1. The circumstances stated under which bonds of Florida,
payable to bearer, issued in aid of certain railroad companies,
signed by her governor and her treasurer, and sealed with her seal,
were sold by the active efforts of the governor and came into the
hands of subjects of Holland. Most of the sales were in that
country.
Held that inasmuch as the bonds, though
fraudulent in their inception, were put upon the market and sold in
a foreign country to a people largely unacquainted with the English
language, a case is presented which justifies the court in treating
the owners of them as purchasers for value and in good faith, and
entitled to relief accordingly.
2. One S., having money in his hands belonging to a corporation,
W., fraudulently diverted it from the use to which the company had
appropriated it and purchased therewith bonds of the P. & G.
and of the T. railroads. S. subsequently handed over the bonds to
D. and others, purchasers of the railroads from the trustees of the
state Internal Improvement Fund, that D and his associates might
use them in payment, it being the understanding that they were to
raise money by mortgage and pay S. what he had advanced on the
bonds, with commissions and fees in addition, and S., besides
taking stock in the new company to be formed, was to have certain
privileges in the election of directors. D. and his associates not
being able to raise the balance of the purchase money remaining
after applying the bonds, S., by giving to the trustees a
fraudulent check, got possession of the title deeds, and caused
them to be recorded. Thereupon D., for himself and his associates,
executed a paper, purporting to convey the railroads to S.,
"in trust for the express purpose of enabling said S. which he
hereby agrees and binds himself to do to convey tire same to that
incorporation, consisting or to consist as incorporators of said D.
and his associates,"
as soon as the latter should be incorporated as a railroad
company by the legislature. The legislature incorporated D. and his
associates, and the company at once, without objection from S. or
anyone in his interest, took possession of the property and
operated the railroad as owner. One L., who had succeeded to S.
under his contracts, assumed control of the company and was its
principal stockholder. A new railroad company was then
incorporated, which absorbed the other and took possession of its
property. Both S. and L. were named as incorporators of the new
company. The corporation W., whose funds S. had thus embezzled and
invested, averred in its bill that the ownership of the property
was in it. Through its agents, it had also entered into a contract
of settlement with S. and L., stipulating that the money it had
lost should be paid to it from the proceeds of the
Page 103 U. S. 119
sales of certain state bonds to be issued to the railroad
company on the faith of the ownership of this property.
Held that the corporation W. was estopped from setting up
title to the property as against
bona fide holders of the
bonds.
3. The legislation under which certain bonds were issued by the
State of Florida in aid of railroads having been pronounced
unconstitutional by the supreme court of that state, this Court
passes upon the liability of the railroad company as guarantors of
such bonds, the case upon the facts being within the rule of the
liability of an endorser of commercial paper.
4. Contracts created by or entered into under the authority of
statutes are to be interpreted according to the language used in
each particular case to express the obligation assumed.
5. The state, by the terms of the statute, having a lien on the,
property of the railroad company as trustee for the holders of the
bonds, it does not follow, because the provisions of the statute in
respect to the execution and exchange of the state bonds is
unconstitutional, that the statutory lien is void also. The
unconstitutional part of the statute may in this instance be
stricken out and the statutory mortgage left in full force.
6. A suit was brought by the State of Florida against the F. C.
Railroad Company, alleging default in the payment of interest due
on the company's bonds given in exchange for state bonds, and
seeking to enforce the statutory lien by the sale of the roads and
the application of the proceeds to the holders of the state bonds.
The company answered, setting up fraud, the unconstitutionality of
the law touching the state bonds, and averring that the railroad
bonds were not a lien. The supreme court of the state dismissed the
bill because it was not proved that any of the state bonds were in
the hands of
bona fide holders. The point as to the
statutory authority, however, to exchange the bonds and create a
lien, was directly made by the pleadings, and, after full argument,
elaborately considered by the court.
Held that the
decision on this point was in no just sense
obiter.
7. It cannot be said that a case is not authority on one point,
because, although that point was properly presented and decided in
the regular course of the consideration of the cause, something
else was found in the end which disposed of the whole matter.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 103 U. S. 120
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases, although separate in form, are so connected in
their facts that they may properly be considered and decided
together. The facts are these:
The Florida, Atlantic, and Gulf Central Railroad Company,
incorporated by the General Assembly of Florida in 1853, built a
railroad from Jacksonville to Lake City. The Pensacola and Georgia
Railroad Company, also incorporated during the same year, built a
road from Lake City through Tallahassee to Quincy in the direction
of Mobile, with a branch to Monticello; and the Tallahassee
Railroad Company, incorporated at a somewhat earlier date, built
another road from Tallahassee to St. Marks. Each of these companies
became indebted to the State of Florida under the provisions of the
internal improvement law, and, as a consequence, the road of the
Florida, Atlantic, and Gulf Central company was sold, on the 4th of
March, 1868, by the trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund,
under the authority of law, to William E. Jackson and his
associates, that of the Pensacola and Georgia company, on the 6th
of February, 1869, to F. Dibble and his associates, and that of the
Tallahassee company on the same day and to the same parties.
The road from Jacksonville to Lake City was paid for in full,
and a conveyance in due form executed to the purchasers, who, on
the 29th of July, 1868, were, under the name of the Florida Central
Railroad Company, incorporated by the General Assembly of the
state, with all the powers and franchises of the Florida, Atlantic,
and Gulf Central company. They were also authorized to fix the
amount of the capital stock of the company, and the number of
shares into which it should be divided. In this way, the capital
was put at $550,000, with five thousand five hundred shares. Of
these shares George W. Swepson afterwards became the purchaser of
four thousand three hundred and seventy, which he paid for with
money in his hands belonging to the Western Division of the western
North Carolina Railroad Company, a North Carolina corporation,
which he fraudulently diverted from the use to which it had been
appropriated by that company.
Page 103 U. S. 121
Swepson also purchased, with the funds of the same North
Carolina corporation, bonds of the Pensacola and Georgia and the
Tallahassee companies to the amount of $960,000 or thereabouts, and
on the 24th of April, 1869, he entered into a contract with the
purchasers of the roads of those companies by which he was to
deliver them these bonds to use in making their payments of
purchase money; and they, as soon as they could get the necessary
authority from the legislature, were to raise money by a mortgage
on the property and pay him what he had advanced to buy the bonds,
with certain commissions and attorney's fees, and $100,000 in
addition. The contract contemplated an incorporation of the
purchasers after the manner of the Florida Central company, with a
distribution of one third of the stock to Swepson. As security for
the payment of the sum agreed to be paid, the bonds issued under
the contemplated mortgage were to be disposed of in a particular
way, and Swepson was to be given certain privileges in the election
of directors. Under this arrangement Swepson handed over $960,300
of Pensacola and Georgia and Tallahassee bonds to the purchasers;
but after these bonds had been applied in the way contemplated
there still remained a balance of the purchase money, amounting to
$472,065, to be paid. Deeds conveying the property to Dibble for
himself and his associates were executed in due form, but their
delivery was withheld on account of this default in payment. Dibble
and his associates being unable to raise the money, Swepson, by
putting off on the trustees of the improvement fund a worthless
check that was never paid for the amount that was due, got
possession of the deeds and had them duly recorded April 22, 1869.
