Cherry v. Leonard

75 S.W.2d 401, 189 Ark. 869, 1934 Ark. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 29, 1934
Docket4-3734
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 S.W.2d 401 (Cherry v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherry v. Leonard, 75 S.W.2d 401, 189 Ark. 869, 1934 Ark. LEXIS 52 (Ark. 1934).

Opinion

Baker, J.

The appellant filed his suit in Pulaski Chancery Court praying for a restraining order to prevent the -State Treasurer from paying out certain moneys, upon order of the Refunding Board, in the purchase of tenders of bonds, made to the Refunding Board, and which that board desires to accept. Plaintiff alleged that he is a resident of Pulaski County, and that he is a taxpayer and interested in the- contemplated acts of the State Treasurer and Refunding Board, which conduct complained of, he says, is in violation of the provisions of act No. 11, approved February 12, 1934; said act having been passed at the special session of the Legislature held in 1934.

Plaintiff alleges that said act No. 11, by the provisions of § 47, makes an appropriation of $100,000 for redeeming State highway refunding bonds and State toll bridge bonds during the period beginning the 1st day of January, 1934, and ending the last day of June, 1934, and an additional appropriation of $350,000 for redeeming road district refunding bonds during the period beginning with the first day of January, 1934, and ending with the last day of June, 1934; and an appropriation of $20,000 for redeeming certificates of indebtedness during the period beginning with the first day of January, 1934, and the last day of June, 1934; an appropriation of $15,000 for redeeming funding notes issued to contractors during the period beginning with the first day of January, 1934, and ending with the last day of June, 1934; that said § 47 also makes an appropriation for all of said purposes in the total amount of $970,000 during the fiscal year beginning with the first day of July, 1934, and ending with the last day of June, 1935. The total appropriation made by said § 47 is $1,455,000.

Plaintiff states further that by the terms of said § 47 of said act No. 11 the appropriation made for use during the period beginning the first day of January, 1934, and ending the last day of June, 1934, has expired.

That the Refunding Board on the 27th day of July, 1934, passed a resolution authorizing the State Treasurer to draw a voucher for the full amount of the appropriation made for the period from January 1, 1934, to the last day of June, 1934, for the purpose of redeeming bonds that might be purchased by the State Treasurer on the 19th day of September, 1934.- Plaintiff states that at the time said resolution was passed by the Refunding Board there had been no bonds offered for tender, and, under the terms of the call made, there could be no bonds offered for tender and no purchases made until the 19th day of September, 1934.

Plaintiff further states that neither, the Treasurer nor Refunding Board has a right to use. any portion of the moneys appropriated by the provisions of said § 47 of said act No. 11 for the period beginning with the first day of January, 1934, and ending the last day of June, 1934.

Plaintiff further states that, under the provisions of § 37 of said act No. 11, no refunding obligations can be purchased by the State Treasurer until there shall be on hand in the State Highway and Toll Bridge Refunding Bond Redemption account and in the other redemption accounts, provided for in said act, funds in excess of the amount necessary to pay the interest and principal falling due in any fiscal year. That the State Treasurer is preparing to purchase bonds offered for redemption on September 19, 1934, when there are on hand funds in excess of the amount necessary for the semi-annual payments on refunding obligations next to accrue after the date of the acceptance of said tenders.

Plaintiff further alleges that the State Treasurer should not' purchase any refunding obligations until there shall be on hand in the State Highway and Toll Bridge Refunding Bond Redemption accounts funds in excess of the amount necessary to pay the interest and principal falling due in the fiscal year, which ends June 30, 1935, and that at the present time there is on hand no funds in excess of said amount when there is taken into consideration all payments falling due on highway obligations during said fiscal year, there being on hand a sufficient amount of funds with which to purchase refunding obligations in the amount of $1,350,000 when there is provided, only for the semi-annual payments next to accrue; that the Treasurer and the Refunding Board should provide for all payments falling due in the fiscal year before using funds with which to purchase refunding obligations under the provisions of said act No. 11.

To this complaint a demurrer was interposed, sus- ■ tained by the court, and the plaintiff refusing to plead further, the complaint was dismissed. The plaintiff, by his appeal, brings to this court, the matters alleged in his complaint.

It is necessary that we construe those particular sections of act No. 11 relied upon by the plaintiff, the appellant herein.

Act No. 11 is the result of settlement and compromise between the State of Arkansas and bondholders, holding State highway bonds, toll bridge bonds, and road improvement district bonds, which were assumed by the Martineau Act, passed in 1927, and other creditors.

We think it unnecessary to go into the complete and detailed history of the so-called Martineau Act and the amendments thereto, and the subsequent acts, in an effort to set out all of these obligations. It will be sufficient, however, to say that at the time of the passage of act No. 11, under consideration, the State had already defaulted in payments of its several obligations. Decreased revenue available for payment of these obligations, and extremely heavy bonded indebtedness, were such that, under the conditions that prevailed, suits had been filed and the funds of the State, whatever they were, were held under orders impounding the same, and it was seeming impossible, under the then existing statutory authority, for the State to meet its obligations.

After a long period of negotiations between the officers and agents of the State and committees of bondholders, certain facts were recognized that made it necessary to refund all of this indebtedness. The road improvement district bonds had, as their security, lands of taxpayers along, and adjacent to, the highways built by the improvement districts. An effort to enforce liens of the bondholders against these lands necessarily meant that the property owners, who were in most instances not able to pay the assessments, would not pay State and county and school taxes, and on that account the resources of the State, from which a large part of its revenue is derived, would be further destroyed, and the ability of the State to meet its obligations be so hopelessly impaired as to leave, all creditors without remedy. These conferences between officers and agents of the State and bondholders’ committees, were in full recognition of these general facts and other conditions equally potent and affecting both debtor and creditor alike. The ultimate result of these negotiations was act No. 11, which a special session of the Legislature was called to pass, and, when passed, to become a contract and settlement as between the State and its creditors.

It is on account of these facts that the writer of this opinion approaches his task with some degree of trepidation.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W.2d 401, 189 Ark. 869, 1934 Ark. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherry-v-leonard-ark-1934.