E. B. & A. C. Whiting Co. v. City of Burlington

175 A. 35, 106 Vt. 446, 1934 Vt. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 2, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 175 A. 35 (E. B. & A. C. Whiting Co. v. City of Burlington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. B. & A. C. Whiting Co. v. City of Burlington, 175 A. 35, 106 Vt. 446, 1934 Vt. LEXIS 189 (Vt. 1934).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

At a special meeting of the legal voters of the city of Burlington, hereafter called the city, held on January 3, 1934, the city was authorized, by a majority of the votes cast, to issue bonds to an amount not to exceed $178,000, for the purpose of making certain public improvements.

*451 The plaintiffs, who are large taxpayers in the city, brought this bill of complaint against the city, praying for an injunction restraining it from issuing the bonds voted at the special meeting on 'the grounds that the meeting was illegally called, and that two-thirds of all the voters voting at such meeting did not vote to authorize such public improvements and the issuance of the bonds to pay for them. A temporary injunction was issued. The defendant demurred to the bill; and, on hearing on the demurrer, the demurrer was sustained, the temporary injunction dissolved, and the bill dismissed. The plaintiffs appealed.

The plaintiffs allege in their bill that 2,453 legal voters voted at the special meeting; that 1,225 voted in favor of the proposal to bond the city, and 1,198 voted against the proposal. It is also alleged that the special meeting was illegally called, and that the vote taken at the meeting was null, void, and without effect for that reason.

The plaintiffs allege further that the charter of the city is silent as to whether the vote of the legal voters at the special meeting held on January 3, 1934, should be by a majority vote or a two-thirds.vote; that section 342 of the charter provides that all powers not expressed in the charter shall be governed by the statutes of this State; that the statutes of this State (Public Laws, chapter 150) provide that there shall be a two-thirds vote of all the voters voting at such meeting to authorize the city to issue bonds; that the vote at such meeting was not decided by a two-thirds vote, and was therefore null and void.

Prior to 1917, the statutory provisions, other than charter provisions, regulating the issuance of bonds and other moneyed obligations by municipal corporations, were contained in chapter 157 of the Public Statutes of 1906, Act of No. 84 of the Laws of 1908, and Act No. 126 of the Laws of 1912.

Act No. 105 of the Laws of 1917 was an act entitled: “AN ACT REGULATING THE ISSUANCE OF MUNICIPAL BONDS.” It was the first general, comprehensive legislation on the subject, and it provided in detail the procedure for the voting on and the issuance of bonds by municipal corporations to pay for public improvements, and it expressly repealed chapter 157 of the Public Statutes and the acts of 1908 and 1912. That act became chapter 176 of the General Laws of 1917. Several sections of chapter 176 of the General Laws were amended by subsequent acts, and, as so amended, and with *452 slight editorial changes, which are immaterial, that chapter became chapter 150 (sections 3603-3632) of the Public Laws of 1933. All of our general statutory provisions regulating the issuance, of bonds by municipal corporations, in force at ‘the time of the special meeting, are found in chapter 150 of the Public Laws, and, for convenience, we refer to the sections of that chapter.

Section 3603 provides: “The term ‘municipal corporation’ as used in this chapter shall include a city, town, village (and) town school district, * * Subdivision I of section 3604- provides: “The term ‘legislative branch’ of a municipal corporation as used in this chapter shall mean- the mayor and board of aldermen of a city, * * Section 3605 provides that when the legislative branch of a municipal corporation at a regular or special meeting called for that purpose shall by resolution passed by a two-thirds vote of all its members determine that the public interest or necessity demands, improvements and that the cost of the same will be too great to be paid out of the ordinary annual income and revenue, it may at any subsequent meeting of such legislative branch called for that purpose, by a two-thirds vote of all its members, order the submission of the proposition of making such public improvements, and of incurring a bonded debt to pay for the same, to the qualified voters of such municipal corporation at a meeting to be held for that purpose.

The first part of section 3606 provides how the meeting shall be called. The last paragraph of this section reads as follows: “When two-thirds of all the voters voting, at such meeting vote to authorize such public improvements and the issuance of bonds to pay for the same, the legislative branch shall be authorized to make such public improvements and to issue bonds as hereinafter provided.” (The italics are ours.) There 'are other provisions of the chapter which relate to the issuance and sale of the bonds and other details when a public improvement has been voted in the method provided by sections 3605 and 3606, which are not material here.

Section 3631 provides: “This chapter shall not affect rights allowed a municipal corporation by its charter provisions, nor any rights granted by a special act of the legislature.” The language of section 4103 of chapter 176 of' the General Laws is the same as that of P. L. 3631. Section 29 of No. 105 of the *453 Laws of 1917 read: “This act shall not affect rights now allowed any municipal corporation by its charter provisions, nor any rights now or hereafter granted by special act of the legislature. ” (The italics are ours.) In the revision of 1917 the words in italics were omitted as unnecessary.

Act No. 242 of the Laws of 1908 is the charter of the city. The Act has been amended, but it is necessary to call attention to such amendments only as are material here. Section 25 of the charter, as amended by section 17 of Act No. 163 of the Laws of 1927, provides: “Special meetings of all the legal voters of said city, shall be called by the mayor upon request by resolution of the board of aldermen or on the petition of thirty legal voters for any legal purpose beyond the jurisdiction of the city council, said purpose to be set forth in the warning for said meeting, * * Section 36 of the charter provides that “the mayor and board of aldermen in their joint capacity shall be called the city council. ’ ’

It appears from an examination of the Session Laws that there were general revisions of the charter of the city by the Legislature at the sessions of 1896 (No. 148), 1906 (No. 261), and 1908 (No. 242) ; that section 63 of the present charter is the same as section 69 of the revision of 1896 and section 63 of the revision of 1906, except for certain changes which are not material here.,

Section 63 reads as follows: “Whenever the legal voters of said city shall give authority to the city council thereof to pledge the credit of said city for any purpose, said city shall have power and authority to issue its negotiable orders, warrants, notes or bonds, and to prescribe whether such bonds shall be registered or have interest coupons attached, to the amount, not to exceed the limit prescribed by law, for which the legal voters aforesaid shall have given authority to so pledge the credit of the city, such notes or bonds to be payable at such time and at such a rate of interest as shall be established by said voters; or if no time or rate of interest is fixed thereby, the same shall be established by resolution of said city council.”

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Bluebook (online)
175 A. 35, 106 Vt. 446, 1934 Vt. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-b-a-c-whiting-co-v-city-of-burlington-vt-1934.