On the same day Dibble, for himself and his associates, party of
the first part, executed a paper which on its face purported to
convey the roads to Swepson,
"said party of the second part, in trust for the express purpose
of enabling said party of the second part -- which he hereby agrees
and binds himself to do -- to convey the same to that
incorporation, consisting or to consist as incorporators of said F.
Dibble and his associates, as soon as said Dibble and his
associates shall have granted to them such a similar relief as the
legislature of the said State of Florida granted to William E.
Jackson and his associates by act
Page 103 U. S. 122
for relief of William E. Jackson and his associates, approved
July 29, 1868, and also for the further purpose of securing said
party of the second part in all advances made as specified and
agreed upon in the said agreement between these parties, executed
and dated March 26, 1869, and the advancement, as aforesaid, of
said sum of four hundred and seventy two thousand and sixty five
dollars, until such time as said relief shall have been granted and
said party of the second part shall have conveyed said property to
said incorporation, as hereinbefore prescribed."
This instrument was never acknowledged or recorded.
On the 24th of June, 1869, the proposed act of incorporation was
obtained, by which Dibble and his associates, as purchasers of the
roads, were made a body corporate under the name of the Tallahassee
Railroad Company, to hold, operate, and enjoy the property
purchased, with all the powers, privileges, and franchises of the
Pensacola and Georgia and the original Tallahassee companies, and
with power to issue bonds secured by mortgage;
"
Provided that any deed of trust, mortgage, or
conveyance, bond or bonds, or security which may have been
executed, made, created, or contracted for, as a lien on said
railroad or otherwise by said Franklin Dibble, in behalf of himself
and his associates prior to the passage of this act shall be valid
and effectual to all intents, either at law or in equity, as a lien
or a mortgage or security on said railroad as if the same had been
made by virtue of this act, and shall in nowise be affected by any
provisions thereof."
Sec. 6.
The new Tallahassee company was duly organized under this
charter, and took possession of and operated the roads. Afterwards,
to remove all doubts as to the title of the corporation to the
property of the old companies, Dibble, for himself and his
associates, at some time during the year 1870, executed a paper
which purported to be a conveyance, in due form, for that purpose,
by which he professed to relinquish and quitclaim to the
corporation all his rights. This paper was not acknowledged, and
was not in fact a legal conveyance of the property. No conveyance
in form was ever executed by Swepson, neither has he at any time,
so far as appears, attempted to exercise any rights under the
conveyance or transfer which was made to him.
Page 103 U. S. 123
On the 24th of June, 1869, an act was passed by the General
Assembly of Florida to "perfect the public works of the state." By
this act,
"in order to secure the speedy completion, equipment, and
maintenance of a connection by railroad between Jacksonville, on
the Atlantic coast, and Pensacola, on the Gulf coast, and Mobile,
in Alabama,"
George W. Swepson, Milton S. Littlefield, J. P. Sanderson, J. L.
Re Qua, William H. Hunt, their associates, successors, and assigns,
were constituted a body politic and corporate under the name of the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad Company. This company
was authorized to build a railroad from Quincy to the Alabama state
line, and there connect with any road running to Mobile, and to
consolidate with the several companies owning roads from Quincy to
Jacksonville, from Tallahassee to St. Marks, and the branch to
Monticello. The original charter was somewhat amended on the 28th
of January, 1870, after which secs. 9, 10, 11 of the original
charter, and sec. 4 of the amended charter, were as follows:
"SEC. 9. In order to aid the said Jacksonville, Pensacola, and
Mobile Railroad Company to complete, equip, and maintain its road,
and to aid in perfecting one of the public works embraced in the
internal improvements of the state, the governor of the state is
hereby directed to deliver to the president of the said company
coupon bonds of the state to an amount equal to sixteen thousand
dollars per mile for the whole line of road and length of railroad
owned by or belonging to said Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile
Railroad Company, in exchange for first mortgage bonds of said
railroad company, of the denomination of one thousand dollars, when
the president thereof shall certify upon his oath that the road or
parts of road for which he asks for an exchange of bonds is
completed, and is in good running order. The said bonds shall be of
the denomination of one thousand dollars, signed by the governor,
countersigned by the treasurer, sealed with the great seal of the
state; shall bear eight percent interest, payable semiannually, and
shall be payable to bearer. They shall be dated on the first day of
January, A.D. 1870, and shall be due thirty years thereafter, and
principal and interest shall be payable at such place in the city
of New York as the governor shall designate. The coupons for
interest shall be payable to bearer, and shall be authenticated by
the written or engraved signature of the treasurer,
provided,
Page 103 U. S. 124
however, that when the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and
Mobile Railroad Company shall or may determine to pay the interest
in gold for or upon their bonds or the bonds designated in the
tenth section of an act entitled 'An Act to perfect the public
works of the state,' approved June 24, 1869, upon giving notice to
the governor of such intention, then the state bonds aforesaid and
the coupons for interest on said bonds shall be payable in gold,
notice of which shall be given by the governor in some paper
published in the city of New York, and at the capital of this
state, to be designated by the governor."
"SEC. 10. In exchange for the bonds of the state above
described, the president of the company shall deliver to the
governor of the state coupon bonds of the company, bearing a like
rate of interest, payable to the State of Florida, signed by the
president, sealed with the corporate seal; coupons payable to State
of Florida, authenticated by the written or engraved signature of
the president. The bonds shall be of such denominations, not less
than one thousand dollars, as the said company may choose, and
principal and interest shall be payable at the same time and place
as the aforesaid state bonds."
