Frantz v. Jacob

11 S.W. 654, 88 Ky. 525, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 7, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 S.W. 654 (Frantz v. Jacob) 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
Frantz v. Jacob, 11 S.W. 654, 88 Ky. 525, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 79 (Ky. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion op the court.

This action was instituted in the Louisville Law and Equity Court by the appellant, who is a resident of that [529]*529-city, and a tax-payer, to enjoin the mayor and council from issuing $1,500,000 of bonds, in accordance with the popular will, ascertained at an election held for that purpose, and by virtue of an ordinance under which the submission was made. No question is raised as to the passage of the ordinance, or the election held under it, but it is claimed that so much of the city charter as authorized 'such an appropriation, with the consent of the people or otherwise, was repealed by an act approved May 12,1884, entitled “ An act to revise and amend the tax laws of the ■city of Louisville.” Section 67 of the charter of 1870 authorized the city to borrow money, and to give or loan the credit of the city in aid of any person or' corporation, for appropriate municipal objects.

Section 68 provides the condition upon which the city council may contract debts and liabilities in behalf of the city beyond the amount of revenue of the current fiscal year, and payable within or beyond such year. The ■ordinance authorizing the creation of the liability must be published in the newspapers of the city, as required by section 68 ; it must be approved by a majority of the votes cast for it by the qualified voters of the city. Th« aggregate vote for and against the ordinance must not be less than one-fourth the aggregate vote at the last preceding general election for city or State purposes. Provision shall be made in said ordinance for levying and • collecting the annual tax “ upon such estate as may be “ designated by the council, sufficient to pay the interest “ on such debt or liability as the same shall become due, “ and to discharge the principal thereof at maturity..”

The right of the tax-payer to enjoin, in order to pre[530]*530vent the issuing of these bonds, if illegal, both for his own protection and that of innocent parties who may purchase them, is not now an open question; and if this law under which the appropriation was made by the city, and approved by the popular vote, was repealed by the act of May 12, 1884, the injunction should have been perpetuated.

By an act approved March 11, 1884, under the title of ‘,‘An act to designate certain persons to prepare new assessment and revenue laws for the city of Louisville,” the legislature selected those learned in the law to prepare and formulate a complete system of laws ‘ ‘ regulating, .in all respects, the assessment of property and dioses in action, the duties of all assessing and collecting officers, the time, terms and manner of the payment of taxes, and the compensation to be allowed officers charged with the raising and collection of the revenue.”

The act of May 12, 1884, was the product of the minds of one or more of the persons named in the act of March 11, 1884, and is aptly and skillfully drawn with a view, not of making a new charter, or of embodying all the laws on the subject of taxation applicable to the city, but of revising and reforming the mode of collecting and imposing taxation to meet the ordinary annual expenditures of the city government. The framers of that act saw the changes essential to the proper mode of enforcing and collecting such revenue, and no allusion is made, either in the act in question or by the legislature, to the right of the city council to make extraordinary appropriations, other than for the revenue proper, by the consent of the people expressed at the polls; in fact, the [531]*531power to make suck appropriations having been takén from the council and confided to the people, was not the proper subject for consideration in discussing the plan to be adopted for enforcing the collection of the annual tax. It was not the imposition of a tax simply to defray the ordinary expenses of the city, but the question addressed to the voter is, Shall the council or the city make contracts for improvements municipal in their character, that creates a liability on your property to be enforced by taxation ? The annual taxation as provided by the original charter, and by the amendment of May 12, 1884, might be entirely inadequate to repair the public buildings of the city, or to reconstruct the streets that are worn out by constant travel, or the prosperity of the city might demand a large expenditure essential to the health of its citizens, or their comfort and convenience, and for such reasons section 68, of the charter of 1870, has been left untouched, that the city authorities may be able to meet any such emergency by the consent of the qualified voters. We do not mean to adjudge that where a system of street improvements has been adopted, and the western portion of the city has improved its streets by taxing the owner, that this same owner may be taxed to improve the streets in the eastern part of the city in like manner. This would be unequal taxation, and open to constitutional objection; and while that system, producing equality and uniformity in imposing such burdens, should be adhered to, when streets, sewers, etc., become so much out of repair as the improvement, if made at the expense of the property owner, would result in a virtual confiscation of his property, or in the imposition [532]*532■of a burden unequal and unjust, yet it is manifest the ■council may resort to the popular vote, and obtain, by the consent of those to be taxed, the right to contract such a debt as is necessary to make the improvement. If it is a municipal purpose to which the money is to be applied by the sale of these bonds, we perceive no objection to the ordinance, or the proceeding under it, as it can not well be doubted that the reconstruction of streets, sewers, ■etc., belong to the municipality, and it is the duty of the council to see that they are opened and kept in order for the public convenience. When the contingency arises requiring an expenditure for the improvement of the great and principal thoroughfares of a city, it was never contemplated that the owner should incur the expense if the burden was such as would take from him his property instead of improving it, and in such cases resort should be had to the provisions of section 68, and the improvements made, should the voters favor the ordinance, for by their votes they express a willingness to be taxed. If the owner should be taxed in the ordinary mode so as to make the improvement bordering on his property liable for its value, and to an extent that would, in effect, confiscate his property, he would at once receive the protection of the Chancellor; and with section 68 of the charter of 1870 repealed, the growth and progress of a great city would be checked, and no remedy left either the city authorities or the people to avoid the result. We think 'it plain that the act of May 12, 1884, was only an amendment to the ordinary tax laws of the city, and that neither the framers of that act nor the legislature considered, in its adoption, section 68 of the [533]*533charter of 1870. (City of Louisville v. Hyatt, &c., 5 B. M., 199; Broadway Baptist Church v. McAtee &c., 8 Bush, 508; Oakland Paving Co. v. Rier, 52 California, 270 Cumming v. Mayor, &c., 11 Paige, 600.) The right or the extent of taxation by the city council is limited by the act of May 12, 1884, and when an appropriation exceeding the ordinary amount necessary for the revenue proper, and payable in the same or in a different year, becomes necessary, it can only’be done by the consent of the qualified voters of the city.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W. 654, 88 Ky. 525, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frantz-v-jacob-kyctapp-1889.