue, under the law
estops the county from saying that it is untrue.
Town of Coloma
v. Eaves, 92 U. S. 484;
Town of Venice v. Murdock, 92 U. S.
494;
Marcy v. Township of Oswego, 92 U. S.
637;
Wilson v. Salamanca, 99 U. S.
499;
Buchanan v. Litchfield, 102 U.
S. 278;
Northern Bank v. Porter Township,
110 U. S. 608.
The rule respecting the binding force of recitals in bonds is
well stated in
Town of Coloma v. Eaves as follows:
"Where legislative authority has been given to a municipality or
to its officers to subscribe for the stock of a railroad company,
and
Page 142 U. S. 365
to issue municipal bonds in payment, but only on some precedent
condition, such as a popular vote favoring the subscription, and
where it may be gathered from the legislative enactment that the
officers of the municipality were invested with power to decide
whether the condition precedent has been complied with, their
recital that it has been, made in the bonds issued by them and held
by a
bona fide purchaser, is conclusive of the fact, and
binding upon the municipality, for the recital is itself a decision
of the fact by the appointed tribunal."
92 U.S.
92 U. S.
491.
In
Buchanan v. Litchfield, while holding that the bonds
were in excess of the amount that could be legally issued and that
the recitals in the bonds were not sufficient to estop the
municipality from pleading a want of authority to issue them, the
Court say:
"As therefore neither the constitution nor the statute
prescribed any rule or test by which persons contracting with
municipal corporations should ascertain the extent of their
'existing indebtedness,' it would seem that if the bonds in
question had contained recitals which, upon any fair construction,
amounted to a representation on the part of the constituted
authorities of the city that the requirements of the constitution
were met -- that is, that the city's indebtedness, increased by the
amount of the bonds in question, was within the constitutional
limit -- then the city, under the decisions of this Court, might
have been estopped from disputing the truth of such representations
as against a
bona fide holder of its bonds. The case might
then, perhaps, have been brought within the rule announced by this
Court in
Town of Coloma v. Eaves."
And again:
"Had the bonds made the additional recital that they were issued
in accordance with the constitution, or had the ordinance stated in
any form that the proposed indebtedness was within the
constitutional limit, or had the statute restricted the exercise of
the authority therein conferred to those municipal corporations
whose indebtedness did not at the time exceed the constitutional
limit, there would have been ground for holding that the city could
not, as against the plaintiff, dispute the fair inference to be
drawn from such recital or statement as to the extent of its
existing indebtedness."
102 U.S.
102 U. S.
292.
Page 142 U. S. 366
We think this case comes fairly within the principles of those
just cited, and that it is not governed by
Dixon County v.
Field and
Lake County v. Graham, but is
distinguishable from them in the essential particulars above
noted.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY dissented.
*
"SEC. 1. It shall be the duty of the county commissioners of any
county having a floating indebtedness exceeding ten thousand
dollars, upon the petition of fifty of the electors of said
counties, [county,] who shall have paid taxes upon property
assessed to them in said county in the preceding year, to publish,
for the period of thirty days, in a newspaper published within said
county, a notice requesting the holders of the warrants of such
county to submit, in writing, to the board of county commissioners,
within thirty days from date of the first publication of such
notice, a statement of the amount of the warrants of such county,
which they will exchange at par and accrued interest for the bonds
of such county, to be issued under the provisions of this act,
taking such bonds at par. It shall be the duty of such board of
county commissioners at the next general election occurring after
the expiration of thirty days from the date of the first
publication of the notice aforementioned, upon the petition of
fifty of the electors of such county who shall have paid taxes upon
property assessed to them in said county in the preceding year, to
submit to the vote of the qualified electors of such county who
shall have paid taxes on property assessed to them in said county
in the preceding year the question whether the board of county
commissioners shall issue bonds of such county, under the
provisions of this act, in exchange at par, for the warrants of
such county issued prior to the date of the first publication of
the aforesaid notice; or they may submit such question at a special
election, which they are hereby empowered to call for that purpose
at any time after the expiration of thirty days from the date of
the first publication of the notice aforementioned, on the petition
of fifty qualified electors as aforesaid, and they shall publish,
for the period of at least thirty days immediately preceding such
general or special election, in some newspaper published within
such county, a notice that such question will be submitted to the
duly qualified electors as aforesaid at such election. The county
treasurer of such county shall make out and cause to be delivered
to the judges of election, in each election precinct in the county,
prior to the said election, a certified list of the taxpayers in