"SEC. 11. To secure the principal and interest of the said
company bonds, the State of Florida shall, by this act, have a
statutory lien, which shall be valid to all intents and purposes as
a first mortgage duly registered, on the part of the road for which
the state bonds were delivered, and on all the property of the
company, real and personal, appertaining to that part of the line
which it may now have or may hereafter acquire, together with all
the rights, franchises, and powers thereto belonging, and in case
of a failure of the company to pay either principal or interest of
its bonds or any part thereof for twelve months after the same
shall become due, it shall be lawful for the governor to enter upon
and take possession of said property and franchises, and sell the
same at public auction, after having first given ninety days'
notice by public advertisement in at least one newspaper published
in each of the following places: the City of New York, in the State
of New York, the City of Savannah, in the State of Georgia, and the
City of Tallahassee, in the State of Florida, for lawful money of
the United States, and for nothing else, except that the state, for
its own protection, may become the purchaser at said sale, and may
pay on said purchase any evidences of indebtedness the state may
hold against said roads, which purchase money or said evidences of
indebtedness shall be paid on the day of sale into the treasury
of
Page 103 U. S. 125
this state, or within ten days thereafter; and all moneys
arising from said sale and paid into the treasury of this state, as
heretofore prescribed, shall be promptly and exclusively applied to
the payment and satisfaction of the bonds issued by the State of
Florida, under this act, and in case the holders of said bonds do
not present them for redemption within ninety days after said sale,
the treasurer shall invest the same, or any part thereof which may
be remaining in his hands, in the securities of the United States,
to be held by the State of Florida, as trustee for the bondholders,
until said bondholders shall demand the same, upon which demand the
treasurer shall immediately turn over or pay said securities to the
bondholders. The purchaser or purchasers of said road shall be by
said sale possessed of all the rights, privileges, and franchises
of said defaulting company, together with the franchise of use and
being a body politic, and the governor shall, upon the payment of
said purchase money into the treasury of this state, as above
provided, immediately cause the purchaser or purchasers of said
road at said sale to be placed in the actual possession, use, and
enjoyment thereof, and cause all the books, papers, and real and
personal property of said company, of every description, together
with its franchise of use and being a body politic and corporate,
to be turned over to said purchaser or purchasers, and the
purchaser or purchasers of said road shall be by said sale
possessed of all the rights, privileges, and franchises of said
defaulting company, together with the franchise of use and being a
body politic and corporate, and may use any new corporate name they
see fit, and make and use a new seal upon signifying their action
in writing to the governor, and thereafter may exercise all the
rights of a body corporate and privileges thereof, and of said
defaulting company, under said new name, for the term of thirty
five years, to date from the time of purchase as aforesaid. That
any such sale shall be ratified by the legislature before the same
shall become effective."
"SEC. 4. That the governor shall, for the purpose of further
aiding said Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad Company in
the speedy construction of its road, deliver to the president of
said company coupon bonds of this state, of the same character as
those above described in this act, to the amount of sixteen
thousand dollars per mile, upon receiving for and from the
president of said company first mortgage bonds of like amount on
any part or portion of the road between Quincy and Jacksonville;
provided, however, the state bonds under this section
shall not be exchanged for first mortgage bonds for a greater
length than one hundred miles
Page 103 U. S. 126
of any part of railroad between Quincy and Jacksonville;
provided, the said railroad company or companies shall not
issue first mortgage bonds to a greater amount than sixteen
thousand dollars per mile."
Under the authority of this act, the new Tallahassee company was
consolidated with the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company,
May 25, 1870, by the name and having the corporate powers of the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad Company, with a
capital of $6,000,000, divided into 60,000 shares. Previous to this
time, M. S. Littlefield had succeeded to all the rights of Swepson
in these several transactions, and in the distribution of stock in
the consolidated company he was given 38,433 shares of the agreed
capital. He represented 9,930 out of the 10,000 shares at the
meeting of the stockholders of the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and
Mobile company which voted for the consolidation, and 17,998 of the
30,000 shares of the Tallahassee company voting to the same effect.
The Florida Central company never entered into the consolidation,
and the consolidated company therefore only became the owner of the
roads west of Lake City.
After the consolidation was perfected, the Jacksonville,
Pensacola, and Mobile company executed its bonds, payable to the
state for $3,000,000, as allowed by sec. 10 of its charter, and
received in exchange bonds of the state for the same amount, such
as were provided for in sec. 9, and in the following form:
"
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"
"
No. ___] State of Florida [No. ___"
"It is hereby certified that the State of Florida justly owes to
_____ or bearer, one thousand dollars, redeemable in gold coin of
the United States, at the Florida state agency in the City of New
York on the first day of January, at the rate of eight percentum
per annum, payable half yearly at the said Florida state agency, in
gold, on the first days of July and January in each year, from the
date of this bond and until the principal be paid, on surrendering
the proper coupons hereto annexed."
"Tallahassee, January 1st, 1870"
"HARRISON REED,
Governor"
"S. B. CONNER,
Treasurer"
"[FLORLDA GREAT SEAL]"
Page 103 U. S. 127
"Issued in accordance with act of the legislature of Florida,
approved January 28th, 1870."
"
Form of Coupon"
"The State of Florida will pay to bearer forty dollars in gold,
at the state agency, in the City of New York, for interest due ___,
on bond for $1,000."
"No. ___ S. B. CONNER,
Treasurer"
"
Endorsement"
"
STATE OF FLORIDA"
"
No. ___] THIRTY YEAR EIGHT PER CENT BOND [$1,000"
"Payable January 1st, 1900. Interest payable 1st July and
January, in gold, at Florida state agency, in the City of New
York."
"This bond is one of a series issued in aid of the Jacksonville,
Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad Company, to the extent of $16,000
per mile upon completed road. The State of Florida holding the
first mortgage bonds of said railroad company for a like amount, as
further security to the holder hereof."
"HARRISON REED,
Governor of Florida"
These bonds of the state, thus endorsed, were put in the hands
of Littlefield, the president of the company, to be disposed of,
and he, under an arrangement previously made with S. W. Hopkins
& Co., of New York and London, handed the bonds over to them
for sale.
Some time in the spring of 1870, Littlefield, who was at the
time president of the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company,
and a director in the Florida Central, caused a million of dollars
of the bonds of the last named company to be printed in New York,
and signed there by one H. H. Thompson as treasurer of the company.
These bonds were made payable to the state, and purported to be
executed under the authority of the Act of Jan. 28, 1870, to amend
the Act of June 24, 1869, "to perfect the public works of the
state," and given in exchange for bonds of the state to aid the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company. After having been
signed by Thompson, they were taken by Littlefield to Washington,
where they were signed by Swepson as president of the company.
