Bk. for Sav'gs, Etc. v. . Grace, Etc.

7 N.E. 162, 102 N.Y. 313, 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 18, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 842
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 30, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 7 N.E. 162 (Bk. for Sav'gs, Etc. v. . Grace, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bk. for Sav'gs, Etc. v. . Grace, Etc., 7 N.E. 162, 102 N.Y. 313, 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 18, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 842 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Daottorth, J.

■ The question to be determined is, whether or not the u stock or fund created by the corporation of the city of New York,” and held by “ the commissioners of the sinking fund,’’ can be brought within the purview of that provision of the Constitution on which alone the plaintiffs rely, and which declares that no" city ‘ ‘ of over one hundred thousand inhabitants, whose *318 present indebtedness exceeds ten per centum of the assessed valuation of its real estate subject to taxation, shall be allowed to become indebted in any further amount, until such indebtedness shall be reduced within such limit.” (Art. 8, § 11, N. Y. Const, as amended November 4, 1884.) We think it plain that the indebtedness here referred to is an indebtedness to be met in the future by taxation, for (1) before its possible limit can be defined, the value of the , real estate subject thereto must be ascertained. (2.) By the express words of the provision, water bonds issued for a' fixed term are not to be included, but a sinking fund must be created “ for their redemption.” (3.) So the issue of certificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds in anticipation of, and payable out of the taxes for the current year, is permitted. The mischief to be prevented was the creation of. an excessive debt for local improvements, or public works, or the loaning of municipal credit, so payable that the burden should not fall upon those who contracted the obligations, or on their revenues, but on posterity. The judgment appealed from stands upon the idea that the debt of the city of- New York is already in excess of the measure allowed by the Constitution, and it must prevail if the city stocks held by the commissioners of the sinking fund are so circumstanced that their satisfaction can directly or indirectly involve taxation, or, putting the proposition in another form, if the city stocks held by the commissioners are debts which the municipality can be called upon to pay. This depends upon the construction and effect of the' statutes and ordinances relating to the sinking fund. The first to which our attention is called is a statute entitled “ An act to regulate the finances of the city of New York,” passed June 8, 1812. (Chap. 99, § 9.) It authorized the city of New York to create a sinking fund to pay the principal, and pledged the credit of the State to provide for the interest, of a public debt. This was followed by an ordinance of the mayor, etc., of the city of New York, passed August 9, 1813 (page 105, quoted as from the manuscript ordinances of New York, passed during the mayoralty of DeWitt Clinton), entitled a law making provision for the redemption of the New York city stock.” *319 The preamble, which in this case at least may be said to state the ground and cause of making it, and to be a key to open the minds of the makers of the act,” so that what was really intended by it may be seen, declares that: Whereas, it is highly useful to establish a fund out of which purchases of the New York city stock may, from time to time, be-made whenever the same can be done at par or the true value thereof, whereby the said stock will be prevented from depreciating, and the redemption of the same will be regularly progressing, and then enacts that all moneys derived from certain specified sources, “-and all such other sources of revenue or sums of money as the said corporation shall hereafter think proper to appropriate to that purpose, shall and hereby are firmly and inviolably pledged, appropriated and applied to and constitute and form the fund for the purpose aforesaid until the final redemption of the whole of the said stock.”

Whether we give these words their ordinary and common meaning, or define the completed act according to its legal signification, it is difficult to find that those who used them had any other object in view than the extinction of the stock, to the purchase of which the funds were to be applied. The fund was established by the party who created or made the stock; the utility anticipated by that party was, first, redemption so far as the money in hand would go, and, second, the maintenance of the market value of the unredeemed stock. Re-purchase of notes or other evidences of debt, by the issuer from the holder, is redemption, and is equivalent to and has the force of payment. Here the whole fund is to be so applied until final redemption of the whole stock — which in this connection means until the maturity of the stock, when by its terms it is no longer an executory obligation. We find nothing in the other provisions of the statute to conflict with this view. The purchases were to be made under the direction of the mayor, recorder, comptroller, and treasurer of the city, and the chairman of the finance committee, for the time being, who are denominated as the “ commissioners of the sinking fund for the redemption of the New York city stock.” They *320 were authorized to invest all the moneys of the fund in the purchase of the city stock, or if that could not be had, then as they may see fit, in the stock of the United "States or in bank stock, but these last were to be sold and the proceeds invested in city stock ” when, in the opinion of the commissioners, it could be "done without in jury. In the meantime the moneys constituting the fund were to be deposited in the treasury to their credit, “kept separate and distinct from other moneys of the corporation,” and to be drawn on their warrant when required “ for such purchase and investments.” These stocks of whatever kind, when purchased, were to be transferred to the treasurer of the city “ in trust for the sinking fund for the redemption of the city stock,” to be held by him until its final redemption, and the interest of the stock so purchased is “at each quarterly payment thereof, and the interest and dividends on the other stocks to be carried to the credit of the sinking fund,” and thereafter to form part of it.

In 1817 (Ordinances, p. 69) a similar ordinance was enacted, with some change in the detail, but none in the preamble or the expression of its general purpose. It did not allow the purchase of bank stock, the treasurer was no longer to act as trustee, but the city stock bought by the commissioners “ was to be held by them until the final redemption of the city stocks.” In 1821 (Ordinance, chap. 32) the commissioners were allowed to invest in State stocks, or stock of the United States, but preference was at all times to be given by them to the purchase of Hew York city stock, if it could be obtained at a reasonable rate. Although ordinances under the same title were enacted in 1823 (Chap. 31), in 1827 (Chap. 31), no material change was made. In 1834 (Chaps. 9, 10) the clauses of former ordinances were rearranged, and it was declared that the powers conferred on the commissioners should be so construed as to render it imperative on them at all times to give preference to the purchase of the city stock, if it could be procured at a reasonable rate, and they were permitted in their discretion to sell such stock of the United States, or of this State, as they held, and purchase any of the city stock at such prices as they might judge best for the public interest.

*321 In 1839 the law was re-enacted and a clause added, by which the terna

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.E. 162, 102 N.Y. 313, 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 18, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bk-for-savgs-etc-v-grace-etc-ny-1886.