A suit against a city to enforce, as upon an express trust, an
accounting of an improvement fund and liability for alleged
breaches of trust in failing properly to conduct the sales of lands
assessed for benefits and properly to apply the proceeds of such
sales to the satisfaction of public improvement certificates, said
suit not having been instituted until more than 17 years after
definite repudiation of the alleged trust duties, and the efforts
on behalf of the plaintiff having been meanwhile confined to the
obtaining of a restraining order, which was never observed, and to
the presentation of divers
Page 250 U. S. 322
memorials and offers of compromise to the city authorities,
held barred by laches, such a cause of action, in New
York, being subject, if not to the six-year statute of limitations
(Code Civ. Pro., § 382), then to the ten-year statute
(
id., § 388) governing bills for relief in cases of trust
not cognizable by courts of common law. Pp.
250 U. S.
325-327.
In case of an express trust, the statute begins to run when the
trust is repudiated.
Id.
Federal courts, in equity, are not bound by state statutes of
limitations, but are ordinarily guided by them in determining their
action on stale claims.
Id.
247 F. 758 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1874, commissioners theretofore appointed by special act
(Laws N.Y. 1871, c. 765) to improve the streets of Long Island City
were directed to improve a particular district. Laws N.Y. 1874, c.
326. The act provided that the cost of the improvement should be
assessed upon the land benefited and created a lien upon the land
for the assessment and interest, but it declared that no sale for
failure to pay the assessment could be made before the expiration
of ten years after filing of the assessment roll. The improvement
was to be paid for by delivering to the contractors
interest-bearing certificates of indebtedness equal at par, to the
expense of the work and materials furnished. These certificates did
not provide
Page 250 U. S. 323
for a personal obligation on the part of the city or the
district. T hey were receivable in payment of assessments at par
and interest, and were payable in cash only out of moneys to be
derived from the assessments, which the city treasurer was directed
to keep as an improvement fund separate from all other funds. The
statute further provided that, upon the completion of the sales for
nonpayment of assessments,
"all the certificates issued by the said commissioners shall be
paid off, and if there be any excess to the credit of said
improvement fund . . . , it shall be paid into the city
treasury."
By an amendment passed June 11, 1879 (Laws N.Y. 1879, c. 501),
it was provided that, under certain circumstances, it was the duty
of the officer making sale of land for nonpayment of assessment to
receive in payment of the purchase price certificates at par and
interest.
Certificates were issued to the amount of $1,847,500. A large
portion of the assessments levied were left unpaid by the
landowners, and it became necessary to sell the properties. Sales
for nonpayment of assessments were made in 1888. The purchase price
was paid in certificates at par and interest up to the amount of
the assessments, the interest and the excess, if any, being paid in
cash. In 1892 and 1893, sales of land were made at much less than
the amounts of the assessment. Here also, bidders were permitted to
pay the purchase price in certificates at par and interest.
Likewise, the owners of lots sold were permitted to redeem lots
upon paying the amount of the bid and accrued charges by
certificates at par and interest. After all the land had been
disposed of and the improvement fund exhausted, there remained and
are now outstanding unpaid certificates aggregating about
$300,000.
Prior to June 11, 1879, Benedict acquired certificates to the
amount of $8,000 which he has held ever since and on which the
principal and interest are unpaid. In July,
Page 250 U. S. 324
1910, suing on behalf of himself and others similarly situated,
he brought this suit in the Circuit (now District) Court of the
United States for the Southern District of New York to enforce, as
upon an express trust, an accounting of the improvement fund and
liability for alleged breaches of trust. The contention is that
Long Island City became trustee of the lien on the several lots for
the benefit of the certificate holders, and the alleged breaches of
trust relied upon are in substance that, through its treasurer and
in spite of the protest, the city permitted and authorized sales of
land for less than the assessment, in violation of the Act of 1874,
that, instead of cancelling certificates received in payment of
assessments and of the purchase price at sales, it reissued the
same, and that even where sales had been made for less than the
amount of the assessments it allowed redemption from sales in
certificates at par and interest. The City of New York is made
defendant on the ground that, in 1898, Long Island City was merged
into it by the Greater New York Act, and that the consolidated
corporation assumed the obligations and liabilities of the
constituent municipalities. Laws N.Y. 1897, c. 378.
Protest was made by plaintiff at time of sales against the
course pursued by the treasurer, but he justified the action
complained of, relying upon Act of 1874 and c. 501 of the Laws of
1879 and c. 656 of the Laws of 1886. Writs of mandamus had
previously been issued compelling him to receive certificates at
par and interest even in payment for the redemption of land sold
for nonpayment of assessments.
People ex rel. Ryan v.
Bleckwenn, 8 N.Y.S. 638;
People ex rel. Oakley v.
Bleckwenn, 13 N.Y.S. 487;
People ex rel. Oakley v.