Afterwards the seal of the company was put to them, but
undoubtedly
Page 103 U. S. 128
in an irregular and surreptitious way. It is apparent, also,
from the evidence, that when Thompson signed the bonds as treasurer
he had not been formally elected to that office by the directors,
but at a meeting of the directors, on the 25th of May, Littlefield
stated that Swepson, the late president, had appointed Thompson as
secretary and treasurer of the company for the past year, and on
his motion this action of the president was approved.
On the 30th of May, 1870, an agreement was entered into between
Littlefield and one Edward Houstoun, both stockholders of the
Florida Central company, by which this million of dollars of bonds
was put in the hands of Houstoun as collateral security for a debt
from Littlefield to him, and on the 2d of June, at a meeting of the
stockholders of the company, the following resolutions were
unanimously adopted:
"
Resolved, that bonds to the extent of sixteen thousand
dollars per mile be issued by this company, which bonds shall be a
first lien or mortgage on the Florida Central railroad, its
equipments, franchise, road bed, workshops, and depots, excepting,
however, the town lots in the city of Jacksonville not used for
depot purposes."
"And whereas the late president, George W. Swepson, caused to be
prepared bonds to be issued by this company preparatory to an order
of the board of directors to that effect, and which bonds were
signed by said Swepson as president of this company and
countersigned by H. H. Thompson, treasurer:"
"
Be it therefore resolved that the said bonds so signed
by said Swepson and countersigned by said Thompson, to the extent
of sixteen thousand dollars a mile, be and they are hereby adopted
as the bonds to be issued under the foregoing resolution, and that
such bonds when so issued shall be a first lien or mortgage on the
said Florida Central railroad, its equipment, franchise, road bed,
workshops, shops, and depots (excepting the lots in Jacksonville
not used for depot purposes)."
"
Be it further resolved that said bonds shall be placed
in the hands of Edward Houstoun for the purposes agreed upon by an
arrangement between himself and Milton S. Littlefield, who is the
owner of nearly all the stock in this company, which bonds or their
proceeds are to be held and applied according to the terms of said
arrangement, except the proportion thereof applicable or
apportionable to the stock owned by other parties and upon the
satisfaction
Page 103 U. S. 129
otherwise of the terms of said arrangement with said Houstoun,
the said bonds are to be by him transferred to Milton S.
Littlefield, or according to his direction, to the extent of the
stock owned by him at the time."
"
Resolved further that the directors be directed to
carry the foregoing resolutions into effect."
On the 7th of June, after these resolutions were passed, the
original agreement between Littlefield and Houstoun was modified so
as to provide for a substitution and exchange of the bonds of the
state for the bonds of the company, and a sale of the bonds of the
state by Hopkins & Co., they to pay from the proceeds certain
sums to different parties, and the remainder, if any, to
Littlefield. So far as appears, nothing was to go to the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company.
Afterwards, on the 21st of November, 1870, at a meeting of the
directors of the company, a report was received from a committee
appointed to take into consideration the past issue of bonds, as
follows:
"The committee finding that the bonds signed by G. W. Swepson,
president, and countersigned by H. H. Thompson, treasurer, are in
such form as that they cannot be used to carry out the intention of
their issue when they were adopted, report the following resolution
in respect thereto:"
"
Resolved that the resolution adopting the bonds to be
issued by the company, signed by George W. Swepson, president, and
H. H. Thompson, treasurer, at a meeting of the board of directors,
held on the 2d of June, A.D. 1870, be and the same is hereby
rescinded, and that said bonds be destroyed."
The resolution as reported was unanimously adopted, but the
bonds were never destroyed, and Houstoun, on the 11th of January,
1871, delivered them upon certain trusts to Coddington, who
exchanged them for state bonds, which he took to New York, and
afterwards, on the 18th of April, placed in the hands of Hopkins
& Co. in New York for sale. On the 13th of April, 1871, at a
meeting of the stockholders of the company, the following
resolution was passed:
"
Resolved that Edward Houstoun is authorized to place
the bonds referred to in the preamble and resolutions of the
stockholders, adopted June 2, 1870, in the hands of S. W. Hopkins
&
Page 103 U. S. 130
Co., for the purposes mentioned in said resolutions, subject to
the same exceptions therein expressed with respect to the
proportion thereof applicable to the stock owned by other parties,
and according to the same terms therein mentioned."
These state bonds were in the same form as those exchanged with
the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company, and they had upon
them similar endorsements.
On the 24th of March, 1870, J. L. Henry, N. W. Woodfin, W. P.
Welch, W. G. Candler, and W. W. Rollins were appointed by the
General Assembly of North Carolina a commission
"to examine and fully investigate the condition and affairs of
the Western Division North Carolina Railroad Company, as far as it
concerns the administration of G. W. Swepson, late president
thereof, and to make a full and final settlement of all accounts
and liabilities of said president, G. W. Swepson, in connection
with said company,"
and this commission, on the 16th of April, 1870, entered into
the following agreement:
"Memorandum of agreement and settlement between the Florida
Central Railroad Company, George W. Swepson, president, and the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad Company, Milton S.
Littlefield, president, and Milton S. Littlefield, majority owner
of the stock of said companies, and also of the stock of the
Tallahassee Railroad Company, of the first part, and the Western
Division of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company,
represented by N. W. Woodfin, W. G. Candler, W. Pink Welch, and W.
W. Rollins, commissioners appointed by an act of the Legislature of
North Carolina, approved by the stockholders of said corporation,
of the second part, witnesseth:"
"That whereas, George W. Swepson, late president of the Western
Division of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company, made
certain investments of the funds of said company in securities of
and interests in the said Florida Central railroad, Jacksonville,
Pensacola, and Mobile railroad, and the Tallahassee railroad, of
the said State of Florida, as per report made by the said George W.
Swepson to the said commissioners, amounting in the aggregate to
the sum of one million two hundred and eighty seven thousand four
hundred and thirty six dollars and three cents, to bear interest
from the first day of November, 1869, at the rate of eight percent
per annum; and whereas the said George W. Swepson heretofore
conveyed to the said Milton S. Littlefield, subject to the
payment
Page 103 U. S. 131
of the above recited claim, his interest in the above recited
railroads; and whereas the said Littlefield has received authority
from the legislature of the State of Florida and the several
railroad companies to receive bonds to be issued by and for account
of the several railroad companies, which bonds are to be exchanged
for the bonds of the State of Florida to be issued for the purpose
of aiding the finances of the said several railroad companies, all
of which bonds are now in a state of preparation; and whereas the
said Milton S. Littlefield has made a contract with S. W. Hopkins
and Co., No. 71 Broadway, for the disposition of said bonds as the
same may be issued, the proceeds of the issue of the bonds of the
Florida Central Railroad Company of the said State of Florida,
amounting to nine hundred and sixty thousand dollars, are to be
applied to the payment of the existing liabilities of the said
several railroad companies, including the sum of one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars to be paid to the commissioners aforesaid,
for the purpose of paying existing liabilities of the said Western
Division of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company."
