Adams v. Bryant

370 S.W.2d 432, 236 Ark. 859, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 716
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 16, 1963
Docket5-2920
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 370 S.W.2d 432 (Adams v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Bryant, 370 S.W.2d 432, 236 Ark. 859, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 716 (Ark. 1963).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

Appellants, plaintiffs below, brought a taxpayers’ suit in which they sought injunctive relief against appellees, Light and Water Commissioners in the City of Clarksville. Appellants urged that City Ordinance No. 387, under which appellees were acting, was invalid; that certain expenditures made by appellees from surplus funds acquired in the utility operations, were unlawful; an accounting was sought from appellees, as well as a judgment against them, for particular payments hereinafter set out that had already been made, and the court was asked to enjoin and restrain the commissioners from making such further expenditures. After the filing of an answer and various amendments to the pleadings, the case proceeded to trial before the chancellor, who, after taking the cause under advisement, rendered his opinion. The court found that “the Clarksville Light and Water Company” 1 was an agency of the City of Clarksville, empowered to perform those duties specifically outlined in the ordinance, and further found that the commission had performed its duties in accordance with the expressed desire of the City Council. The court refused to grant a judgment or issue an injunction, as prayed, but did direct that in the future “the agency do and perform only those acts which are necessary to operate the utilities, pay the debts, and to build up a sound business operating reserve from the profits of the organization and when that reserve has been established that all profits of the organization be paid in to the City Treasurer as a part of the General Revenue.” Except for the directive, all relief sought by appellants was denied. A decree was entered in accordance with the opinion, and from such decree, appellants bring this appeal. For reversal, three points are relied upon as follows:

I. Ordinance No. 387 is invalid and does not create a valid utility commission or constitute appellees a valid commission or agency of the city of Clarksville.

II. Purchase of corporate stock was illegal; and appellees should be required to place the money back into the treasury with interest.

III. Appellees should be required to pay back into the city treasury with interest the $1,000 placed by them in the Dairy Expansion Fund.

— I —

In 1949, the city of Clarksville, which operated its own light and power plant, and water works system (originally acquired through municipal improvement districts), enacted Ordinance No. 387, creating a commission to be known as the “Clarksville Light and Water Commission of the City of Clarksville, Arkansas.” In brief, the ordinance sets forth that the commission shall be composed of three qualified resident electors of the city of Clarksville, and provides that the commissioners shall be appointed by the City Council. Section 2 places the commission in full charge and authority of the light and water plants “with the power to operate and maintain them and to exercise all power necessary or incident to the management, operation and control of the properties for the furnishing of water and electricity to the inhabitants of the City of Clarksville.” 2 Section 3 authorizes the commission to enlarge the plants and extend such services as may become necessary in order to serve the residents of the city, but further provides that the commission shall not have the power to increase the rates, nor power to issue revenue bonds or notes, without the approval of the City Council. Section 4 sets out that “out of any surplus in revenue after making provision for the payment of bonds and interest and operation, the Commission shall set aside a reasonable sum for the maintenance of the plant and the depreciation account. Any sums remaining after providing for the funds herein defined shall be declared to be ‘net revenue’ and the Commission at its discretion may use such part of the net revenue as may be necessary or proper for the extension or enlargement of the two plants or their distribution systems, and any funds not so used shall he held hy the Commission as reserve fund, to he used hy the Commission as it deems best.” 3

The italicized portion, in large measure, was the basis for the disbursements that gave rise to this litigation. Section 5 states that the commissioners shall have “wide discretion in the exercise of the powers conferred upon them, it being the purpose of this ordinance to grant such commission the powers ordinarily exercised by the board of directors of a corporation, * * *” and the section further provides the manner of removal of a commissioner for improper exercise of authority. Section 6 sets out that members of the commission shall not receive any compensation for services but shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the performance of duties.

The commission is presently composed of Leslie E. Bryant, Earl K. Johnston, and Wilson Jones. 4

Appellants contend that the Chancellor erred in holding the ordinance valid, and they stoutly maintain that Act 95 of 1939 [Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 19-4001 through 19-4033 (Repl. 1956) ] should control. This act authorized the creation, in cities of the second class and incorporated towns, of a board to be known as “The Board of Public Utilities,” and the statute provided that this board should have the sole and exclusive control of the maintenance, enlargement, and operations of electric light and water plants and sewerage systems owned by improvement districts, or where such districts had paid out and were under control of the city or town council. Appellants point out certain conflicts between provisions of this act and Ordinance 387, including the fact that the “Board of Public Utilities” requires 5 members and, further, that a Board of Public Utilities cannot be created until the plan is first approved by a majority of the voters in an election. Other differences are cited, but we do not consider a discussion of this phase of appellants’ argument to be necessary since Act 95 does not make compulsory the operation of utility plants by this board. Section 19-4001 simply provides that such a board may be created. Here, the citizens of Clarksville apparently did not desire to create the Board of Public Utilities, and the authority to operate the utilities, therefore remained in the City Council. We agree with the Chancellor, that in passing Ordinance 387, the city created an agency to operate the utilities heretofore mentioned. The city had the express statutory power to own and operate these utilities [Ark. Stat. Ann. § 20-316 (Repl. 1956)], and we have held that a City Council may designate agents to act, within the scope of their agency, on behalf of the city. Jonesboro v. Montague, 113 Ark. 13, 219 S. W. 309, Gladson v. Wilson, 196 Ark. 996, 120 S. W. 2d 732.

The Clarksville Light and Water Commission was not delegated power of a legislative nature, (which would have been unlawful) as shown by the fact that the ordinance provides that the commission shall not have power to increase rates, nor to issue revenue bonds or notes; the commission was only given executive and administrative functions in carrying out the provisions of the law which authorized the city to own and operate the utilities. In other words, the commission was simply acting for the City Council.

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Bluebook (online)
370 S.W.2d 432, 236 Ark. 859, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-bryant-ark-1963.