Eisiminger v. Elliott

84 P.2d 823, 103 Colo. 216, 1938 Colo. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 21, 1938
DocketNo. 14,321.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 84 P.2d 823 (Eisiminger v. Elliott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisiminger v. Elliott, 84 P.2d 823, 103 Colo. 216, 1938 Colo. LEXIS 196 (Colo. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Knous

delivered the opinion of the court.

The City of ftochy Ford, a municipality of the second class organized under the general laws of Colorado, created a local improvement district entitled Main Street Paving District and caused the streets therein to be improved. The property affected was duly assessed and bonds of the aggregate amount of $192,000' were issued under the provisions of chapter 151 of the Session Laws of 1899, C. L. ’21 §§9464-9513. In 1923 the foregoing local improvement act was repealed and a new statute (chapter 180, S. L. 1923, ’35 C. S. A., chapter 138, §§65 to 107 inclusive) was enacted. It is agreed here, as would be certain in any event, that the subject of the proceeding before us is governed by the 1899 act, notwith *218 standing its repeal and the passage of the later law. As was contemplated by the statute the county treasurer of Otero county, in which the City of Rocky Ford is situate, has been collecting the installments of the principal of the assessments and interest on the unpaid balances from the property owners and remitting such funds to the city treasurer for disbursement. In making remittances to the city treasurer the county treasurer has indicated what part of the fund has been collected on account of principal and what part on account of interest, whereupon the city treasurer on his books makes credit to two accounts: one showing- the amount received from the county treasurer as installments on the principal of the assessments, and the other showing the amount of interest collected on the unpaid balances of such assessments. From such interest fund, when a sufficient amount was therein available, it has been the practice of the city treasurer to pay the interest on the bonds, but in the event the account was insufficient the interest coupons are returned unpaid to the bondholders, even though at the time there was in the other fund derived from payments of principal of the assessments, a sufficient amount to pay the interest, if so applied. Whenever there accumulated in the principal fund an amount sufficient to permit redemption of outstanding- bonds the city treasurer has redeemed bonds in their regular numerical order. Since April 1, 1933, there has been an insufficient balance in the interest fund for the redemption of interest coupons and the interest on all bonds has been in default since that date. The bondholders whose bonds have been redeemed subsequent to that time have been permitted to retain uncancelled all interest coupons maturing thereafter and up to the redemption date. At the time this action was filed there was in the interest fund $3530.98 and in the principal fund $2962.49.

The plaintiff in error, to whom we shall hereinafter refer as petitioner, is the owner of five of the outstanding and unpaid bonds of the district. Prior to the *219 institution of this action he presented to the respondent city treasurer matured interest coupons from his bonds with a demand for payment, which was rejected. The proceeding before us, in the nature of an action in mandamus and for injunctive relief, was then instituted by him. The judgment of the lower court was for the respondents. It is the contention of the petitioner that all monies derived from the payment, either of interest or principal, of the paving assessments should be placed in one fund and that out of that fund interest on the bonds should first be paid and if any excess remains that excess should be applied to the redemption of outstanding bonds in their numerical order.

The respondents, on the other hand, assert that they may pay interest accrued and accruing on the bonds solely out of the fund composed of interest paid on the annual installments collected and that they only may redeem the outstanding bonds with proceeds of the principal of the annual installments paid by the property owners.

In their pleadings respondents further allege that they are the trustees for all of the bondholders and, as such, are charged with the duty of correctly applying the monies received by them for account of the improvement district; that neither of them has any obligation to pay the bonds or the interest thereon except with the monies received from the property owners of the district; that they have no right or desire to seek to prefer any one creditor over any other creditor of the district; and that since the controversy has arisen, it is essential that the matter be finally determined both for their future guidance in the administration of the fund and as a protection to them against any possible liability which might accrue by reason of their inadvertent failure to properly apply the funds of the district. They add that if the litigation should result unfavorably to them and the judgment should approve the procedure insisted upon by the petitioner, sufficient monies will be received hereafter by them from the property owners of the district to enable them *220 to comply with the judgment and pay all delinquent interest to the holders of maturing coupons and, in the future, to the extent of monies, available, discharge the indebtedness in accordance with the procedure to be established by the judgment herein.

As both parties concede, there is in the statute no express provision requiring’ payment of interest from interest collections and principal from principal payments on the assessments and the determination of the issue must rest upon the construction given certain portions of the act, the ordinance, and the bonds, themselves. The respondents premise their contention on the provisions of section 35, act of 1899 (§9500 C. L. 1921), wherein it is provided that: “All monies collected from said assessments for any improvement shall be applied to the payment of all bonds * * * issued,” on the following words in the bond ordinance: “that said bonds * * * shall be payable out of the monies collected on account of the assessments,” and on the provision contained in the bonds to the effect that ‘ ‘ This bond is payable out of the proceeds of a special assessment to be levied upon real estate * * *. ” It is. asserted that by virtue of-the inference to be drawn from these provisions, all monies collected on account of principal of assessments must go to pay principal of bonds and that none of it may be applied to the payment of interest on bonds, which of necessity then must be discharged by interest solely. The fallacy of this thesis lies in the erroneous assumption that the obligation to pay interest is separate and distinct from the obligation to pay the principal of the bonds. The bond is the sealed promise of the municipality to pay both principal and interest. It reads in part as follows: “The City of - Rocky Ford * * * promises to [pay] the bearer * * '* $1000.00 * * * on the first day of April A. D.1943, * * * with interest thereon from date until payment at the rate of six per centum per annum, payable semi-annually ***.”’

Section 36, chapter 151 S.L. 1899, provides that the *221 “bonds * * * shall bear interest not exceeding six per cent, per annum, as may be ordered by the * * * city council * *■ #, the interest to be paid semiannually, evidenced by coupons * * Under these circumstances the obligation of the city to pay interest is just as much a part of the bond obligation as is its promise to pay principal.

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Bluebook (online)
84 P.2d 823, 103 Colo. 216, 1938 Colo. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisiminger-v-elliott-colo-1938.