Byars v. City of Griffin

147 S.E. 66, 168 Ga. 41, 1929 Ga. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 14, 1929
DocketNo. 6585
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 147 S.E. 66 (Byars v. City of Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byars v. City of Griffin, 147 S.E. 66, 168 Ga. 41, 1929 Ga. LEXIS 69 (Ga. 1929).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

The ruling announced in the first headnote does not require elaboration.

The proposed contract begins with certain preliminary statements explanatory of the reasons for making it. In sections 1 to 6 the company agrees to construct and equip, under the city’s supervision and with its approval, the pumping and transmission system to be paid for and owned by the company. The city is to continue to own and maintain its existing system of waterworks, so that it may be used as a distributing system. The two systems are to be physically connected, so that they may be jointly operated for the purpose of drawing water from the river and distributing it to users of water in the city and its suburbs. The city agrees to pay the company the sum of $100,000 “on or before the first day of January, 1929, out of funds now in the treasury of the city.” Section 7, which has several subdivisions, provides that as soon as the pumping and transmission system is completed the city will “lease” it and operate both systems jointly for a period of years, on a basis of division of the net profits from the joint operation, in the ratio of 10 per cent, to the city and ninety per cent, to the company, the last-named amount to be annually applied to payment of principal and interest as it should become due on bonds of .the company running through a period of twenty years. The ninety per cent, is based on an estimated cost to the company for the [52]*52construction and equipment of the pumping and transmission system at $400,000; but as soon as the actual cost can be ascertained, the annual payments shall be adjusted so as to net the company a sum sufficient to pay six per cent, dividends on the capital stock, and interest on the six per cent, bonds actually issued, and to retire the bonds at the end of twenty years. It is provided, however, that the city “shall have the right to pay as much in excess of said sum each year as it desires, the same to be used to pay said interest and retire the bonds as provided in the charter.” In subsection (g) of section 7, considered in connection with subsection (a), the city shall not be required to pay for water used for fire protection, flushing sewers, and other public purposes, unless the annual income for the preceding calendar year “does not equal the sum necessary to pay the principal and interest on said bonds maturing during such year.” In the event of such failure of income, the city shall pay for such water such sum as shall be “sufficient to insure the company” the amount “necessary to pay the principal and interest on said bonds maturing during such year.” And moreover, in the event of the failure of income as above stated and failure of the city to make good the deficit, the company shall have the right to terminate the agreement, after thirty days notice, before expiration of the twenty years. In section 9, which also has subsections, it is provided that in the event the company should terminate the agreement under subsection (g) of section 7, the company and the city shall continue to observe the provisions of the contract except that the lease of the property shall be from year to year.

In section 8 the city is given an “option, at any time within the life of this contract, to purchase the company’s interest in the pumping and transmission system,” and its properties “for a sum sufficient to discharge the company’s outstanding obligations, to retire its outstanding bonds with accrued dividends, and to pay the expenses of dissolving the corporation, including one thousand ($1,000) dollars to be distributed to the holders of the common stock, with accrued dividends as provided in the charter. And upon the exercise of the option, and the payment of the purchase-price, the company shall convey to the city all of its properties and assets.” And further, “whenever the amounts paid the com-' pany as provided in sec. 7 hereof have been sufficient to retire the bonds with all accrued interest, and to pay the expenses of dis[53]*53solving the corporation, including one thousand dollars ($1,000) and accrued dividends to be distributed to the holders of the common stock, and the assumption of the city of all outstanding obligations incurred in the operation of the joint enterprise, the company will convey to the city, free from all liens, all of its properties and assets.” In section 10 it is provided that in the event the city fails or refuses or is unable to carry out “either of the plans and agreements outlined in sections 7 and 9” then “the city hereby gives the company an option . . ‘to purchase the electric light and waterworks systems and plants of the city, together with the complete franchise necessary to operate, maintain, extend, and modify said system and plants, so as to operate and maintain an adequate and complete waterworks plant, and an adequate and complete electric light and power plant in and for the City of Griffin, its inhabitants, and its suburbs,” upon terms which included: (a) that the company will comply with its obligations outlined in sections 1, 3, 4, and 5 of the contract; and (b) the companjf will pay to the city all sums received by it from the city under sections 2, 7, and 9 of this instrument, except so much thereof as is necessary to pay the accrued dividends of six per cent, on the outstanding bonds, and such as may be necessary to restore the depreciation (if any) of the pumping and transmission system. The meaning and intent is that the company (before exercising the option to purchase) shall pay to the city the excess in the fair market value of the pumping and transmission system over the par value of 'the outstanding bonds and one thousand dollars, represented by the common stock, “in payment and satisfaction of an equity that the city might have acquired in the pumping and transmission system under sections 2, 7, and 9;”* (c) that the company shall agree to furnish the city and its inhabitants with an adequate supply of good, pure, filtered drinking water, and an adequate and complete electric light plant and system at fair and reasonable rates to be agreed upon, or fixed by arbitration.

From the foregoing statements it is obvious that the primary purpose and plan of the city was to acquire, in its own right and title, the pumping and transmission system. It could not raise sufficient funds by direct issue of its own bonds, because when added to its existing bonded indebtedness the amount would exceed the constitutional limit of seven per cent, of the assessed value of all [54]*54the taxable property in the city. So resort was had to the plan of organizing the water company with a capital stock of one thousand dollars, to construct and equip what may be termed a four-hundred-thousand-dollar water system. The plan involved financing the water company by the city, by advancing $100,000 from available funds in the treasury, and by making the contract to jointly operate the two systems, and pay to the company ninety per cent, of -the net profits, upon the basis of which the company would sell its bonds to pay for the proposed water system, and the bonds would be retired in twenty years by annual payments of principal and interest. When the bonds should be retired and the stockholders reimbursed for their one thousand dollars of capital stock, the city should have a deed to all the property. The company did not intend primarily to engage in the water-supply business, this being manifested by the provisions in its charter, and also in the proposed contract that when all the bonds should be paid the corporation should be dissolved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.E. 66, 168 Ga. 41, 1929 Ga. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byars-v-city-of-griffin-ga-1929.