Carmichael v. City of Dothan

100 So. 643, 211 Ala. 492, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 10, 1924
Docket4 Div. 107.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 So. 643 (Carmichael v. City of Dothan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carmichael v. City of Dothan, 100 So. 643, 211 Ala. 492, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 243 (Ala. 1924).

Opinion

ANDERSON, C. J.

Section 11 of the act of 1909 (Acts Sp. Sess. p. 192), fixing the nature of municipal bonds and the period within which they may run, provides that no bonds under this provision of the act shall run for a longer period than 30 years, and no bond issued by a city with a population of exceeding 6,000 inhabitants shall bear a greater rate of interest than 5 per centum, payable semiannually. Then follows the last provision of said section (incorrectly set out in the published acts, but correctly set out in the case of City of Andalusia v. Baldwin, 208 Ala. 19, 93 South. 894), which is as follows:

“But cities of less than six thousand population and towns may issue bonds bearing six per cent, interest per annum, but no bonds bearing six per cent, interest shall run for a longer period than ten years.”

The general purpose of this act was to fix a limitation of 30 years as to the running of bonds and a maximum rate of interest of 5 per cent., but»to make an exception as to the smaller cities and towns by allowing them to provide a greater rate than 6 peí-cent., but restricting the life of the bonds to 10 years instead of 30. Tbe act of 1920 (Acts Sp. Sess. p. 116), authorizes cities and counties of 5,000 population to issue bonds at a rate of interest not exceeding 7 per cent, per annum, and that the rate of interest on bonds issued by cities and-towns of less than 5,000 shall not exceed 8 per cent, interest. This last act makes no express reference to the act of 1909, but, as it increases the rate of interest that the bonds may bear, and re-classes the cities by the slight change of 5,000 instead of 6,000 population, it must be presumed that the Legislature was conscious of the former act as well as its intent and purpose, and intended by said last act to merely increase tbe rate of interest, subject to the limitation and restriction of the former as to time, and which in effect meant that when the interest was within the limitation fixed for the larger class the bond issue could run for 30 years, whether the bonds be issued by either class, but where the cities of the smaller class issued bonds for the excessive rate allowed them tbe bonds could not run for exceeding 10 years. The result is, and we so hold, that the two acts must be construed as authorizing the bond issue to all counties, cities, and towns of any size when the rate of interest does not exceed 7 per cent., but when cities and towns of not exceeding 5,000 population avail themselves of the authorized additional rate of interest the bonds must not run longer than 10 years. In other words, the limitation of 10 years, in order to harmonize and make the two acts workable and efficacious as to tbe purpose and intent of same, must be considered as applicable only when the bonds boar the excessive rate authorized to the smaller class, and does not apply to bonds issued by either class when the rate of in *494 terest is within the limitation allowed the larger class by the last act, that is, 7 per cent., and as to which the bonds may run for SO years.

In the case of City of Andalusia v. Baldwin, supra, the act of 1920 was not involved, as the t)ond issue was prior to the passage of same. True, in referring to said act it was in effect stated that it changed the rate of interest and not the time the bonds could run. There was no express change of time in said last act, but by necessary implication the 10-year limitation in "the former act must be held as applicable only when the smaller cities and towns adopt the excessive rate of interest, 6 per cent., under the act of 1909, and 8 per cent, under the act of 1920. As the bonds in question bore only 7 per cent, they could run for a period of 30 years.

Section 2 of the act of 1920 (Acts Sp. Sess. p. 116) deals with and regulates the sale of honds, and does not authorize the governing board of the city, town, or county to issue or change bonds in violation of section 222 of the Constitution. This section of the Constitution deals with the issuance of the bonds, and not the sale thereof, and does not prevent a sale of same for less than par or control or forbid a discount, and said act of 1920 is not repugnant to section 222 of the Constitution. The act authorized the issue of bonds in question for a fate not to exceed 7 per cent., and requires that they shall not be sold for less than par; but when bonds are issued for a lower rate of interest than 7 per cent, they may be sold below par, but the discount shall not be so great as to cost the municipality a greater rate of interest than 7 per cent, taking the discount into consideration. The bond issue in question bore 6 per cent., and the respondent city of Dothan had the authority to sell the same at a discount which, when taken in connection with said 6 per cent., would not exceed 7 per cent.

It is urged that the sale of bonds was violative of the act of 1920, as it will cost the city a greater rate of interest than 7 per cent, taking the discount into consideration. The bonds are for 6 per cent., and were purchased for 90 cents, or at a discount of 10 per cent., and they run for a period a little in excess of 18 years, or, to be accurate, for 18 years one month and 20 days. As to whether or not the city will have to pay over 7 per cent, interest, taking into consideration the discount, is a question of mathematics. We find upon an examination of the “Consolidated Tables of Bond Values” issued by the “Financial Publishing Company” that, in order for a 6 per cent, bond, which runs for a period of 18 years, to cost the city 7 per cent, interest, it must sell for 89.85. Here the bonds not only sold for 99, but run for a period in excess of 18 years, and as per this table the cost of interest to the city is less than 7 per cent. The writer has also conferred with and been assisted by several expert mathematicians who hhve verified the foregoing table, and are quite positive that the interest cost to the city, discount considered, is a fraction less than 7 per cent.

The fact that tlie proceeds o'f the bonds were to be placed ih a bank and paid out as the work progressed did not increase the rate of interest or render the transaction otherwise illegal. This requirement was no doubt intended in good faith, and for the purpose of guaranteeing that the money was to be expended for. the purpose for which the bonds were issued and upon which said bonds were secured by mortgage. Reed v. Athens, 146 Tenn. 168, 240 S. W. 439. The case of Planters’ National Bank v. Wysong Co., 177 N. C. 380, 99 S. E. 199, 12 A. L. R. 1412, is one where the lender bank required the borrower to keep continuously on deposit a portion of the loan, and the lender therefore had the use of same, and the borrower did not, and the court properly held that the transaction was usurious. Here the purchaser of the bonds did not retain the use of a part of the proceeds, but all of same was to be deposited with a bank, a third party, to be expended or paid out as the work on the water system progressed.

The sinking fund was to be created by 25 per cent, annually of the revenue derived from the operation of the plant, and not from the proceeds of the sale of the bonds, and this did not increase the rate of interest to be paid by the city.

The trial court seems to have overruled the demurrer to that feature of the bill seeking to cancel the contract because not let to che lowest responsible bidder, and as this ruling was favorable to the appellant we are not called upon to review the same.

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Bluebook (online)
100 So. 643, 211 Ala. 492, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carmichael-v-city-of-dothan-ala-1924.