Dunham ex rel. Village of Morrow v. Opes

3 Ohio C.C. 274
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio C.C. 274 (Dunham ex rel. Village of Morrow v. Opes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunham ex rel. Village of Morrow v. Opes, 3 Ohio C.C. 274 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

On the 20th day of April, 1888, the village of Morrow, having less than one thousand inhabitants, the council thereof" passed an ordinance “ to provide for the purchase of a steam fire-engine, hose-reels, and such other apparatus as shall be- ' deemed necessary for the use of such village, and to remodel4 the present engine-house of the village,” and providing by' the 3rd section thereof “that the cost and expenses of said" purchase and repairs be and the same are hereby assessed upon the general tax-list of the taxable real and personal property of said village of Morrow.” By another ordinance, passed! on the same day, entitled “An ordinance for the issue and sale-of bonds to raise fuuds to purchase a steam fire-engine, hose-reels, hose, etc., and to remodel the engine-house,” it was de- • dared that the sum of 15,000 was necessary for this purpose, and it was provided that ten bonds of the village, each for the sum of 1500.00, be issued, bearing interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, the interest to be payable semi-annually,, one of said bonds to fall due in one year, and one each year-thereafter until all were paid. And the council thereupon-proceeded to issue said bonds and advertised them for sale.

The plaintiff then filed his petition in this cause, setting-out the proceedings of the council in this behalf, and alleging that he had applied to the solicitor of said village to bring an action against the village to enjoin the issue and sale of" said bonds, and the levy of the tax to pay the same, but that the solicitor refused to do so, and that thereupon the plaintiff-brought this action on behalf of such village, praying for such. [276]*276'injunction, and he alleges that all of such proceedings of the ■ council are illegal and void, for the reason that the question of ■the issuing of said bonds had not been submitted to the voters ■of the village as is required by law, and that there was no '■money in the treasury of the village applicable to any such ¿purpose.

A preliminary injunction as prayed for was granted by the court of common pleas, but on the filing of a general demurrer to this petition, on hearing, the court dissolved the injunction and dismissed the action. An appeal was taken by the plaintiff from the judgment, and application has been made rto the judges of this court, in chambers, for an injunction as ■prayed for in the petition, until the case can be fully heard, and on this application the question as to the right of the ■council thus to proceed has been fully argued.

There is no question but the legislature has conferred upon '.the council of a village the right annually to levy taxes on the ¡property within the village “for the erection of buildings required by the fire department and for the purchase of steam or other fire-engines and other apparatus, and for the support of the fire department.” (Sec. 2683, Rev. Stats.) But by section 2689 it is provided that “all taxes levied or ordered by a village (excluding taxes for school purposes) shall not exceed in any one year ten mills on each dollar of the value of any property as valued for taxation on the county tax-list,” the purpose of the legislature evidently being to limit the burdens to be placed upon the tax-payer for the carrying on of the municipal government. If, therefore, a tax for that purpose .had theretofore been' levied, and if the amount had been collected and was in the treasury of the village unappropriated, this amount so in the treasury undoubtedly might have been .applied to the purpose for which it had been collected, by an •ordinance or resolution duly certified in accordance with the provisions of the statute, sec. 2702. But without this, no contract, agreement or other obligation involving t.he expenditure of money therefor, or. ordinance providing for the appropriation thereof is valid; on the contrary is void.

. There being then now no money in the village treasury ¡applicable to this purpose, as the pleadings concede, the con[277]*277tention of the village solicitor is, that the council -has the-right to borrow the money on the bonds of the village and! place it there and appropriate in the manner proposed.

We are of the opinion'that the power of a municipal corporation to borrow money and issue bonds therefor, is conferred only-by statute, and if none can be found to justify it.in a particular case, such action must be held invalid. The-only sections of the municipal code that refer to this subject,. and which in several kinds of cases do expressly authorize-this to he done, are found in chapters 1 and 2 of the 9th division of that title; chapter 1 being headed Finance and Taxation,” and chapter 2, “ The power to borrow money and issue bonds.” As has been stated, sec. - 2682-2683 and 2689 of this first chapter point out the purposes for which the council of a municipal corporation may levy taxes, and affix a-limit to the amount thereof. And the only sections in these-t-wo chapters which expressly authorize the issue of bonds,, are-secs. 2685 and 2700-2701, 2704 and 2705, and the question is, does either of these sections cover the case at bar?

Section 2685 provides that the council may, under certain restrictions mentioned therein, anticipate the tax authorized to be laid for sanitary and street cleaning purposes by temporary loans. Section 2700 allows loans to be made by municipal corporations in anticipation- of the general revenue fund to a. limited amount. Section 2701 authorizes the council to borrow money and issue bonds therefor for the purpose of extending the time of payment of a pre-existing debt, when from its limits of taxation it is unable to pay the same; but-the amount of the debt is not to be increased; and sections 2704 and 2705 authorize the borrowing of money and the issuing of bonds therefor, in anticipation of the collection of' any special assessment, as distinguished from a tax on all the-property of the village for general purposes. It is clear, we think, and we understand it to be conceded by the solicitor of' the village, that neither of these sections authorizes the issue-of bonds by the village for the purposes for which they propose to issue them, but the claim is made that section 2686 authorizes the action taken. It reads as follows: “ When the bonds of the corporation have been issued in anticipation of a. [278]*278■tax provided for in section 2688, the same tax may be laid to 'raise means for the payment thereof, as is authorized for the ¿purpose for which they were issued.” And it is urged that ,by it an implied license is given to the council, whenever it it has no money in the treasury for a special purpose, if it -sees fit to do so, to issue its bonds for any amount, and running for any length of time, the only limitation on the right ¡being, that the tax laid to pay the principal and accruing interest on bonds payable in any year shall not with the taxes levied for all other purposes, exceed ten mills on the dollar valuation on the tax duplicate.

• We think this claim wholly untenable. The idea that a ;power like this, and so liable to abuse, should be granted by implication, when in all other cases the right to issue bonds if given, is done in express terms, and is carefully guarded, and many restrictions thrown around it, is not to be enter-stained. And if such extensive power is given by this section, what was the necessity of expressly conferring it in the other ■ cases? No satisfactory answer can be given to this.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio C.C. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunham-ex-rel-village-of-morrow-v-opes-ohiocirct-1888.