"It is understood and agreed by the parties of the first and
second part that the proceeds of the sale of the said bonds, so to
be issued by the said Florida railroad companies and the said State
of Florida, are to be equally divided, dollar for dollar, between
the Western Division of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company
and the said Florida railroads, and as the commissioners aforesaid
receive by this first sale of bonds only the sum of one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars, it is further understood and agreed that
out of the proceeds of the sale of the issue of the bonds of the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad there is first to be
received by the commissioners aforesaid a sum sufficient to be
equal to the amount received by and on account of the said Florida
railroads, and then an equal amount is to be received by the said
commissioners and the said Florida railroads, dollar for dollar,
until the entire amount of one million two hundred and eighty seven
thousand and thirty six dollars and three cents, with interest at
eight percent, as aforesaid, being the sum reported by the parties
of the first part as due to the Western Division of the Western
North Carolina Railroad, is fully paid."
"It is further understood and agreed by the parties of the first
and second parts, that all the interest owned or claimed by the
said parties of the first part, George W. Swepson and Milton S.
Littlefield, or which they as individuals have a right to control,
in the said Florida railroads, are hereby pledged for the faithful
fulfillment of
Page 103 U. S. 132
this contract without the right on the part of any party to
interfere with our management or control of the affairs of the
road."
"(Signed)"
"GEORGE W. SWEPSON"
"
Pres't Fla. Cent. R. R. Co."
"M. S. LITTLEFIELD"
"M. S. LITTLEFIELD"
"
Pres. J. P. & M. R. R. Co."
"N. W. WOODFIN"
"W. W. ROLLINS"
"W. G. CANDLER"
"W. P. WELCH"
"
Commissioners"
"Witnesses: M. W. RANSOM"
"R. R. SWEPSON"
While these different proceedings were going on and for a very
considerable time afterwards, strenuous efforts were made by some
parties interested to prevent a sale of the bonds of the state
which had thus been put out. Notices of the fraud were extensively
published both in this country and in Europe. Letters were written
to those engaged in putting the bonds on the market, and suits were
begun; but notwithstanding all this, we are entirely satisfied from
the evidence that twenty eight hundred, or thereabouts Of bonds
given in exchange for those of the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and
Mobile company, and two hundred and six given for those of the
Florida Central company, were actually sold and are now owned by
bona fide purchasers, most or all of whom are citizens of
Holland. We have reached this conclusion without the aid of the
depositions taken in Amsterdam, which were excluded in the court
below. There cannot be a doubt that the Governor of Florida was
active in promoting the sale, as was also, to some extent, the
chairman of the commission appointed by the General Assembly of
North Carolina. The bonds were taken at once to London, and from
there put on the market in Holland, where most or all of the sales
appear to have been made. The bonds were undoubtedly steeped in
fraud at their inception, but they were nevertheless apparently
state bonds on the market in a foreign country, among a people
largely unacquainted with the English language, and offering
tempting inducements by reason of their liberal interest to those
who were seeking
Page 103 U. S. 133
investments. To promote their sale, those interested in the
scheme kept a part of the proceeds to meet the interest for a time
as it matured. Under these circumstances, it is easy to see how, in
the course of two or three years, with the help of skillful
managers, the amount now out would be found in the hands of persons
who believed they were holding a good and safe investment. At any
rate, upon the facts as they are presented to us, we must hold that
in this suit the present owners of the bonds occupy the position of
purchasers for value and in good faith, and are entitled to relief
accordingly.
In March, 1872, the trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of
Florida commenced a suit in Duval Circuit Court, Florida, against
the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company to recover the
balance that was due upon the purchase of the Pensacola and Georgia
and Tallahassee roads, for which the fraudulent check was given by
Swepson, and to enforce an equitable lien they claimed to have on
the property as security for the payment. After this suit was
begun, Daniel P. Holland recovered a judgment against the company
and levied upon and sold its railroad under execution, he himself
becoming the purchaser and getting into possession. He thereupon
was made a party to the suit of the trustees, and in his answer
claimed to be the owner of the road, free of all liens in favor of
the trustees or of the state on account of the bonds exchanged for
the company's bonds under the amended charter. At its January Term,
1876, the supreme court of the state decided in that case that the
title which Holland took by his purchase was subject to the prior
liens on the property, and that the bonds of the state were
unconstitutional and void, but that the
bona fide holders
of the state bonds were entitled to the benefit of the statutory
lien to secure the company bonds which were given in exchange for
the state bonds.
Holland v. State of Florida, 15 Fla.
455.
In March, 1872, the State of Florida instituted another suit in
the Duval Circuit Court against the Florida Central Railroad
Company and others alleging a default in the payment of the
interest due on the bonds of that company given in exchange for the
bonds of the state and seeking to enforce the statutory lien by
sale and an application of the proceeds to the
Page 103 U. S. 134
holders of the bonds of the state. To this suit the company
answered, setting up to some extent the frauds that are complained
of in the present case and further averring that the bonds of the
state were unconstitutional and void and that the railroad bonds
were not a lien. This suit also went to the supreme court of the
state on appeal, and it was there decided, at the January Term,
1876 -- 1, that the state bonds were unconstitutional; 2, that the
Florida Central company was authorized by the Act of Jan. 28, 1870,
to issue the bonds held by the state, and that thereby a first lien
was created on the road of the company in favor of the
bona
fide holders of the state bonds; 3, that there were no such
circumstances connected with the issue, delivery, and exchange of
the bonds as would excuse the company from their payment to
bona fide holders; but, 4, that there was no proof in that
case showing that any of the state bonds were actually so held.
State of Florida v. Florida Central Railroad Co., id.,
690.
Afterwards, at the January Term, 1878, in the case of the
Trustees of the Improvement Fund v. Jacksonville, Pensacola,
& Mobile Railroad Co., 16
id. 708, the same court
repeated its decision that the state bonds were unconstitutional
and that the statutory lien was good in favor of
bona fide
holders. The court also in that case declared the lien of the
trustees on the roads of that company, to be prior in right to all
others, as security for the payment of the balance due on the sales
under which the present company got title to its roads. The amount
due, as found by the court below in its decree, is $661,845.55, as
of April 2, 1874.
