Haney v. City of Somerset

530 S.W.2d 377, 1975 Ky. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 26, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 530 S.W.2d 377 (Haney v. City of Somerset) 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
Haney v. City of Somerset, 530 S.W.2d 377, 1975 Ky. LEXIS 54 (Ky. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinions

CATINNA, Commissioner.

Robert J. Haney, a citizen, resident, and taxpayer of the City of Somerset, appeals from a judgment of the Pulaski Circuit Court approving the issuance and sale of revenue bonds by the City of Somerset, the proceeds of which are to be used for the construction of a gas transmission pipeline.

The City of Somerset owns and operates a municipal natural gas distribution system. The system is not engaged in the primary production of natural gas, its function being confined exclusively to distributing natural gas purchased from other producers. The supply of gas available to the Somerset system from other sources has been drastically curtailed by the present energy crisis. The system determined that it could acquire a substantial amount of natural gas from the West Hyden field in Leslie County. The city proposes to obtain this available natural gas by constructing an eight-inch transmission line from the West Hyden field to the interstate transmission line of Columbia Gas Transmission Company near Manchester in Clay County. Columbia Gas would transport Somerset’s gas through its privately owned line to the municipal system, and Somerset would defray the cost of constructing the eight-inch pipeline from monies realized from the sale of revenue bonds to be issued by the city, the estimated cost of the project being $1,800,000.

KRS 96.170, while granting cities of the third class power to furnish utility services including heat, is nothing more than a basic grant of authority. Financing of the acquisition, construction, and extension of a municipal natural gas distribution system, as authorized by KRS 96.170, envisions the issue and sale of revenue bonds authorized by KRS Chapter 58. This procedure requires compliance with the statutory mandate set out in KRS 58.010 — 58.140.

The participation of Columbia Gas, a private corporation, in the transaction caused federal authorities to classify the proposed bonds as “industrial development bonds” subject to all federal taxation. (See Section 103(c), U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1954.) Federal regulations concerning the public sale of the proposed revenue bonds require the filing of a detailed financial statement on behalf of Columbia Gas, which requirement is beyond the scope of Somerset’s ability to supply. Being unable to sell the revenue bonds at a publicly advertised competitive sale because of these restrictive federal regulations, Somerset proposes to issue and sell these revenue bonds privately, without any prior public advertisement. This private sale would be consummated by negotiations conducted with a number of “sophisticated investors,” a designation promulgated by federal statutes to define a particular class of investors.

Robert J. Haney filed this declaratory-judgment proceeding contesting the validity of the Somerset plan. It is claimed that various segments of the program are of questionable legality, including the proposal to sell the revenue bonds at a negotiated private sale rather than a publicly advertised competitive sale.

The trial court, upon its consideration of the private versus public sale question, reasoned:

[379]*379“The sale of the proposed bond issue to a limited number of sophisticated investors within the meaning of SEC regulations can be accomplished without an Official Statement and without the special audits necessary to a public sale, and in view of the fact that the proposed bonds would take on some of the aspects of industrial building revenue bonds as authorized by Chapter 103 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes, which bonds may be sold by private negotiations, the proposed sale limited to sophisticated investors, which will require adequate reporting to a representative of the City, will be valid;
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“The City has the legal authority to sell municipal bonds possessing certain characteristics of industrial revenue bonds in a manner limiting such sales to sophisticated investors, as defined by federal law, where it is impractical or impossible to sell such bonds at competitive sale under federal law;”

Chapter 103 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes is concerned with “Revenue Bonds for Miscellaneous City or County Projects,” while KRS 103.200-103.285 are entitled “Industrial Buildings for Cities and Counties.” KRS 103.200 defines an industrial building as follows:

“As used in KRS 103.200 to 103.285, ‘industrial buildings’ or ‘building’ means any building, structure, or related improved area suitable for and intended for use as a factory, mill, shop, processing plant, assembly plant, fabricating plant, or parking or pollution control area or structure deemed necessary to the establishment, retention or expansion thereof, and the necessary operating machinery and equipment, or any of these things, to be rented or leased to an industrial concern by the city or county by which it is acquired.”

The revenue bonds now being considered by Somerset cannot qualify as industrial building revenue bonds under this definition. Although KRS 103.230 specifically permits the private sale of this particular type revenue bond, such private or negotiated sale is conditioned upon the lessee of the industrial building requesting in writing that the bonds be sold privately. This court is of the opinion that there is no possible theory by which the revenue bonds that Somerset proposes to issue can be transformed into industrial building revenue bonds that can be sold at a private or negotiated sale.

This court is of the opinion that existing Kentucky law is the controlling consideration in determining the validity of bonds issued by the Commonwealth or any of its governmental agencies. For many years the general policy of the Commonwealth has been to require the offering of municipal bonds at a publicly advertised competitive sale. Eagle v. City of Corbin, 275 Ky. 808, 122 S.W.2d 798 (1938). However, the public policy, as announced by the court, has upon occasions been made the subject of exceptions by acts of the legislature; for example, the Capital Plaza Authority, the Turnpike Authority, and the County Turnpike Authority, all of which are authorized by specific legislative enactment to sell revenue bonds either at public or private sale. Cf. Perkins v. City of Frankfort, Ky., 276 S.W.2d 449 (1953).

Although it is contended that KRS 96.170

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530 S.W.2d 377, 1975 Ky. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haney-v-city-of-somerset-kyctapp-1975.