such county who shall have paid taxes upon property assessed to
them in such county in the preceding year, and no person shall vote
upon the question of the funding of the county indebtedness unless
his name shall appear upon such list, nor unless he shall have paid
all county taxes assessed against him in such county in the
preceding year. If a majority of the votes lawfully cast upon the
question of such funding of the floating county indebtedness shall
be for the funding of such indebtedness, the board of county
commissioners may issue to any person or corporation holding any
county warrant or warrants issued prior to the date of the first
publication of the aforementioned notice coupon bonds of such
county in exchange therefor at par. No bonds shall be issued of
less denomination than one hundred dollars, and, if issued for a
greater amount, then for some multiple of that sum, and the rate of
interest shall not exceed eight percent per annum. The interest to
be paid semiannually at the office of the county treasurer, or in
the City of New York at the option of the holders thereof. Such
bonds to be payable at the pleasure of the county after ten years
from the date of their issuance, but absolutely due and payable
twenty years after date of issue. The whole amount of bonds issued
under this act shall not exceed the sum of the county indebtedness
at the date of the first publication of the aforementioned notice,
and the amount shall be determined by the county commissioners, and
a certificate made of the same, and made a part of the records of
the county, and any bond issued in excess of said sum shall be null
and void, and all bonds issued under the provisions of this act
shall be registered in the office of the state auditor, to whom a
fee of ten cents shall be paid for recording each bond."
"SEC. 2. All bonds which may be issued under the provisions of
this act shall be signed by the chairman of the board of county
commissioners, countersigned by the county treasurer of the county,
and attested by the clerk of said county, and bear the seal of the
county upon each bond, and shall be numbered and registered in a
book kept for that purpose by the county treasurer in the order in
which they are issued; each bond shall state upon its face the
amount for which the same is issued, to whom issued, and the date
of its issuance."
"SEC. 3. The county commissioners shall be authorized to
prescribe the form of such bonds and the coupons thereto, and to
provide for the half-yearly interest accruing on such bonds
actually issued and delivered. They shall levy annually a
sufficient tax to fully discharge such interest, and for the
ultimate redemption of such bonds they shall levy annually, after
nine years from the date of such issuance, such tax upon all the
taxable property in their county as shall create a yearly fund
equal to ten (10) percent of the whole amount of such bonds issued,
which fund shall be called the 'redemption fund.' And all taxes for
interest on and for the redemption of such bonds shall be paid in
cash only, and shall be kept by the county treasurer as a special
fund, to be used in payment of interest on and for the redemption
of such bonds only, and such taxes shall be levied and collected as
other taxes."
"SEC. 4. It shall be the duty of the county treasurer, when
there are sufficient funds in his hands to the credit of the
redemption fund, to pay in full the principal and interest of any
such bonds, immediately to call in and pay as many of such bonds,
and accrued interest thereon, as the funds on hand will liquidate,
as hereinbefore provided. Such bond or bonds shall be paid in the
order of their number, and when any bonds or coupons issued under
this act are taken up, it shall be the duty of such treasurer to
certify his action to the board of county commissioners, who shall
cancel the same so that they can be plainly identified, and cause a
record to be made of the same; and when it is desired to redeem any
of such bonds, the county treasurer shall cause to be published for
thirty days, in some newspaper at or nearest the county seat of the
county, and in a newspaper published in the City of Denver, a
notice that certain county bonds, by numbers and amounts, will be
paid upon presentation, and at the expiration of thirty days such
bonds shall cease to bear interest."
"SEC. 5. All persons voting on the question as hereinbefore
provided shall vote by separate ballot, which shall be deposited in
a box to be used for that purpose only, and on which ballot shall
be printed the words, 'For funding county debt,' or 'Against
funding county debt,' and if, upon canvassing to [the] vote, which
shall be canvassed in the same manner as the vote for county
officers, it shall appear that a majority of all votes cast upon
the question so submitted are for funding the county debt, then the
county commissioners shall be authorized to carry out the
provisions of this act, and the canvassing board shall certify the
vote, and it shall be made part of the county records. The judges
of election shall make and certify to the clerk of the county a
separate list of the names of the electors voting upon the question
of the funding of the county indebtedness in the order in which the
ballot of the elector so voting is received, and each ballot shall
be numbered in the order in which it is received, and the number
recorded and [on] the said list of voters opposite the name of the
voter who presents the ballot."
Laws 1881, p. 85, §§ 1-5.