Town of Bloomfield v. Charter Oak Nat Bank of Hartford, Conn
Decision Date | 04 April 1887 |
Citation | 30 L.Ed. 923,121 U.S. 121,7 S.Ct. 865 |
Parties | TOWN OF BLOOMFIELD v. CHARTER OAK NAT. BANK OF HARTFORD, CONN |
Court | U.S. Supreme Court |
This action was brought June 5, 1880, by a national bank against the town of Bloomfield, in the state of Connecticut, upon three promissory notes, dated June 20, June 21, and July 1, 1879, and payable three months after date, for the aggregate sum of $19,433.30, and all alike in form, the first being as follows:
'S. J. MILLS, Treasurer.'
The answer denied that the defendant made the notes, or that Mills, as its treasurer, had authority to make them in its behalf.
A trial by jury was had, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff in the full amount of the notes and interest; and a bill of exceptions was tendered by the defendant, and allowed by the court, so much of which as is material to be stated was as follows:
The town of Bloomfield was incorporated, in the usual manner of Connecticut towns, by a resolve of the legislature of Connecticut, in May, 1835, by which the inhabitants of the town, and their successors forever, residing therein, 'shall have and enjoy all the powers, privileges, and immunities which are enjoyed by other towns in this state.' It was admitted that Mills was elected treasurer of the town on October 5, 1868, and was re-elected annually, and acted as treasurer until July 16, 1879, when he resigned; and that he made and signed the notes in suit, and indorsed them to the plaintiff. The defendant objected to the admission of the notes in evidence, because the plaintiff had shown no authority from the defendant to Mills to borrow money or execute notes. But the court, against the defendant's objection and exception, admitted the notes, 'subject to the duty of the plaintiff to prove such authority.'
The plaintiff then offered in evidence a copy, certified by thet own clerk, February 16, 1877, of the record of this vote of the town: 'At an annual town meeting, legally warned and held at the usual place, October 5, 1868,—S. J. Mills, moderator; H. W. Rowley, assistant town clerk,—voted that hereafter the town treasurer be authorized and empowered to borrow money for the use of the town.' The defendant objected to the admission of this vote, because the plaintiff offered no evidence that the warning of that meeting specified any such object as was contained in the vote. It was admitted that the warning had not been recorded by the town clerk, and was not on file in his office. The court overruled the objection, and admitted the vote in evidence, 'not as showing a legal or valid vote of the town, but subject to the duty on the part of the plaintiff to prove that the town at its meetings, by its affirmative acts and conduct, had assented to and treated as authoritative the power of the treasurer under said vote to borrow money for the use of said town; or for the purpose of establishing that, by the course of conduct of the town in its town meeting, it had practically established the authority of the treasurer under said vote; and of establishing an estoppel in pais against the power of the town to treat as invalid a vote the validity of which had been affirmatively declared by its acts, if it should appear that the defendant had intentionally caused the plaintiff to believe in a state of facts which it now claims not to exist, and induced it to act on such belief.' To this ruling the defendant excepted.
The plaintiff thereupon, 'for the purpose of proving that the town had made the said Mills its general agent in fact to borrow money, and had at its town meetings, and by its affirmative acts in said meetings, treated the treasurer as authorized under said vote to borrow money for the town,' offered the following evidence: (1) Forty-four notes, for the aggregate sum of more than $64,000, made by Mills as treasurer, in behalf of the town, to sundry persons, other than the plaintiff, and mostly citizens of Bloomfield, between the times of the passage of that vote and of his resignation, all of which bore indorsements of payments of interest, and had been paid and taken up. (2) Copies of the annual printed reports made by the selectmen of the town, together with the treasurer's annual reports, to the annual town meetings from 1869 to 1878 inclusive, and the records of the town meetings, showing the action of the town thereon. The reports of those officers, in 1869, showed sums paid for 'interest on town notes,' to sundry individuals named, $1,507; and to two of them, for 'town notes taken up,' $1,646.58; 'indebtedness of town by notes, $27,100;' and 'amount received on town notes $6,559.88.' The reports in the subsequent years showed similar items, verying in amount, and the 'indebtedness of the town by notes' gradually increasing to $48,416.28. It was admitted that the sums paid for interest included the payments of interest on the 44 notes aforesaid. The records of the town meetings showed that at an adjournment of the annual meeting of 1868 it was 'voted that the selectmen be directed to have the report of items of account printed yearly, 500 copies;' that, at the annual meeting in 1869, the reports of the selectmen and treasurer were 'read and accepted;' that, in 1870, 'the reports of selectmen and town treasurer, being in printed form, were not called for;' and that there was no record of any action of the town at the subsequent meetings with reference to such reports. But it was admitted that the printed reports were in fact distributed to all who attended those meetings. (3) A vote of the town, passed at a special meeting, duly warned, and held May 29, 1880, authorizing the selectmen to make and deliver notes in the name and behalf of the town to take up and cancel 'certain memoranda of indebtedness, signed by the selectmen or other officers of said town, and all bearing date July 1, 1879,' for money lent to the town and unpaid; also evidence that, in pursuance of ths vote, the selectmen took up 20 notes, some signed by Mills as treasurer, and others both by him as treasurer and by the selectmen, amounting in all to $45,184, and given by him in their presence on July 1, 1879, to various persons, in revewal of or substitution for notes which he had previously given to them; and that these notes were afterwards taken up and paid by the selectmen.
The defendant objected to all this evidence as irrelevant and immaterial; but the court admitted it for the reasons above stated, and the defendant excepted to its admission.
The bill of exceptions proceeded as follows:
The plaintiff thereupon rested its case; and the defendant again objected to the admission in evidence of the notes sued on, and the vote of October, 1868, on the grounds above stated; also on the grounds 'that no sufficient evidence had been offered to prove a ratification by the town of the said vote, or to establish any estoppel against the town which would prevent it from setting up the invalidity of said vote, or, in connection with said vote, to prove a...
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