Hockensmith v. Co. Bd. of Ed. of Franklin Co.

41 S.W.2d 656, 240 Ky. 76, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 656 (Hockensmith v. Co. Bd. of Ed. of Franklin Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hockensmith v. Co. Bd. of Ed. of Franklin Co., 41 S.W.2d 656, 240 Ky. 76, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 345 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Thomas.—

Reversing.

On May 2, 1931, the county hoard of education of Franklin County adopted an order or resolution providing for the issuance of bonds of the common school district of which the members of the board are representatives (and which under the present law is the entire county of Franklin outside of graded and city school districts that may have been established within it) in the sum of $26,000 for the purpose of funding an accumulated floating indebtedness that had been incurred by the board because of its spending (mostly for the last three years) a sum each year largely in excess of its revenues, a large portion of which is derived by it through the budget system, or the method created by section 439.9a-8 of our present statutes. The remaining portion of the revenues of a county board of education is obtained from the state school fund, and the amount that each county so receives is measured by the number of school pupils residing in it, the state fund paying so much per capita. (

The defendant, board, in this case was about to issue the bonds provided for in its order or resolution, when appellant and plaintiff below, a citizen and taxpayer in the district, filed this equity action against it in the Franklin circuit court to enjoin it from doing so upon the grounds that, (1) it did not legally create the indebted *78 ness proposed to be funded, and for -which reason it was and is void, and, (2) that if mistaken in ground (1), then defendant board, being merely an administrative body without the power to levy taxes and raise revenue, could not incur the debt in any event, and therefore it could not fund, though created for legal purposes, by the issuing of the proposed bonds. These grounds were in a manner denied and contested by the answer, but the record discloses that ¿11 parties to the litigation are friendly to the issuing of the proposed bonds, and the pleadings were not so searchingly drafted as to accurately develop' the facts and conditions with reference to the finances of the board at the time it created the various annual installments of the aggregated indebtedness proposed to be funded. Whether the board had the right under the contention of its learned counsel, hereinafter to be referred to, to expend funds beyond that which it •actually received, would depend upon the existence of certain facts that are not alleged as a condition precedent to its receiving any greater sum for school purposes (from a levy to be made by the fiscal court of the county) than it did receive, and from which we would be compelled to grant the relief sought by plaintiff, and this too, although counsel should be correct in their contention that the board had the right to create the indebtedness and also the right to fund it in the manner proposed. The trial court on final submission dismissed the petition and adjudged that the floating indebtedness of defendant was valid, and that it had the right to fund it by the issuing of the bonds of the county common school district in the manner undertaken, and from that judgment plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

In support of the judgment (assuming that the pleadings were sufficient to present the case on its merits) two lines of cases which this court has heretofore rendered are relied on, and which are: (a) That any county, city, town, taxing district or other municipality in this commonwealth is authorized to expend in any one year all of the revenue which it might have raised by imposing the maximum rate of taxation allowed by section 157 of our Constitution, and that they are not limited in their annual expenditures to the amount of collected revenues that may be derived from levying a less rate of taxation than the maximum one prescribed in that section. It being the contention of counsel that a governmental agency without authority to levy and collect taxes, *79 such as a county board of education, is embraced within such interpreted authority; and (b), cases holding that the valid floating indebtedness of any city, town, county, taxing district, or other municipality, may be funded without a vote of the people within the territory affected. Examples of cases in class (a) are City of Providence v. Providence Electric Light Co., 122 Ky. 237, 91 S. W. 664, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 1915, and Hogan v. Lee County Fiscal Court, 235 Ky. 100, 29 S. W. (2d) 611. There are other intervening ones to the same effect.

Those cases construe the language in section 157 of our Constitution, limiting the expenditures of the subordinate governmental agencies therein specified, as allowing them to expend during any fiscal year the amount of revenue that could have been raised if the maximum rate of taxation provided for in that section had been adopted, and that the expenditures which such organizations may make during any one year is not limited by the amount of revenue actually collected and produced by levying a less rate of taxation than the maximum one therein provided for., The limiting language therein says: “No county, city, town, taxing district, or other municipality, shall be authorized or permitted to become indebted, in any manner or for any purpose, to an amount exceeding, in any year, the income and revenue provided for such year, without the assent of two-thirds of the voters thereof, voting at an election to be held for that purpose; and any indebtedness contracted in violation of this section shall be void. Nor shall such contract be enforceable by the person with whom made; nor shall such municipality ever be authorized to assume the same.”

By way of illustration, those cases hold that a county, being authorized by the section of the Constitution (157) to levy a maximum rate of 50 cents on each hundred dollars worth of taxable property therein, may incur an indebtedness in any fiscal year in an amount up to what such maximum rate would have produced had it been levied, although its fiscal court may have actually levied a much smaller rate, or even no rate at all. It is not our purpose at this time to draw in question the soundness of that interpretation when first made, and in the determination of this case it will be accepted as proper in every respect, notwithstanding this court in rendering such opinions since 1906 made no mention of, or refer *80 ence to, section 4281u-4 of our present statutes, which, was a part of chapter 81, page 352, of the Session Acts of 1906, the provisions of which limit the expenditures of subordinate governmental agencies having power to levy and collect taxes to the amount “actually levied and collected for that year,” and makes it a misdemeanor with fine and imprisonment for any member of the managing boards of such governmental agencies to expend more in any one year than what was actually levied and collected for that purpose.

The cases composing class (ib), supra, are illustrated by that of Vaughn v. City of Corbin, 217 Ky. 521, 28.9 S. W. 1104, and others following it, and which hold that a floating indebtedness of such subordinate governmental agencies, if validly created and with full power and authority to do so at the time of its creation, may be funded by the issuing of bonds for that puprose by the managing authorities of such agencies without a vote of the taxpayers therein.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 656, 240 Ky. 76, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hockensmith-v-co-bd-of-ed-of-franklin-co-kyctapphigh-1931.