Falls City Construction Co. v. Fiscal Court

170 S.W. 26, 160 Ky. 623, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 524
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 S.W. 26 (Falls City Construction Co. v. Fiscal Court) 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
Falls City Construction Co. v. Fiscal Court, 170 S.W. 26, 160 Ky. 623, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 524 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Miller

Reversing upon tbe original appeal and affirming upon tbe cross-appeal. j-

In May, 1913, tbe court bouse of Wolfe County, situated at Campton, was totally destroyed by fire. It was insured for $6,000.00, which sum was promptly paid and deposited to the credit of tbe county.

[624]*624The fiscal court having appointed a building committee, consisting of S. P. Howe, J. C. Lindon and J. S. Miller, to make a contract for the building of a new court house, the committee, acting upon behalf of Wolfe County and its fiscal court, made a contract on July 18, 1913, with the appellant, the Palls City Construction Company, by which that company agreed to build a specified part of the court house, known in the record as “Stage A,” for the sum of $6,000.00, in cash. Stage'A included the foundation and exterior walls of the court house up to the first story window sills, exclusive of the portico.

The contract further provided that this $6,000.00 was to be paid to the contractor by the county, out of the funds derived from the insurance policy, then on deposit in the county treasury; $3,500.00 thereof to be paid when the foundation had been put in and the walls built up to the established grade line, and the remaining $2,500.00 when Stage A was completed.

Article 19 of the contract contained this further provision :

“It is agreed by the parties hereto that the contractor and the county will make a legal contract for the erection and completion of the remainder of the building according to plans, specifications and proposal accepted by the building committee for seventeen thousand seven hundred and fifty ($17,750.00) dollars, to be paid in annual installments, with interest thereon at six per cent per annum, payable annually until said debt is fully paid. Said contract shall be made satisfactory to the attorneys of both parties hereto.”'

Pursuant to the above agreement, the parties made a second contract on August 7, 1913, with the appellant, for the completion of the court house, known as Stage B, for $17,750.00, which aggregated $22,775.00 when the interest was included. This sum was to be paid in five installments as the work progressed, by the delivery of county warrants to the contractor for the contract price, less $250.00 which was to be paid in cash. These warrants amounting to $22,525.00, were to be cared for and paid out of a special tax of twenty cents on each $100.00 of assessed property, levied for that purpose for the years 1914 to 1921, inclusive.

In the second contract, article 2 of the first contract for the construction of Stage A is referred to and made part of the second contract, only so far as said article [625]*625might be applicable for the purpose of aiding the county and the contractor in the construction of the work under the second contract; it being expressly provided, however, that nothing in the second contract should be construed to conflict or interfere with the first contract of July 18, 1913, for the building of Stage A.

Article 7 of the second contract provided that it should not become binding upon either party thereto, and nothing should be done under it by either party until the contractor should have finished his work on Stage A according to the contract of -July 18, 1913, and until the contractor had been paid the contract price of $6,000.00 therefor.

As above stated, the contract of July 18, 1913, was made by the building committee upon behalf of Wolfe County and its fiscal court. But at a meeting of the fiscal court held on August 7, 1913, said contract for the construction of Stage A was approved, and the contract for Stage B was made and approved. The order recited that the contract price of $6,000.00 for Stage A was to be paid out of money then on hand in the county treasury, and the contract price for Stage B under the second contract was to be paid as heretofore recited and shown in the second contract; and for the purpose of providing the revenue to pay the $22,775.00 that would be payable under the second contract, the fiscal court at said meeting of August 7,1913, levied a tax of twenty cents on each $100.00 of all taxable property in the county for and during the years 1914 to 1921, inclusive. No part of this tax levy was to be applied to the payment of the contract price for building Stage A because that work was to be paid for out of the $6,000.00 insurance money then on hand.

On August 11, 1913, James I. Holland, 'a citizen and taxpayer of Wolfe County, filed this action against the Falls City Construction Company and Wolfe County, seeking to enjoin the execution of the two contracts above mentioned, upon the ground that they violated section 157 of the Constitution, because the indebtedness created by the two contracts was in excess of the revenue which could be raised in Wolfe County, by taxation, during the year in which the contracts were made. It was further alleged that the contract of July 18, 1913, for Stage A, and the contract of August 7, 1913, for Stage B, were really one contract, and had been divided for the purpose of evading section 157 of the Constitution. An [626]*626amended petition alleged that the contracts also violated section 158 of the Constitution.

As no attempt was made by the plaintiff to procure a temporary order of injunction, the appellant proceeded under its first contract in the construction of Stage A of the court house. While this suit was pending, and shortly after Stage A had been completed and the first installment of $3,500.00 of the contract price had been paid, the personel of the fiscal court of Wolfe County was changed by an election of new members who were hostile to the building of a new court house. Consequently, by an amended petition, the new fiscal court joined in the prayer of the petition and sought to have the contracts with the Construction Company declared void, and to recover back from the Construction Company $3,500.00 of the contract price for Stage A which had been paid to it out of the insurance money, and pursuant to the contract of July 18,1913.

Upon the trial the chancellor, in the main, found the facts and the law as contended for by the plaintiffs. He found, as a fact, that the contracts of July 18, 1913, for Stage A, and of August 7, 1913, for Stage B, were so connected and dependent, the one upon the other, that they were in fact but one contract for the building of the entire court house, and were drawn at different dates and in separate instruments for the purpose of evading the provisions of sections 157 and 158 of the Constitution.

As conclusions of law, he found that the two contracts when treated as one, were in violation of section 157 of the Constitution, because they attempted to create an indebtedness on Wolfe County for an amount greater than the income and revenue provided for the year in which said indebtedness was created, and violated section 158 of the Constitution, because they attempted to incur an indebtedness for Wolfe County in excess of two per cent, of the value of the taxable property therein, estimated by the assessment next before the last assessment previous to the incurring of the indebtedness.

Consequently, the chancellor held the two contracts to be void, and enjoined the fiscal court from further attempting to execute them, and from paying to the Construction Company any part of the $2,500.00 balance then due it under , the first contract for Stage A, although the money was then in the county treasury, and had been dedicated to that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 S.W. 26, 160 Ky. 623, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falls-city-construction-co-v-fiscal-court-kyctapp-1914.