After some of these decisions, and on the 30th of December,
1876, the holders of the state bonds represented in the present
suits, and having 2,751 of the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile
issue and 197 of the Florida Central, united and, through a
committee, applied to the governor of the state to seize and sell
the roads under the statutory liens for their benefit. Complying
with this request, the governor advertised the roads for sale, and
thereupon the Western Division of the Western North Carolina
Railroad Company filed two bills in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Northern District of Florida, one to enjoin the sale
of the Florida Central
Page 103 U. S. 135
road, and the other that of the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and
Mobile company. A preliminary injunction having been granted and
the sale stopped, J. Fred. Schutte and others, representing the
state bondholders, filed their bill in the same court to obtain a
decree for the sale of the roads to pay their bonds. In all these
cases, pleadings were filed and testimony taken, but before any
final hearing, the General Assembly of North Carolina passed an act
repealing all acts creating or continuing in existence the Western
Division of the Western North Carolina company, and vesting in the
Western North Carolina Railroad Company absolutely all its rights,
credits, rights of action, and effects, with authority for the
Western North Carolina Company to prosecute, defend, and manage any
or all suits pending in which the Western Division company was
interested. This having been suggested to the court below after the
cases were called up for hearing, the suits instituted in the name
of the Western Division company were revived in the name of the
Western North Carolina Company, and the parties to the suit of
Schutte and others corrected so as to adapt that case to this
change in circumstances. A hearing was then had in all the suits,
which resulted in decrees dismissing the bills of the Western North
Carolina Railroad Company. In the Schutte suit a first lien was
declared in favor of the trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund
upon the road of the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company as
far west as Quincy, to secure the payment of $463,175.37, with
interest at eight percent from March 20, 1869, that being the
amount of the original purchase money of that road unpaid, and a
second lien in favor of the complainants upon the entire road of
that company, including a few miles built west of Quincy, to secure
the amount of state bonds held by them, given in exchange for the
bonds of the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company, the
principal of which was $2,751,000, and the accrued interest
$1,655,001.60. A first lien was declared on the road of the Florida
Central company for $197,000 of principal, and $118,515.20 of
interest, on account of bonds of the state given in exchange for
the bonds of that company. Further provision was made in the decree
for the sale of the roads separately, and for the application of
the proceeds to the payment of the several
Page 103 U. S. 136
sums so found to be due from each respectively, in the order of
the priority of the liens.
From the decrees dismissing the bills of the Western North
Carolina company that company appealed. From the decree in the
Schutte case the Western North Carolina company, the Florida
Central company, and the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile
company were allowed an appeal. In perfecting their appeal the
Western North Carolina company and the Florida Central company gave
bonds which operated as a supersedeas. Before, however, either
appeal was docketed here, a settlement was concluded between the
Western North Carolina company and the bondholders, and pursuant to
an understanding to that effect, the appeal of that company was
docketed and dismissed in this Court on the 13th of September,
1879, pursuant to the 28th Rule.
At the last term, an application was made to set aside the
supersedeas obtained on the bond of the Florida Central, because
the approval of the bond was obtained by fraud and perjury. This
motion was granted.
Railroad Company v. Schutte,
100 U. S. 644.
After this, on application to this Court in behalf of parties
interested in the administration of the assets of the Western
Division company, and upon a representation that the settlement
which had been made by the Western North Carolina company was in
fraud of their rights and without their consent, an order was made
to the effect that the dismissal be set aside, and the cause
reinstated, if the Western Division company filed with the clerk of
this Court by the first Monday in February a bond, such as was
specially designated. This bond was given and approved on the
second day of February, 1880, and in time.
Upon these facts, gathered, with the help of counsel, from the
confused mass of papers brought here as the transcript of part of
the record below, and filling nearly fifteen hundred printed pages,
many questions have been presented and ably argued. We will first
consider the special position which the Western North Carolina
company, as the successor of the Western Division company,
occupies. So far as the Florida Central is concerned, it is not
claimed that the Western Division could have had any other rights
than such as belong to a stockholder
Page 103 U. S. 137
holding a controlling interest in the stock of the corporation.
Its moneys were wrongfully invested in that stock by an embezzler.
Swepson, the embezzler, bought the stock as stock, and if the
company whose money was embezzled adopts his purchase, the stock
must be taken as he held it, and subject to such encumbrances as
were put on it while in his hands. This in not seriously
disputed.
As to the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company, an
attempt is made to reach the property of the company because of the
trust deed or agreement executed by Dibble to Swepson, after the
conveyances from the trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund had
been procured through Swepson's fraud. That instrument purported,
however, to be in trust for Swepson to convey to the company to be
created by an act incorporating the purchasers of the property as
soon as the necessary legislation to that effect could be obtained.
It was not executed in a form to pass title, and the security was
only to continue under this plan until the contemplated corporation
could be organized. When the act of incorporation was obtained, the
company at once, without objection from Swepson, or any one in his
interest, took possession of the property and operated the railroad
as owner. Littlefield, who had succeeded to all of Swepson's rights
under his several contracts, assumed the absolute control of the
company and was its principal stockholder. Both Swepson and
Littlefield were named as corporators of the Jacksonville,
Pensacola, and Mobile company, incorporated on the same day with
the purchasers, which shortly after, as no doubt was from the
beginning intended, absorbed the purchasers' corporation and took
possession of its property. No one ever disputed the title of the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company until long after this
litigation began, and the Western Division company in its original
bill distinctly averred that the ownership of the property was in
that company. Littlefield held a controlling interest in the stock,
and that undoubtedly represented the proceeds of Swepson's
embezzlements invested in the Pensacola and Georgia and Tallahassee
bonds, through which the North Carolina company seeks to reach the
property. This is clearly recognized in the contract of settlement
entered into between Swepson, Littlefield, and the commissions
of
Page 103 U. S. 138
North Carolina, on the 16th of April, 1870, by which it was
agreed that the North Carolina company should he paid the money it
had lost from the proceeds of the sales of the state bonds to be
issued to the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company on the
faith of its ownership of this very property. Certainly under such
circumstances the North Carolina company is estopped from setting
up title to the property as against the
bona fide holders
of these bonds. In this litigation, that company can occupy no
other position than that of an equitable owner of the stock of
Littlefield in the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company, and
all encumbrances on the property are necessarily encumbrances on
the stock which the property in legal effect represents. The
settlement with Swepson was undoubtedly conditional, and not to be
complete until the money agreed on was paid, but nevertheless the
North Carolina company became by the transaction a seller of the
bonds and is estopped accordingly.
