Brooke v. City of Philadelphia

29 A. 387, 162 Pa. 123, 1894 Pa. LEXIS 954
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 31, 1894
DocketNo. 10
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 29 A. 387 (Brooke v. City of Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooke v. City of Philadelphia, 29 A. 387, 162 Pa. 123, 1894 Pa. LEXIS 954 (Pa. 1894).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Dean,

As the contention here affects large public interests, an early final determination of it ought to be had; therefore, at the request of both parties, we have taken original jurisdiction of plaintiff’s bill.

The plaintiffs are citizens and taxpayers of Philadelphia. They aver that the city councils, by ordinance approved March 15,

1894, authorized the creation of a city loan of $6,000,000, for the purpose of ridding the city of steam railroad grade crossings on twenty-four public streets from Broad to Thirtieth, all [125]*125crossings of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. The' power of the city to make such a municipal improvement is not questioned, nor is its power, within certain constitutional limits, to create a debt by loan or otherwise to accomplish the purpose, denied. It is averred, however, that the debt of $6,000,000, authorized by this ordinance, when added to the existing debt of the city, will largely exceed the constitutional limit of municipal indebtedness, and is, therefore, illegal.

It is further averred that the ordinance, authorizing said loan, discloses the fact that the money in part is to be expended in an improvement for the advantage of the railroad company, which company is by contract to reimburse the city in an amount equal to one half the expenditure, or $8,000,000; that to this extent it is a loan of the city’s credit to a corporation, and the creation of the additional debt, for that reason, is, under the constitution, unlawful.

The city denies that if $6,000,000 be added to its existing actual debt, that debt will exceed the amount authorized by the constitution. It further denies that its contract with the railroad company is, in any correct ascertainment of the meaning of the constitution, a loan of its credit to the corporation.

Section 8, article 9, of the constitution, declares that: “ The debt of any city shall never exceed seven per cent of the assessed value of. the property therein, nor shall any such municipality incur any new debt or increase its indebtedness to an amount exceeding two per centum upon such assessed valuation of property without the assent of the electors thereof at a public election, in such manner as shall be provided by law; but any city, the debt of which now exceeds seven per centum of such assessed valuation, may be authorized by law to increase the same three per centum, in the aggregate, at any one time upon such valuation.”

This follows immediately after section 7 of the same article, which section prohibits the legislature from authorizing any municipality becoming a stockholder in any corporation, or loaning its credit or money to any corporation, association or individual.

There were no such restrictions on legislative authority or on municipal power in the constitution of 1838 ; and while not a few profound lawyers, because of the sparseness of restric[126]*126tions in that constitution and the multiplicity of them in our present one, think the old superior to the new, we doubt if any one condemns the policy disclosed in sections 7 and 8 of article 9, regulating and limiting municipal debts. The twenty years preceding the adoption of the constitution of 1874 was an era of great growth and expansion in easy and rapid modes of communication and transportation ; highways, such as railroads, plank roads and turnpikes, were multiplied. Almost every municipal organization sought to promote the construction of them to, from and through the municipal limits. They subscribed for the securities of these corporations, sometimes beyond their ability, and generally beyond their subsequent willingness to pay. Not seldom the courts were impelled, at the suit of importunate creditors, to enforce the assessment and collection of taxes for payment of such debts, by the imprisonment of municipal officers. Litigation, too, in more than one case demonstrated that increased ability to pay was not followed by increased willingness to pay such debts. The debt of one county in this commonwealth, for the larger part made up of subscriptions to the stock and bonds of railroad corporations, reached nearly forty per cent of its assessed valuation. The basis of such debts was almost wholly speculative, for, when contracted, there was no traffic and no experience in the new enterprise, which demonstrated any value to. its securities. Prompted often by the wildest hopes of future municipal wealth and prosperity on the completion of the new highway, the county, city or borough rushed into indebtedness to promote it. This propensity was characterized by an eminent writer on municipal law, Judge Dillon, as “ an epidemic insanity inducing extravagant corporate subscriptions to public works.” The result of this insanity is shown by the fact that in 1860 the fourteen principal cities of the United States had an aggregate indebtedness of only $109,808,409; fifteen years after-wards, the aggregate debt of the same cities was §407,218,-351. The debt had increased 271 per cent, the population only 70 per cent.

To this sort of debt there was added during the war large loans for bounty purposes, so that, in 1878, when the constitutional convention was in session, if there was one evil more prominent and exasperating than another to the taxpayer, it [127]*127was the big debt of his particular locality; a debt often out of all proportion to its ability to pay. The convention struck at this evil when they framed sections 7 and 8 of article 9 of the constitution. The people of the commonwealth struck at it when, by a large majority, they adopted the constitution. They fixed what they deemed the reasonable limit of municipal debt at seven per cent of the assessed valuation. But we do not concur with the learned counsel for plaintiff, in his most able argument, that the real intent and policy of the constitution of 1874 was to establish or promote, except debt for temporary purposes, absolute non-indebtedness for cities, counties and boroughs; to inaugurate a new and “ pay as you go ” system. If his assumption be correct, there would seem to be no escape from his conclusion, viz.: that no new debt ought to be incurred while any part of the old remains unpaid. But it seems to us the obvious intention of sections 7 and 8 of article 9, and section 3 of article 15, is to authorize a continuous debt, not exceeding seven per cent of the assessed valuation. In these sections the constitution plainly says, to all the municipalities of the commonwealth, “You may owe seven per cent of what you are worth; if you want to spend more than this, then you must pay as you go, for you shall not at any one time, in the aggregate, be in debt beyond this amount.” As to the commonwealth itself, the intention was to wipe out the existing debt, and thereafter permit the incurring of only a limited amount of debt on grave exigencies, and that only temporarily. But as to the municipal subdivisions of the state, the necéssity for a reasonable debt, for municipal improvements, was recognized; the constitution sought only to limit the aggregate amount of it at any one time, and to provide for the gradual payment of any such debt incurred for any particular purpose, within a period of thirty years.

On this theory, the borrowing power, within the seven per cent limit, would practically never be wholly exhausted,- for whenever the debt to this amount was created, the process of extinction would commence, leaving in a short time a margin for further loans.

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Bluebook (online)
29 A. 387, 162 Pa. 123, 1894 Pa. LEXIS 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooke-v-city-of-philadelphia-pa-1894.