Daviess County Court v. Howard

76 Ky. 101, 13 Bush 101, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 30, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 76 Ky. 101 (Daviess County Court v. Howard) 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
Daviess County Court v. Howard, 76 Ky. 101, 13 Bush 101, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 14 (Ky. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion oe the court.

This is an' appeal in the name of the Daviess County Court against A. G. Howard and others, tax-payers of the county of Daviess. The Owensboro & Russellville Railroad Company was chartered by an act of the legislature passed in the year 1867. By the 19th section of the act of incorporation it was provided “that the county courts of Daviess, Ohio, Muhlenberg, and Logan counties shall have power, and are hereby authorized, to subscribe to the capital stock of the company in such number of shares as may be determined by said county courts, respectively, and to levy upon the tax-payers of- such counties, respectively, such taxes as may be necessary to pay the stock subscribed; and the said county courts may, if they shall deem it prudent, issue the bonds of said counties, respect[105]*105ively, for the amount of stock subscribed, or any part thereof; said bonds to be in such sums, and payable at such times, as said county courts may determine upon. But before such stock shall be subscribed by the county courts, the said county courts shall submit to the voters of said counties the proposition to subscribe stock, and the amount thereof (to be suggested and fixed by the commissioners named herein), at an election to be held after due notice,” etc. The commissioners for Daviess County, in accordance with this provision of the charter, suggested to the county court a submission to the voters of the question, “Will the voters instruct the county court to subscribe ten thousand shares to the capital stock of the company ?” The vote was regularly and properly taken, and, a majority of the voters favoring the subscription, the sum of $250,000 was subscribed and taken by the county as stock in the corporation, the shares being $25 each.

At the July term of the Daviess County Court, held in the year 1868, it was ordered that Geo. W. Triplett, the county judge, W. B. Tyler, and E. C. Berry be and are hereby appointed a committee, on behalf of the county court of Daviess County, “to have bonds executed and prepared of a sufficient amount to satisfy and pay off the subscription, on the part of the county of Daviess, to the Owensboro & Russellville Rail- ■ road Company; that said bonds be executed and made payable as follows, viz: $50,000 five years from date, $50,000 ten years from date, $75,000 fifteen years from date, $75,000 twenty years from date; the bonds bearing interest at six per cent per annum, payable semi-annually; for the payment of which coupons were attached,” etc. The committeé, or a majority, were authorized by this order “to sell or dispose of the bonds either to the Owensboro & Russellville Railroad Company, or to individuals, or to other corporations, on such terms as said committee may deem best and most advisable to the interests of the county of Daviess, in paying the subscription,” etc.

[106]*106At a subsequent term of the court, held in the same month— July, 1868 — it was recited “that as the court had ordered the committee to have bonds prepared and executed, in a sufficient amount to satisfy and pay off the subscription, and to sell and dispose of said bonds, either to individuals or corporations, it is now ordered that said order he so amended as to authorize said committee to appoint agents to sell said bonds.”

Under these orders of the county court the bonds of the county were executed, not only for the $250,000 and its interest, but for the additional sum of $67,350, making the whole amount of interest-bearing bonds, with coupons attached, $317,350. These bonds, as is alleged in the petition, were sold to the railroad company, in discharge of the county subscription, and many of them are now in the hands of parties unknown to the plaintiffs in the action. A tax has been levied on the tax-payers of the county to pay the bonds as they matured, and the accruing interest on the whole amount. The plaintiffs, the tax-payers of the county, instituted the present action, in which they seek to enjoin the county court from collecting either the principal or interest upon the bonds issued in excess of the $250,000, insisting that the county court, as the agent of the tax-payer, exceeded its authority in making sale of any of the bonds, and that the bonds, other than those directed to be issued by the order of the county court, made in July, 1868, are void. The county court, or its committee, acted upon the idea that it was invested with the power to execute and sell at a discount as many bonds as were necessary to raise the money to pay the subscription of $250,000. This is the sole question presented by the record.

It is alleged in the petition that the railroad company, the Planters Bank, and others are the holders of some of these bonds, and as they were made defendants to the action, and the court refused to pass upon the question as to the liability of the county to them, the appellees, the tax-payers, have [107]*107prayed a cross-appeal. This cross-appeal can not be. considered, as the parties against whom it is prayed, or who are to be affected by it, are not before the court. The court below has enjoined the county court from proceeding to collect the interest on the bonds in excess of the $250,000. The defendants, if they hold any such bonds, are not complaining, as they have failed to prosecute any appeal. The appeal is here by the Daviess County Court against the tax-payers, that tribunal insisting upon its right to levy the tax to pay the interest on all the bonds issued and sold to satisfy the county subscription. The controversy is between the agent and principal.

The county court, by virtue of the 19th section of the act incorporating the railroad company, was invested with the power to pay the county subscription by levying a tax upon the property of the citizen, or by issuing county bonds in whole or in part discharge of the indebtedness. The power to issue bonds was limited in amount to the sum subscribed by the county to the capital stock, and the county court, looking to the extent of the power with which it was clothed by the act in question, designated the number and amount of bonds to be issued by an order of that court made in July, 1868. This order directed the execution of bonds for $50,000 payable in five years, a like amount payable in ten years, $75,000 payable in fifteen years, and a like sum payable in twenty years, with interest coupons attached, payable semiannually. This covered the entire subscription, and when issued it was proper for the county court to deliver them over to the railroad company in payment of the subscription made by the county. These were all interest-bearing bonds, and when executed by the county for the amount of stock subscribed, the county court acted within the scope of the authority conferred by the act, and exhausted all the power that tribunal had to discharge the indebtedness in that manner.

The act expressly authorized the county court to issue bonds [108]*108for the amount of stoclc subscribed; but we find no power conferred by the charter upon the county court to issue bonds for $317,350. It was a cash subscription, and the interest-bearing bonds are to be regarded as equivalent to a cash payment, and if the railroad company declined to accept them in discharge of the subscription, it was the duty of the county court to raise the money by taxation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Ky. 101, 13 Bush 101, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daviess-county-court-v-howard-kyctapp-1877.