Brenham v. German American Bank, 144 U.S. 549 (1892)
U.S. Supreme Court
Brenham v. German American Bank , 144 U.S. 549 (1892)Brenham v. German American Bank (No. 2)
No. 120
Submitted and Decided May 2, 1892
144 U.S. 549
Syllabus
On a petition for a rehearing, the court vacates the judgment ordered in this case, ante, 144 U. S. 189, and reverses the judgment and remands the cause for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion, ante, 144 U. S. 174.
This was a petition for leave to file a petition for rehearing in the case reported, ante, page 144 U. S. 173. Among the causes assigned were the following:
"The decision visits with severity your petitioner, who, in perfect good faith, with prudence and care, invested the trust money of its depositors in what at the time of the transaction was universally regarded under the decisions of this Court as a form of negotiable security of the safest and best character. In saying this, your petitioner does not mean to be understood as contending that a rehearing ought to be granted because it is a hardship to the defendant to lose the case. Your petitioner deems it a duty as trustee for its depositors to invite the attention of your honors to the fact that by no possible precaution could your petitioner have had warning not to make this investment; that the result is a peculiar one, inasmuch as a settled rule of law is reversed by a divided court, and innocent parties made to suffer. This fact being brought to the court's attention is of cumulative force to induce the court to grant a reargument."
"One word as to the order made in this case."
"The case is returned to the court below with directions to dismiss the suit and to enter a general judgment for the City of Brenham. Should the court be still of the opinion these bonds are invalid, and their vitality, if there is any, should be destroyed utterly, the consideration at the bottom of them still lives, and the city is liable for the money she raised, notwithstanding the bonds are dead. Little Dock v. National
Bank, 98 U. S. 308, and cases cited. The complaint in the suit had not the common counts, and was not broad enough to reach this point and to recover the money received by the city."
"Would not the order, if the decision upon the bonds is to stand, be more in accordance with justice if it allowed the defendant in error to amend the complaint and sue for this money had and received? Amendments are purely within the discretion of the court in furtherance of justice. The order cuts off the right to apply in the court below to amend, and therefore it is asked here. It can scarcely be said it is just for the city to avoid her bonds and keep the money she has derived from them too. It would seem but just to modify the order at all events, to this extent."