Hesse v. City of Watertown

232 N.W. 53, 57 S.D. 325, 1930 S.D. LEXIS 114
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1930
DocketFile No. 7017
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 232 N.W. 53 (Hesse v. City of Watertown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hesse v. City of Watertown, 232 N.W. 53, 57 S.D. 325, 1930 S.D. LEXIS 114 (S.D. 1930).

Opinions

MISER, C.

This action is brought under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act, being chapter 214, Laws 1925. Omitting all findings not essential to the decision of the questions here raised, the facts as found by -the trial court are as follows: Plaintiff and appellant has, for many years, been a resident freeholder of the defendant and respondent city of Watertown and a patron of its municipal light plant. The other defendants and respondents are the mayor, auditor, treasurer, and members of the council of the city. For more than five years, Watertown has owned and operated its own electric light plant, having been thereto authorized by a vote of the people. This electric light plant had a maximum ratedi capacity of 850 kilowatts, all of which was being required by the users of electric current in the city. The municipal light plant furnished electricity to the city of Watertown for the pumping of water in the municipally owned and operated water system and also for the pumping of the sewage in the Watertown sewer system. In addition thereto, the municipal plant furnishes electricity to residences, business houses, and industries, including the Swift Packing Company. At the time of the trial of this action in September, 1929, there was being operated in competition with the municipal plant, under a franchise granted in 1909, a privately owned electric light and power plant, whose franchise would expire on October 20, 1929. Oh March 18, 1929, at the time of the passage of the ordinance hereafter mentioned, the municipal plant was distributing approximately 75 per cent of the electricity required in the city. In furnishing this electricity, the maximum rated capacity of the municipal plant had been exceeded. This and the increasing demand made it necessary to- increase the capacity of the plant. On March 18, 1929, the mayor and city council passed ordinance known as O-31, without a vote of the people having been had prior thereto upon the subject of the issuance of the municipal [327]*327electric light plant revenue bonds proposed therein to- be issued, and without the filing with the city council of a petition of its citizens and taxpayers with relation to the passage and approval of said ordinance or of the issuance of the revenue bonds therein proposed to be issued.

Ordinance C-31 provides for the issuance of $150,000 of revenue bonds to provide for extensions, improvements, and additions to the municipal electric plant of the city of Watertown. These bonds mature in each of the years and amounts as follows: 1932 and 1933, $5,000; 1934, 1935, 1936, and 1937, $10,000; 1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, and 1942, $20,000. Each bond specifically recites that it "is payable solely from the municipal electric plant development fund of said city heretofore created, and does not constitute a general indebtedness of said city within the meaning of any constitutional or statutory provisions or limitations, and the taxing powers of said: city are not pledged and shall never be used to pay either principal or interest of this bond or any part thereof.”

Section 3 of the ordinance, omitting those parts not absolutely essential to this decision, is as_ follows:

“Section 3. From and after delivery of any bonds issued under the provisions of this ordinance, the income and revenues of said Municipal electric plant of the city of Watertown shall be set aside into a separate and special fund to' be used in maintaining said plant and in payment of the aforesaid bond, which revenues shall be apportioned as follows:

“Forty-five per cent of the incomes and revenues of said plant shall be set aside and used for the proper operation and maintenance of said plant. * * *

“Ten per cent of the incomes and revenues of said plant shall be set aside to the depreciation fund and: shall be expended in making good any depreciation in said municipal electric plant and in making good any extensions, additions or constructions to the property of said plant * * *

“Forty-five per cent of the income and revenues of said plant, from month to month as the same shall accrue and be received, shall be paid into the account of the treasury of the city of Water-town and identified as Municipal Electric Plant Development Fund for the purpose of paying the principal and interest of the bonds herein authorized to be issued.

[328]*328“Provided, however,. that when and if there shall ever be moneys in said Municipal Electric Plant Development Fund in excess of the amount of moneys required to pay the principal and interest of the bonds issued pursuant to this ordinance which principal and interest is to become due during the then current fiscal year and the next ensuing fiscal year, such excess may be transferred from said fund upon order of the city council andi used for the payment of any obligations of the city which the city council may order.”

'Section 4 provides that, while any of the bonds authorized thereunder shall remain unpaid, the rates for all services rendered 'by the plant shall be reasonable and just, “taking into account and consideration the value of said Municipal Electric Plant, the cost of maintaining and operating the same, and the proper and necessary allowance for depreciation thereof, and a sufficient and adequate return upon the capital invested.” It also provides that the city shall pay for public service furnished it.

In section 6 it is provided that the city of Watertown “hereby irrevocably pledges said Municipal Electric Plant Development Fund to the payment of the principal and interest of said bonds, subject only to the limitation as to excess funds therein as specified in Section 3 hereof, and any holder of said bonds * * * may by suit, action, mandamus or other proceedings, enforce andi compel performance of all duties required by this ordinance, * * * [and] * * * have appointed a receiver to administer said municipal electric plant- and system on behalf of said city with power to charge and collect rates sufficient to provide for the payment of any and all bonds * * * then outstanding. * * * ”

At the time of the passage of this ordinance, the total bonded indebtedness of the city of Watertown was $1,114,000, less- accumulated sinking funds of $297,099. In addition bonds in the sum of $200,000 for an auditorium had been voted; but no attempt had been made to issue them. So that the net outstanding bonded debt of the city of Watertown was $816,901, without including the proposed revenue bond issue of $150,000.

For a period of years prior to the passage of this ordinance, the profits of the municipal plant hadl been increasing. The city council determined that the revenues from its operation would be sufficient to pay its total operating expense, to keep its plant in [329]*329first-class condition, to pay interest on the “outstanding bonded indebtedness against said electric light plant, besides paying into the sinking fund the required amount each year to provide for meeting the outstanding bonds against said electric light plant as they matured, together with the principal sum of the bonds * * * and without levy of assessments, or the taxation of property be fully competent to meet andl pay all the operating expenses, indebtedness and requirements of said plant annually.”

After the passage of this ordinance, the city purchased a site for the proposed additional building necessary to house the additional machinery and entered into contracts for the construction of the building and for the purchase of the necessary machinery for an additional unit.

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Bluebook (online)
232 N.W. 53, 57 S.D. 325, 1930 S.D. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hesse-v-city-of-watertown-sd-1930.