This disposes also of the claim that the lien in favor of
Swepson, created by the deed, or agreement, of trust to him, was
saved by the proviso at the end of sec. 6 of the act incorporating
the new Tallahassee company. It is apparent from the whole tenor of
the instrument that this was not intended as a continuing security,
and it is equally clear from the evidence that the stock standing
in Littlefield's name represents all the interest which he or
Swepson held in the property, as security or otherwise, when these
suits were begun. In addition to this, as the instrument was
imperfectly executed and was never recorded, it passed no title as
against
bona fide purchasers. The cases, then, in all
their aspects are to be treated as they would be if the several
companies were alone, each for itself, defending the claims made by
the bondholders.
We proceed, then, to inquire whether the companies or either of
them can successfully defend the Schutte suit. At the outset, it
will be conceded that the state bonds are unconstitutional. The
supreme court of the state has three times so decided in cases
where the question was directly presented by the pleadings, and
apparently fully argued. In
State of Florida v. Anderson,
91 U. S. 667, we
said this delicate question was "one it was eminently proper the
courts of Florida
Page 103 U. S. 139
should determine." and while we are not now prepared to say that
these decisions are conclusive on us, they certainly are not of
such doubtful correctness as to make it proper that they should be
disregarded. The conclusions were reached by applying the language
of art. 12, sec. 7, of the Constitution of 1868, to the condition
of affairs in the state when that Constitution was adopted. Such a
question is peculiarly within the province of the courts of the
state to decide, and we ought not to depart from what they have
done, except for imperative reasons.
But it by no means follows that because the state is not liable
on its bonds the companies are free from responsibility under their
statutory mortgages. By the express provisions of the act the state
bonds were to be given the company in exchange for its own bonds.
The company, not the state, was to use and dispose of the state
bonds. The object of the state was to aid the company with its
credit. The state bonds were to be made payable to bearer, and
negotiable, while the company bonds were to the state alone and not
negotiable. The company bonds were to be coupon bonds payable at
the same time and place as the state bonds, and, if the company
paid its interest in gold, it was the duty of the state to pay in
the same way. It is clear, therefore, the intention was that, as
between the state and the company, the state was to be the
guarantor of the company bonds, and the company the principal
debtor. With the public, however, it was different. There the state
was the debtor, and the company was only known through the statutes
under which the bonds were put out, and the certificates endorsed
on the bonds themselves, which were that the state held "the first
mortgage bonds of the railroad company for a like amount as
security to the holder hereof." Such bonds of the state with such
endorsements the company put on the market and sold. Under these
circumstances, the certificate of the governor as to the security
held by the state is in legal effect the certificate of the company
itself, and equivalent to an engagement on the part of the company
that the bond, so far as the security is concerned, is the valid
obligation of the state. The case is clearly within the reason of
the rule which makes every endorser of commercial paper the
Page 103 U. S. 140
guarantor of the genuineness and validity of the instrument he
endorses. We cannot doubt that under these circumstances the
company is estopped, so far as its own liabilities are concerned,
from denying the validity of the bonds. Having negotiated them on
the faith of such a certificate, the company must be held to have
agreed, as part of its own contract, whatever that was, that the
bonds were obligatory.
What, then, were the engagements into which these several
companies entered when, as is alleged, they accepted the bonds of
the state in exchange for their own, and put them on the market for
what they appeared on their face to be worth as commercial paper?
And here it is proper to say that contracts created by, or entered
into under, the authority of statutes, are to be interpreted
according to the language used in each particular case to express
the obligation assumed. Where the state is concerned the words
employed are sometimes to be taken most strongly against the other
party, but in this as in other cases of contracts, language is to
be given, if possible, its usual and ordinary meaning. The object
is to find out from the words used what the parties intended to do.
Every statute, like every contract, must be read by itself, and it
no more follows that one statutory contract is like another than
that one ordinary contract means what another does. Of course,
general rules of construction may and should be called into use
when required, and sometimes, when certain words used in statutes
are understood to have a certain meaning, the same words will be
given the same meaning in other like cases; still, in the end, it
must be determined from the language used in each particular case
what has been done, or agreed to be done, in that case. We have
been thus careful to state these familiar principles in this
connection to guard against the use of this case as authority in
others where the contract, even though it be created by or under
the authority of a statute, is not the same.
In the present case, a statutory lien, in the nature of a first
mortgage duly registered, was given the state on the property of
the company to secure the principal and interest of the company
bonds, with power in the governor, if default, for a certain length
of time, should be made in the payment of principal
Page 103 U. S. 141
or interest, to take possession of, advertise, and sell the
property for lawful money of the United States, and nothing else,
unless the state, for its own protection, should become the
purchaser, when the price might be paid in money or such
obligations of the company as the state should hold. In case of a
sale the purchase money, as well as the evidences of the company's
indebtedness taken as money, were to be paid into the state
treasury, and promptly and exclusively applied to the payment and
satisfaction of the bonds issued by the state under the authority
of the act now in question. If the holders of the state bonds did
not present them within ninety days after the sale, the treasurer
was required to invest the money remaining in his hands in the
securities of the United States, "to be held by the State of
Florida as trustee for the bondholders," until demand of the
payment of the bonds, when it was made the duty of the treasurer to
turn over the securities to the bondholders. It would seem as
though language could not be used indicating more clearly an
intention to have the lien, what the governor when he made the
exchange certified it to be, a security for the holder of the state
bonds. It is quite true that, by sec. 13 of the act under which the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company was organized, the
company could, at any time before maturity, pay off its own bonds
in national currency, or in bonds of the state; but that does not
change the character of the trust created by sec. 11, in case no
such payment was made. Here, no payment of any kind has been made,
and no foreclosure of the lien has been attempted by the state
except in the interest of the bondholders. The state, from the
beginning, has recognized its obligations as trustee, and, on the
request of the bondholders, commenced the proceedings, under the
authority of this statute, which have resulted in the present
suits. Indeed, one of the decisions against the constitutionality
of the bonds was rendered in a suit instituted by the state,
apparently on its own motion, to enforce to lien on behalf of the
bondholders. In our opinion, there is no occasion for applying here
the doctrines of subrogation, because, in unmistakable language,
the statute has made the mortgage of the company security for the
payment of the obligations of the state. This we to be in
accordance with the opinion of the state
Page 103 U. S. 142
court, as expressed in the Holland and Florida Central cases,
reported in the 15th and 16th of Florida Reports.