Bleckwenn, 126 N.Y. 310. But plaintiff contended that, in view
of § 23 of title VI of c. 461 of the Laws of 1871, if the Acts of
1879 and 1886 were construed as authorizing the action of which he
complains, they impair, in violation of the
Page 250 U. S. 325
federal Constitution, the obligation of contracts previously
entered into with certificate holders. The case was fully heard in
the district court on evidence, and several distinct defenses were
relied upon. The city insisted, among other things, that the
statutory lien did not impose a statutory trust upon it; that the
persons who acted were not its agents, but independent officers,
agents of the state; that the specific provision of the statute
relied upon by plaintiff did not constitute terms of the contract,
but related merely to the remedy, and that the later legislation
introduced at most permissible changes of remedy. The court,
without passing upon these questions, entered a decree dismissing
the bill on the ground that the statute of limitations and laches
constituted a complete defense. 235 F. 258. This decree was
affirmed by the circuit court of appeals on the same grounds. 247
F. 758. Benedict is a citizen of Connecticut, but, as he invoked
the jurisdiction of the circuit court not only on the ground of
diversity of citizenship, but also because of rights asserted under
the federal Constitution, his further appeal to this Court was
permissible.
Vicksburg v. Henson, 231 U.
S. 259,
231 U. S.
267-268.
The whole case is here for review, but we find it unnecessary to
decide most of the questions presented because we are of opinion
that the lower courts did not err in holding that the suit was
barred by laches. None of the acts relied upon here as constituting
breaches of trust occurred later than the years 1892 and 1893.
Before the principal action complained of was taken, the city
treasurer publicly announced his purpose to pursue the course
complained of, which he asserted was in accordance with law.
Plaintiff was represented at the sales by an agent who protested
there orally and elsewhere in writing against the treasurer's
declared purpose and against specific acts now complained of,
asserting then,
Page 250 U. S. 326
as now, that the course pursued was illegal. We have here a
definite repudiation of the alleged trust duties more than 17 years
before the institution of this suit. And there are no circumstances
which excuse the delay. What occurred in the interval, so far as
appears, was this:
(a) In June, 1893, Benedict commenced in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of New York a bill in
equity to restrain the treasurer from receiving certificates from
property owners when redeeming their properties from assessment
sales, made to the complainant, and from marking upon the books as
paid any assessment upon such property when it was sold for less
than the amount of the assessment. It seems that hearing on the
motion was adjourned to a later date, and that a restraining order
issued which the plaintiff alleges was never observed. It is not
shown that any other proceeding was ever taken in the suit.
(b) On May 9, 1904 (at whose instance does not clearly appear),
the legislature enacted a statute (Laws N.Y.1904, c. 686)
entitled
"An act to authorize the comptroller and corporation counsel of
the City of New York, on behalf of said city, to compromise and
settle with property owners interested certain claims for taxes,
assessments, and sales for the same, and for or on account of
evidences of indebtedness issued on account of local improvements
in the territory formerly included within the boundaries of Long
Island City."
(c) On February 21, 1905, plaintiff filed with the comptroller
of the City of New York an offer to sell to the city by way of
compromise certificates held.
(d) On May 26, 1909, plaintiff's present counsel, acting on
behalf of the holders of 283 certificates, presented to the
Comptroller a memorial and statement of facts in which he requested
"that provision should be made in some way for the payment of the
amount due" on the certificates.
Page 250 U. S. 327
(e) Under date of March 19, 1910, plaintiff presented to the
comptroller a similar memorial which he requested should be
submitted for determination to the board of estimate and
apportionment, in view of the fact that c. 601 of the Laws of New
York of 1907 provided that the comptroller may do so where he
believes that, for any reason, a claim against the city is not
valid legally, but in equity, justice, and fairness the same should
be paid, the city having been benefited by the acts performed and
the claim not being barred by the statute of limitations.
(f) On April 26, 1910, a formal request was made upon the deputy
comptroller.
Under the law of New York, the alleged cause of action would
have been subject, if not to the six-year statute of limitations
(New York Code of Civil Procedure § 382), then to the ten-year
statute of limitations (New York Code of Civil Procedure § 388),
governing bills for relief in case of the existence of a trust not
cognizable by the courts of common law.
Clarke v.
Boorman's Executors, 18 Wall. 493. If the Act of
1874 created an express trust, the statute of limitations would not
begin to run until there had been a repudiation of the trust.
New Orleans v. Warner, 175 U. S. 120,
175 U. S. 130.
Here, there was an open repudiation of the trust duties which the
plaintiff now seeks to enforce. And 17 years were allowed to elapse
after that repudiation before this suit was begun, and more than
ten years before any attempt was made to secure some settlement by
negotiation, and there clearly was no waiver of the statute. While
it is true that federal courts sitting in equity are not bound by
state statutes of limitations (
Kirby v. Lake Shore &
Michigan Southern Railroad, 120 U. S. 130),
they are, under ordinary circumstances, guided by them in
determining their action on stale claims (
Godden v.
Kimmell, 99 U. S. 201,
99 U. S. 210;
Philippi v. Philippe, 115 U. S. 151;
Pearsall v.
Smith, 149
Page 250 U. S. 328
U.S. 231;
Alsop v. Riker, 155 U.
S. 448).
Compare Sullivan v. Portland & Kennebec
R. Co., 94 U. S. 806,
94 U. S. 811.
Between 1892 and 1905, plaintiff did nothing to enforce his alleged
rights except to commence in 1893 a suit which he did not
prosecute. His lack of diligence is wholly unexcused, and both the
nature of the claim and the situation of the parties was such as to
call for diligence. The lower courts did not err in sustaining the
defense of laches.
Decree affirmed.