Authorizing Issuance of Funding Bonds Ex Rel. Consolidated School District No. 4 v. Day

43 S.W.2d 428, 328 Mo. 1105, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 43 S.W.2d 428 (Authorizing Issuance of Funding Bonds Ex Rel. Consolidated School District No. 4 v. Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Authorizing Issuance of Funding Bonds Ex Rel. Consolidated School District No. 4 v. Day, 43 S.W.2d 428, 328 Mo. 1105, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 467 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

This is a suit brought under an Act of the General Assembly of Missouri (Laws 1921, p. 36, 1st Ex. Sess.; now Secs. 2926-30, R.S. 1929), for the purpose of obtaining a pro-forma decree authorizing the issuance of $11,500 in school bonds by Consolidated School District No. 4, Greene County, Missouri. An intervening petition in the nature of an answer was filed by certain taxpayers of said school district contesting the validity of the proposed bonds. The court held that the petitioning school district was not entitled to the relief prayed, and from the judgment rendered in accordance therewith said district prosecutes this appeal.

The petition alleged that two final judgments had been rendered in the Greene County Circuit Court at its January Term, 1929, against said consolidated school district, for a sum which, with interest added, exceeded the amount of the proposed bonds, and that the same was due and unpaid; that one of said judgments was rendered in favor of J.I. Grant based on three several school warrants issued by said school district to H.E. Elkins and by him sold and assigned to said Grant, and that the other judgment was rendered in favor of H.E. Elkins based on five several school warrants issued by said school district to said Elkins; that all of the school warrants sued on in both cases were alleged to have been in part payment for labor and material performed and furnished by said Elkins in the erection of a school building in and for the use of said district under a valid contract made and entered into by said parties; that after due and proper service of summons upon it, said school district appeared and filed answer in each of said cases, denying plaintiff's right to judgment against said school district; that thereafter proceedings were had therein resulting in the two judgments aforesaid, aggregating $11,069.03 at the time of their rendition; that a meeting of the school board of said school district was duly held on January 4, 1930, whereat said school board by resolution duly adopted, authorized *Page 1111 and ordered the issuance and execution of the funding school bonds of said district in the aggregate sum of $11,500, to bear interest from date at the rate of six per cent per annum until paid, to be numbered seriatim 1 to 35, both inclusive, the five bonds bearing the lowest numbers to be due and payable January 15, 1931, the remaining bonds to be due and payable in specified groups on January 15 of each succeeding year, the final group being due and payable January 15, 1942, none of said bonds to be delivered to the purchaser or purchasers thereof or to the owners of said judgments, or be binding obligations of the school district, till and upon condition that the said judgments are fully paid, discharged and satisfied of record; that it was further duly ordered by said school board that an annual tax sufficient to pay the interest accruing on said bonds as same becomes due and payable and to create a sinking fund for payment of the principal thereof be levied and assessed each year thereafter on all the taxable property of said school district until said bonds and interest are fully paid, and that an annual tax of ten cents on the $100 valuation was estimated as being sufficient for that purpose. Said petition further alleged that the facts stated in said resolution of said school board were true; that said school board had fully complied with said resolution and performed all the matters and things therein specified and required; that the proposed bonds were funding bonds of said school district authorized by Section 1042, Revised Statutes 1929, as amended and reenacted by Laws of Missouri of 1929, pages 127 and 128, now Section 2892. Revised Statutes 1929, for the purpose of funding and paying said judgment indebtedness; and that neither the rate of interest thereon nor the total indebtedness of said district would be increased thereby.

Interveners raised no objection to the petition, service or method of procedure, but their answer attacked the validity and constitutionality of said Section 2892, Revised Statutes 1929, providing for the issuance of refunding bonds to pay off and discharge judgment indebtedness of a school district or other municipality without a vote of the people, as being in contravention of our State Constitution; and alleged that the school warrants sued on in the two cases in which judgments had been rendered against the school district were based upon "an unlawful and void debt attempted to be contracted by said school district, contrary to the provisions of Sections 11 and 12 of Article X of the State Constitution:" that the issuance of bonds by said school district for the alleged indebtedness is null and void because the same is contrary to and in contravention of the provisions of Section 11 of Article X of the Constitution of Missouri, in that the questions of the issuance of said bonds and the levy of a tax in payment thereof were not submitted to the voters of said school district, as provided by Section 11 of Article X of the Constitution *Page 1112 of Missouri; and because the indebtedness alleged to have been incurred and evidenced by the judgments in this case is in violation and contravention of the provisions of Section 12 of Article X of the Constitution of Missouri, in that it was attempted by the school board of said consolidated school district to cause said district to become indebted to an amount exceeding the income and revenue provided by said school district for the year 1928, without the assent of two-thirds of the voters of said district, and for the further reason that such indebtedness was attempted to be incurred in an amount, including the then existing indebtedness, in the aggregate, exceeding five per centum of the value of the taxable property in said school district, as shown by the assessment next before the last assessment for state and county purposes; and for the reason that the judgments sued on herein are the result of collusion and fraud between the plaintiffs and the defendant therein, such defendant being the plaintiff in this action, in that said parties fraudulently conspired and colluded with each other to charge said school district with an indebtedness that was illegal and void and could not be legally incurred or collected, and in seeking to validate a void contract and indebtedness against the taxpayers of said school district.

Interveners' charge that said Section 2892, Revised Statutes 1929, is unconstitutional will not be considered, because it contains no specification of a particular section or sections of the Constitution thereby contravened. [State ex rel. v. Nolte,315 Mo. 84, 90, 285 S.W. 501, and cases cited.]

This section, in so far as it is here pertinent, provides in substance that any school district, by its school board, is authorized to fund any part or all of its bonded or judgment indebtedness "including bonds, coupons, or anyRefunding judgment, whether based on bonded or otherBonds: To Pay indebtedness," at the same or lower rate ofJudgment: interest, and for that purpose may make, issue andWithout Vote. sell funding bonds and with the proceeds pay off the judgment or exchange the same for such judgment indebtedness. It was admitted at the trial that no election was held in said school district to authorize the issuance of the bonds here in question, and that the amount of said bonds and the amount of the current expenses of said school district for the year 1930 exceeded the estimated income and revenue for that year.

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43 S.W.2d 428, 328 Mo. 1105, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/authorizing-issuance-of-funding-bonds-ex-rel-consolidated-school-district-mo-1931.