Hunter v. City of Louisville

270 S.W. 841, 208 Ky. 326, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 841 (Hunter v. City of Louisville) 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
Hunter v. City of Louisville, 270 S.W. 841, 208 Ky. 326, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 280 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirmiug.

Appellant, a citizen and taxpayer of tlie city of Louisville, instituted this action against the city, its mayor *327 and its commissioners of sewerage, wherein he seeks to enjoin them from issuing and selling $5,000,000.00 of sewerage bonds the city was authorized to issue under an enabling act passed by the 1920 General Assembly, being chapter 86 of the Acts of that year.

A demurrer to his petition was sustained, and he declining to plead further, his petition was dismissed, and he prosecutes this appeal.

The petition refers to the act of the General Assembly and sets forth at length the provisions of an ordinance of the city of Louisville passed in conformity to the act, which ordinance provided for the holding of an election at the regular .November election, 1924, in the city upon the question whether or not the city should become indebted in the sum of $5,000,000.00 by issuing its bonds for that amount to be us.ed as authorized in the act of the General Assembly to construct additions to and make more perfect the city’s system of sewerage. It is alleged that notice of the holding of the election was given in the manner_ required by the ordinance, and that at the election the identical question prescribed in the ordinance was submitted to the voters of the city, and printed on each and every ballot used at the election, and that there were cast on that question 61,753 votes and of this number 43,854 were cast in the affirmative and in favor of the issuance of the bonds, and 17,899 were cast in the negative and against their issue, and that such result of the election had been duly certified.

It is then alleged that the said ordinance was invalid for three reasons, to-wit:

1. Because the ordinance passed by the general council transcends and contravenes the provisions of the enabling act in that the ordinance provides for the issuance of negotiable bonds, while the enabling act does not empower or authorize the city to issue bonds of that character, but only authorizes the issuance of “bonds” without the requirement of negotiability.

2. Because the ordinance fails to specify to whose credit the proceeds of the bonds, when they shall have been sold, shall go, and fails to specify in what depositaries, if any, their proceeds shall be placed, and fails to specify in what manner or upon what terms as to interest, if any, the proceeds shall be deposited, and fails to specify in what manner said funds shall be withdrawn from deposit, and because of such failures in the ordi *328 nance there is no sufficient compliance with the authority conferred by the enabling act.

3. Because neither the notice of election nor the question submitted to the voters submitted to them whether the city should exceed its current income for the fiscal year for the purpose of extending and perfecting its- sewerage system.

These three questions are the only ones discussed in the briefs, and will be considered in the order they are stated.

It is true the enabling act does not in express terms authorize the issual of negotiable bonds, but it does give express authority for the issual of bonds to the amount of $5,000,000.00, and distinctly provides that the ordinance shall provide the date and maturity of the bonds, the rate of interest they shall bear,

“and the ordinance shall also contain the necessary details in reference to’ the execution and delivery of said bonds, their denominations, coupons to be annexed, taxes to be levied to pay the interest, and a sinking fund to retire such bonds at maturity. ’ ’

While there is no specific authority to issue negotiable bonds, there is a specific grant of power to do everything which ordinarily is done in the issuing of negotiable bonds. We know as a matter of current commercial custom that so large an issue of municipal bonds could not be advantageously placed upon the market and sold, unless they were in fact made negotiable.

Municipalities may exercises not only the powers expresly granted to them by statute, but such as are neo essarily or fairly implied in or incident to the powers so expressly granted, and those essential to the accomplishment of the things which they are expressly authorized to do. Barrow v. Bradley, 190 Ky. 480.

Riving effect, therefore, to these well recognized rules of municipal government, we find from the broad and comprehensive grant of power in the enabling act that the. legislative purpose necessarily was to authorize the general council to provide for the sale of negotiable bonds, otherwise it would not have granted authority to provide for their maturity, for the rate of interest they should bear or for the annexing of interest coupons to' them.

Not only so, we find the general rule to be that where express power has been given by the legislature to a mu *329 nicipality to issue interest bearing bonds, this power appears to contemplate and embrace the power to make the bonds negotiable.

Dillon on Municipal Corporations, fifth edition, vol. 2, section 882, says:

“If express power be conferred upon a municipality to issue bonds bearing interest, this contemplates and by necessary or reasonable implication authorizes’ the issue of negotiable bonds. . * . The general power to issue ‘bonds’ must be taken to authorize bonds in the usual form of such well known commercial obligations. The usual form embodies a contract and obligation negotiable in its terms.”
Again, we find this rule stated in 28 Cyc., p. 1612:
“An express legislative grant of power is not essential to confer the authority to give municipal bonds a negotiable and commercial form and character, but such power may be inferred from the intent of the act, indicated by its purpose and-scope.” See also Vicksburg v. Lombard, 51 Miss. 111; Maddox v. Graham, 2 Met. 56.

The second contention is equally untenable. It is true the ordinance is silent on the question of what shall become of the proceeds of the bonds when they are sold, or in what depositaries they shall be placed, or upon what terms as to interest they shall be deposited, or as to the manner of their withdrawal; but the enabling act was so specific as to these things that no such provision in the ordinance was necessary.

Section 12 of the enabling act provides when the bonds were issued they should be placed under the con■trol of the sewerage commission, which should determine when and at what price they should be sold, with certain restrictions. It provides that when they are sold ■the proceeds should go to the credit of the commission

“in the- same depositaries which are selected for the deposit of the funds of the sinking fund commissioners of the city, and upon the same agreement as to interest, and shall be withdrawn only upon the checks of the secretary and‘treasurer of the commission countersigned by the chairman, accompanying a voucher approved by the chief -engineer.”

*330

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 841, 208 Ky. 326, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapphigh-1925.