It is contended, however, that as the provision of the act in
respect to the execution and exchange of the state bonds is
unconstitutional, the one in relation to the statutory lien on the
property of the company is void also, and must fall. We do not so
understand the law. Undoubtedly a constitutional part of a statute
may be so connected with that which is unconstitutional as to make
it impossible, if the unconstitutional part is stricken out, to
give effect to what, taking the whole together, appears to have
been the legislative will. In such a case, the whole statute is
void; but in this, as in every other case of statutory
construction, all depends on the intention of the legislature, as
shown by the general scope of the law. To our minds it is clear in
the present case that the object of the legislature was, not to
create a debt which the state was expected to pay, but to aid the
company in borrowing money upon the credit of the state. As between
the state and the company, the debt for the money borrowed was to
be the debt of the company. If the state paid its bonds from its
own funds the mortgage could be enforced to compel the company to
make the state good for all such payments. If the state did not
pay, then the creditors had their own recourse upon the mortgage.
The state credit, so far as the state and the company were
concerned, was only to aid the company in borrowing money on its
own bonds. In any event, the company was to be bound for the
payment of the entire debt when it matured, and its property was to
be given as security. Under these circumstances, it seems to us
that the unconstitutional part of the statute may be stricken out
and the obligation of the company, including its statutory mortgage
in favor of the state bondholders, left in full force. The striking
out is not necessarily by erasing words, but it may be by
disregarding the unconstitutional provision, and reading the
statute as if that provision was not there. These bonds, as state
obligations, were void, but, as against the company which had
actually put them out, they were good.
This disposes of this part of the case so far as the
Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile company is concerned. No
claim
Page 103 U. S. 143
is made that the statute does not on its face authorize that
company to exchange its bonds for those of the state, or that the
lien is not created by the exchange. Neither is it claimed that the
necessary corporate action was not had to get the bonds out under
the forms of law. Although on the 10th of December, 1870, a
resolution was passed by the directors of the company, ordering a
recall of the bonds on account of the proposed misapplication of
the proceeds of the sales to be made, an actual withdrawal was
never effected, and the bonds have got into the hands of
bona
fide holders. The very resolutions which directed the recall
asserted the previous lawful and regular issue.
As to the Florida Central company, however, the case is
different, and it is claimed not only that the statute did not
authorize the exchange of the bonds and the creation of the lien,
but also that the company did not in its corporate character
execute its own bonds or make the exchange.
As to the first question, we deem it sufficient to say that the
Supreme Court of Florida has distinctly decided that in the case of
this company, as well as the other, the statutory authority was
complete. The point was directly made by the pleadings and as
directly passed on by the court. Although the bill in the case was
finally dismissed because it was not proved that any of the state
bonds had been sold, the decision was in no just sense
dictum. It cannot be said that a case is not authority on
one point because, although that point was properly presented and
decided in the regular course of the consideration of the cause,
something else was found in the end which disposed of the whole
matter. Here the precise question was properly presented, fully
argued, and elaborately considered in the opinion. The decision on
this question was as much a part of the judgment of the court as
was that on any other of the several matters on which the case as a
whole depended.
This, like the constitutionality of the act, is a question of
local law. It depends on the peculiar condition of local affairs.
If the decision is not conclusive on us, it is of high authority
under the circumstances, and we are not inclined to disregard it.
The holders of the commercial paper put out by the company
Page 103 U. S. 144
and bought on the faith of the state are entitled to the benefit
of every presumption in their favor.
The next important inquiry is whether the necessary authority
for the issue and exchange of the bonds was given by the
corporation itself. Certainly the resolution of June 2, 1870, is on
its face sufficient for that purpose, as is also that of April 13,
1871. It is true Littlefield now swears that these meetings of the
stockholders and directors were irregular and without sufficient
notice, but it is worthy of remark that, in the resolution of
November 21, rescinding that of June 2, there is no pretence that
the original resolutions were not lawfully passed and binding on
the company. The rescission is put entirely on the ground that the
form of the bonds was not such as to carry out the intention of the
company in directing their issue. Mr. L'Engle also, in his letter
to Boissevain, giving notice of the frauds that had been practiced
on the company, substantially conceded that the issue of the bonds
was authorized by the company, and confined his protest to the
improper use that was being made of them. It is clear to our minds
from the whole case that but for the fraudulent disposition of the
bonds the corporate action of the company in putting them out would
have been considered sufficient. Littlefield's character, as it
appears all through this voluminous record, is not such as to
entitle him to any favorable consideration as a witness or
otherwise. He and Swepson have both shown themselves capable of the
most shameless frauds, and we cannot but look with suspicion upon
everything they do or say. We regret it is not in our power to
relieve the corporations, whose affairs they have been permitted to
manage, from the consequences of their wanton breaches of trust;
but in our judgment, this cannot be done without injuring those who
are innocent of all wrong.
It is next contended that as the bonds were fraudulently put out
by the officers of the companies, and are unconstitutional, the
recovery must be confined to the amount actually paid for the bonds
to the agents of the companies. As we have endeavored to show, the
bonds, although void as to the state, are valid as to the company
that sold them. Having been put on the market by the companies as
valid bonds, the companies are estopped from setting up their
unconstitutionality. As against
Page 103 U. S. 145
the companies, they occupy in the market the position of
commercial securities, and may be dealt with and enforced as such.
The companies, through their faithless agents, are in a position
where they must meet those they have dealt with commercially, and
respond accordingly. In commerce, commercial paper means what on
its face it represents, regardless of what its maker or promoter
may have got for it. The bonds of the state in the open market
purported to be what they called for. The companies put them out,
and in legal effect, as we think, endorsed them. A
bona
fide holder can now require the endorser to respond to his
endorsement commercially -- that is to say, by paying what he in
effect agreed the maker must pay.
We believe we have now disposed of all the questions the record
presents. It has been suggested that since the appeal, the property
has been sold under the decree below. That is not shown by the
record. The supersedeas in favor of the Florida Central company we
have decided was fraudulently obtained. The justice who accepted
the bond was imposed upon. That supersedeas was promptly vacated
when the facts were called to our attention. The supersedeas
secured by the Western North Carolina company was, to say the
least, suspended when that company voluntarily dismissed its appeal
under the 28th Rule. This suspension was not vacated until the bond
of indemnity was filed on the 2d of February, 1880. It will be for
the court below to determine, when it is called on to confirm any
sale that has been made, whether a sale was stayed by a valid
subsisting supersedeas. From relief against any order in that
behalf the parties must resort to such measures as they may be
advised they are entitled to. We cannot, from anything now before
us, settle any such question.
Decrees affirmed.
These cases were decided before Mr. JUSTICE SWAYNE and Mr.
JUSTICE STRONG resigned.
Mr. JUSTICE FIELD was not present at the argument of these
causes, and took no part in deciding them.