Application of B of E of City of Ardmore

49 P.2d 122, 173 Okla. 296, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 607
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 16, 1935
DocketNo. 26129.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 P.2d 122 (Application of B of E of City of Ardmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of B of E of City of Ardmore, 49 P.2d 122, 173 Okla. 296, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 607 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This appeal involves the ques- • tion of the authority or power of the district court to control the rate of interest of bonds about to be issued to refund judgment indebtedness of a municipality, and the effect of the contract or agreement to fund.

The board of education of the city of Ardmore entered into an agreement with R. J. Edwards, Inc., and W. J. Barnett, Bank Commissioner, to fund certain judgment indebtedness of the school board. The agreement provided that the funding bonds when issued should bear 6 per cent, interest, and should run from 4 to 17 years, payable in annual installments of about $4,000 each, the first installment to be due in four years, and that the agreement itself was subject to the approval of the district court.

Thereafter the board of education gave notice, as required by law that it would, on October 18, 1934, proceed before the district court of Carter county to make a showing and offer proof and ask the court to determine the existence, character, and amount of its outstanding judgment indebtedness, and to sign bonds to be issued in payment thereof.

The Carter County Taxpayers Association, a corporation, and Kenneth Hudson, and other individual taxpayers of said school district filed a remonstrance, or protest, against the issuance of such bonds. Among other things they alleged (hat the rate of interest proposed, viz., 6 per cent., was excessive; that such bonds were then being sold on the market at or about a 5 per cent, basis; that it was wholly unnecessary to issue bonds boearing 6 per cent, interest; that such proposed bond issue would result in a great and excessive burden upon the taxpayers, compelling them to pay interest on said indebtedness over the term of the proposed bond issue in the s|um of $37,000, and that it would be to the better interest of the taxpayers to pay said indebtedness in three annual installments of one-third the amount of such indebtedness, whereby the total amount of interest required would be approximately $6,720.

Hearing was had in which it was shown that the school district had an outstanding bond issue in the sum of $99,000, which would mature June 1, 1934; that a sufficient amount of money had been collected, and placed In the sinking fund to pay said bonds when they fell due. But the board of education, or its treasurer, had invested some $9,000 or $10,000 of its sinking fund in its own nonpayable warrants.

The school board, or its treasurer, had deposited several thousand dollars of its *298 sinking fund in the American Bank & Trust Company, which had become insolvent, and had been placed in the hands of the State Bank Commissioner for liquidation. This deposit was secured by other nonpayable warrants of the school district, which, including accrued interest, amounted to about $43,000.

The school board undertook to sell the warrants in which it had invested its sinking fund, which, including accrued interest, amounted to some $12,000. It was unable to do so.' The Bank Commissioner did not have sufficient money with which to pay the money deposit .due the sinking fund. As a result the school board found itself without sufficient money to take up or pay off the $99,000 bonds that were about to fall due. The board of education took the matter up with local banks, financial institutions, and local financiers, and was unable to sell its warrants it held in its sinking fund. Unless the board of education could convert the warrants it held in its sinking fund into cash, or collect the deposit from the Insolvent bank, it must default in .payment on its bonds when they fell due June 1, 1934. Thereupon, the board opened negotiations with K. J. Edwards, Inc., resulting in an agreement whereby Edwards, Inc., agreed to buy the warrants which the board held in its sinking fund, "and the board, in1 turn, agreed to fund its indebtedness and take up its warrants. It seems that the agreement included the warrants owned by the insolvent bank, but which had been pledged by it to secure the deposit made by the school board in said bank.

R. J. Edwards, Inc., bought the warrants in which the board had invested its sinking fund. This, with other available cash, enabled the board of education to pay off its bonds maturing June 1.

Before these proceedings were commenced, R. J. Edwards, Inc., went into the district court and obtained judgment against the board, on the warrants it had bought.

The Bank Commissioner also commenced an action to obtain judgment on the $43,-000 in warrants which the Bank & Trust Company had bought. The court declined to render judgment thereon in favor of the Bank Commissioner for the reason that the warrants had been pledged to the treasurer of the school board to secure his deposit in said bank. ■

Thereupon the Bank Commissioner sold certain other bonds and securities held by him which were owned by the bank at the time it became insolvent, and paid the school board its deposit, and secured the release of the warrants, whereupon judgment was entered in favor of the Bank Commissioner in the sum of $43,546.86.

The amount of the judgment in favor of R. J. Edwards, Inc., was $12,074.16.

It appears that the Bank Commissioner had agreed with R. J. Edwards, Inc., to sell it the funding bonds when issued to pay off the judgment held by the Bank Commissioner, at par. There was some evidence that the agreement to fund was a tri-partite agreement between the board of education, R. J. Edwards, Inc., and the Bank Commissioner. This is referred to by some of the parties as a “gentlemen’s agreement.”

There was some evidence to the effect that funding bonds of the kind sought to be issued, bearing 5 per cent, interest, would readily sell on the market at par, and that the bonds, if issued, bearing 6 per cent, interest, would sell on the market at a premium of from $6,000 to $7,500 on an issue of $55,000.

After the hearing the court made certain findings, and concluded that the rate of interest proposed was excessive, and refused to approve and sign the bonds.

The journal entry of judgment goes somewhat at length in giving the court’s reasons for his findings and conclusions. Among other things, the.court found:

“I find in this case that the school board is acting and hasi acted at all times in this case and with this matter honestly and in good faith. I find that the two judgments sought to be funded herein are legal and valid judgments. Now we have those matters out of the way. I find that the rate of interest proposed In the refunding bonds is excessive and an abuse of discretion.”

And:

“I find the rate of 6 per cent, proposed in these refunding bonds to be excessive and that it would be an abuse of discretion to xund the bonds at that rate. It would be penalizing the taxpayers of this county under the testimony here. At that rate it shows that a great profit would be made off the taxpayers and I feel that it is the duty of the court in this matter to protect, the taxpayers. I do not mean any offense to the board members. I have found that they have acted in good faith. As stated during the argument, it is apparent that the reason they agreed on C per cent, and the reason they wanted the bonds' refunded now on that basis is that they feel *299

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kansas City Southern R. Co. v. Adair County
126 P.2d 714 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 P.2d 122, 173 Okla. 296, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-b-of-e-of-city-of-ardmore-okla-1935.