Commissioners of Sinking Fund v. Grainger

32 S.W. 954, 98 Ky. 319, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 954 (Commissioners of Sinking Fund v. Grainger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioners of Sinking Fund v. Grainger, 32 S.W. 954, 98 Ky. 319, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 56 (Ky. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

JUDGE EASTIN

DELIVERED THE OPINION OE THE COURT.

This action was brought by appellant to compel appellees, who are .members of the general council of the city of Louisville, to levy a tax of forty cents on the $Í00 of taxable prop[321]*321erty in said city of Louisville for tbe benefit of tbe sinking fund of that city. A general demurrer to tbe petition was sustained by tbe court below, and tbe petition dismissed, and from that judgment tbis appeal is prosecuted.

Tbe appellant is a corporation, created by an act of the-legislature of Kentucky, approved March 9, 1867, providing, among other things, that “tbe mayor, the president of tbe board of aldermen for the time being, and three persons, to be chosen by tbe general council on joint ballot, as hereinafter directed, and their successors in office, shall constitute tbe ‘Commissioners of tbe Sinking Fund of the City of Louisville,’ and by that name shall have corporate powers and existence, may sue and be sued, and do and perform ail things necessary to execute the duties required and powers given them by this act.”

By the terms of this act all the assets and income of the sinking fund of said city were vested in and placed under the control and management of appellant, and upon it was imposed the duty of applying the funds so supplied to it, to the payment of such debts of the city as were made a charge upon the sinking fund, so far as the same could be so applied on fair terms, and, as to any surplus thereof, it was given power to invest the same in bonds of the city of Louisville or of the State of Kentucky, or in such stocks as should be approved by a vote of a majority of each board elect of the general council, by yeas and nays.

These provisions seem to indicate the general purposes, powers and duties of the corporation, as set forth in the act creating it; and the allegations of the petition, which under take to define its duties, are that it is “by law charged with the care, custody and disbursement of the funds provided by law to be raised by taxation and otherwise for the purpose [322]*322of paying the principal and interest of the city’s bonded debt.”

This then may, we think, be taken as a fair statement of the general duties of the appellant corporation and of the general purposes of its creation.

The question involved here, however, relates more particularly to its powers, and especially to the power it is here undertaking to exercise, through the aid of the chancellor, of compelling the legislative department of the municipal government to furnish it with the funds necessary to discharge maturing allegations of the city of Louisville which have been made a charge upon the assets under its control. Can the chancellor grant the relief sought and at the instance of appellant compel the general council to levy the tax for the benefit of the sinking fund?

It is alleged in the petition that by legislative enactment all the bonds for which the city of Louisville is primarily liable are made a charge upon the sinking fund of the city, and that appellant is chargeable with the payment of the annual interest thereon, and with the creation and maintenance of a sinking fund sufficient to pay the principal thereof at maturity; that this bonded debt now amounts to the sum of $8,815,000, on which the annual interest is $408,170, and that it is necessary, in order that appellant may comply with its obligations, that it should be provided in each year with a revenue sufficient to pay this interest, together Avith the expenses of conducting its business, and with an annual sum sufficient in the aggregate to meet the principal of the bonds at maturity. It is further alleged that, for the year 1894, the only tax levied for its benefit was the annual license tax provided for by the act of July 1,1893, from which it was supposed that a revenue entirely sufficient for its pur[323]*323pose would be derived, but which proved wholly inadequate, making it necessary for appellant to borrow from bank a large sum of money. The petition then alleges the fact that by various legislative acts and city ordinances under which the different gales of bonds were issued, the city council was authorized and, in some instances, required to levy a certain tax therein specified for the purpose of creating a sinking fund to provide for the payment of said bonds, which taxes, so authorized, amount to an annual levy of eighty-one cents on the $100 of taxable property; that appellant had brought to the attention of the general council the fact that the license tax, as levied for the year 1894, was wholly inadequate, and had requested said council to make a levy for the year 1895 of not less than forty cents on the $100 of taxable property, which levy it says is necessary, but that one board of the general council had already passed q levy ordinance for 1895, omitting any tax for the benefit of the sinking fund; that said ordinance would soon be acted upon by the other board, and that if passed there would be a very large deficit in the income of appellant for the year 1895, .and that appellant would, therefore, be unable to discharge the obligations of the city of LouisAdlle to its creditors.

In addition to the several ordinances and, special acts passed at the time of the issue of each series of bonds, and either authorizing or directing the levy of a specified tax to meet the same, as set forth in the petition, counsel for appellant have quoted in their brief and seem to rely upon an act of March 15,18C9, entitled “An act to increase the resources of the sinking fund,” in which it is provided as follows, to-wit: “The general council shall, in the month of April or May, 1S69, and in one of the months of each succeeding year thereafter, levy a tax of forty cents on each $100 worth of such [324]*324real and personal property as may be taxed for city purposes in said city, which shall be styled the 'sinking fund tax,’ and shall be in lieu of all taxes now levied for the payment of the bonded debt of the city other than that required' to be levied for the payment of the bonds issued to the Eliz-abethtown & Paducah Railroad Company.

And by the fourth section of which act it is also provided as follows, to-wit: “The resources of the sinking fund shall not be diminished, but may be increased by the general council.”

These provisions of the act of 1869, it is claimed, are mandatory upon the council, and its duty thereunder, it is said, is purely ministerial, and one which the appellant, in its corporate capacity and under its charter power, “to sue and be sued,” may enforce in this action by mandatory injunction.

Waiving, for the present, the question as to whether appellant, though for some purposes an independent and distinct corporation, and yet for other purposes a mere branch or adjunct of the municipal government, could, in any case, maintain an action to enforce the discharge by the legislative department of the city of an admitted ministerial duty, it seems to us clear that the right asserted by appellant does not exist in this case for the reason that the act of 1869'is no longer in force.

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Woolley v. City of Louisville
71 S.W. 893 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 954, 98 Ky. 319, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-of-sinking-fund-v-grainger-kyctapp-1895.