Hughes v. Board of Commissioners

108 La. 146
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
DocketNo. 14,289
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 108 La. 146 (Hughes v. Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Board of Commissioners, 108 La. 146 (La. 1902).

Opinion

-The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nigholls, C. J.

The Caddo Levee District was created by Act No. 74 of 1892, and a Board of Commissioners authorized to be appointed to take charge of its affairs. By Section 4 of the act the board was authorized “ to make and execute contracts and to do and perform any and all acts necessary to carry out the objects of this act, viz.: The thorough and perfect protection of the lands of this district from damage by flood.”

It was made the duty of the board to devise and carry into effect a comprehensive levee system, having for its object perfect protection of the entire district from overflow; to determine in what manner work shall be undertaken, and to provide means to carry out the recommendations of the Board of Engineers; "provided, that all work be advertised to be let out to the lowest responsible bidder, save in cases of emergency.” (Section 5.)

[149]*149For the purpose of providing means to carry out the objects of the act the board was empowered to levy a ten-mill district levee tax, a local assessment not exceeding five cents for every acre of land in the district, and a local .assessment not exceeding fifty cents per bale on all cotton raised in the district. (Sections 7-8.)

As an “additional means” to carry out the purpose of the act, the State made provision for the granting to the board .all lands .belonging to or that might thereafter belong to the State, “and embraced within the limits of the district.” (Section 10.)

And for the purpose of raising “further additional funds” for the said district the board was empowered to issue and negotiate bonds to the amount of $200,000. (Section 10.) The interest on these bonds was made payable out of the ten-mill tax. After twenty years the excess of this tax was to go into the sinking fund.

The board had until 1912 at its disposal the proceeds of the acreage and cotton taxes, and the sales of lands, and any excess of the ten-mill tax over and above interest on the bonds.

The work contracted for is admitted to form part of the levee district of the district, and the contract between the board and Ivey was entered into in good faith by all parties under the belief and conviction that it was authorized by the law. It is not pretended that the contract was not fully and properly performed by the contractor.

The contract was made pursuant to the resolution of the defendant board providing that payment be made “in certificates of indebtedness payable out of the first surplus of revenues of the Caddo Levee Board, aijter the liquidation of. the indebtedness of the board to date, said certificates to bear eight per cent, interest per annum.”

At the date of the Ivey contract, in August, 1895, the board owed John Scott & Sons $22,964 for levee work, payable out of the revenues of 1895 and 1896, and Bobbett and Lanan $31,402, payable out of the revenues of 1897 and subsequent years. The board ¡had issued $200,000 of bonds under Act 74 of 1892, maturing in 1922.

In 1900 the General Assembly by Act No. 142 of that year authorized the defendant board to issue and negotiate bonds to the extent of $100,000 for the purpose of raising additional funds to carry out the objects contemplated by Act No. 74 of 1892, and to fund the unbonded indebtedness of the Caddo Levee District. Section 2 of said act reads as follows: “That the board shall have the right to negotiate said bonds at a rate of discount, including commissions, not to exceed 10 [150]*150per cent, and to exchange said bonds for the interest-bearing ‘warrants’ heretofore issued by the said board on the best terms possible, at the discretion of the hoard.”

These bonds were issued and sold above par. At the date of the judgment in the ease at bar, all the outstanding warrants except those sued upon had been paid by compromise settlements. The plaintiff claims, therefore, -that his warrants have become due and prays judgment for their full value and interest. The president of the board testified that the sale of lands amounts to between $50,000 and $75,000. The current expenses for 1895 and 1896 show a surplus after payment of interest on the bonds. The revenues for 1897 and subsequent years are not shown.

The plaintiff sues not only upon the certificates or warrants, but upon the contract made with Ivey under a partial transfer, with subrogation, using the certificates as evidence. The contract itself contemplated and provided 'for a breaking or dividing up of the indebtedness to be created thereunder in instalments. The district judge has considered and disposed of the various objections raised by the defendant in an able opinion, and from his concise statement of acts we have quoted freely.

Referring to the claim made by the defendant that the word of the contract to the effect that the certificates were to he payable out of the first surplus revenues of the hoard, after the liquidation of the indebtedness of the board to date (August, 1895), postponed payment of the certificates until not only all -outstanding warrants, but also all outstanding bonds which had been issued, should have been paid, he very correctly declared that ‘‘it was not to be presumed that the parties contemplated the bonds as a part of this indebtedness, but referred simply to th'e outstanding levee warrants issued to the contractors already named, and for which the revenues of 1895, 1896 and 1897 and subsequent years had been pledged.”

In disposing of the contention of the defendant that the contract was null and void because the board did not legally provide for and had no means wherewith to pay the debt arising from the contract in accordance with Section 2448 of the Revised Statutes, and did not comply with Act 30 of 1877, the court said:

“A mere perusal of the section (Section 2448) shows that it only applies to the police juries and constituted authorities of cities and towns. Act 30 of 1877 only applies to municipal corporations and [151]*151police juries. A levee district is a mere functionary of the State (Peart vs. Levee District, 45 Ann. 425), one of the instrumentalities which the General Assembly may use in performing its duty of maintaining a levee system in the State (Egan vs. Hart, 45 Ann. 1362). The Board of State Engineers act in conjunction with the District Levee Commissioners, surveys and locates all levees, determines what repairs and changes shall be made, what streams shall be opened or closed and how the State engineers’ fund (provided by the State,) apportioned to the district, shall be expended.”

“Section 5 of Act No. 74 of 1892 makes it -the duty the board ‘to provide the means to carry «out the recommendation of the Board of Engineers.’ ”

“In the nature of things, the General Assembly-could not anticipate the cost of the original construction of the levee system in the Caddo Levee District, hence no limit of expenditures was fixed. The bond issue was authorized ‘ for the purpose of raising additional funds.’ The amount to be expended was left to the discretion of the board subject to the recommendation of the State engineers. We find in the act no provision for annual appropriations and annual benefits, ,and no restrictions on annual expenditures. The board was not required to pass ordinances providing the means of paying the principal and interest of debts contracted for levee construction and repair. Its duty was simply to provide means to carry out the recommendations of -the State engineer.

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Bluebook (online)
108 La. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-board-of-commissioners-la-1902.