Kennedy v. City of Sacramento

19 F. 580, 10 Sawy. 29, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2080
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 F. 580 (Kennedy v. City of Sacramento) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. City of Sacramento, 19 F. 580, 10 Sawy. 29, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2080 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.,

(orally.) This is an action brought to recover $9,000 due on coupons of the Sacramento city bonds. It is an ordinary action upon the instruments, not a mandamus against the officers of the city, but an action against tbe city of Sacramento to recover on these coupons as upon a contract. Under the charter of Sacramento, of 1851, a large amount of indebtedness bad accrued, for which bonds were issued. In 1858 the city and county of Sacramento were consolidated into a municipal corporation, like tbe city and county of San Francisco; the boundaries of the city and county being co-extensive with -the former boundaries of the county. In that act consolidating the city and county, provision was made for funding the then existing debt of the city and of the county of Sacramento, and provision was made in the act for the purpose of liquidating, funding, and paying the claims against tbe city and county of Sacramento hereinafter specified. “The treasurer shall .cause to be prepared suitable bonds for tbe county of Sacramento, not exceeding tbe sum of six hundred thousand dollars, and for tbe city of Sacramento not exceeding one million six hundred thousand dollars, bearing interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, from the first day of‘January, 1859.” St. 1858, p. 280, § 37. Then it provides for raising a fund for the payment of the interest, and ultimate extinguishment, of that [581]*581prior indebtedness of the city of Sacramento so funded. In the last clause of the section it provides that “none of the claims herein specified shall be liquidated or paid except in the manner herein provided.

The act also provides that “the city and county shall not be sued in any action whatever, nor shall any of its lands, buildings, improvements, property, franchises, taxes, revenues, actions, choses in action, and effects, be subject to any attachment, levy, or sale, or any process whatever, either mesne or final,” (Id. p. 268, § 1,) thereby cutting off all right of suit, and providing that none of the funds, or revenues from taxation, or otherwise, shall be reached, on account of this indebtedness, otherwise than as provided in the act.

Section 34 provides that the hoard of supervisors shall not have power to levy any greater taxes than-as follows, viz.: “On the real and personal estate, except such as is exempt by law throughout the city and county, a tax of one hundred cents on the one hundred dollars,” shall be levied, and the amount is limited to that sum annually, except for state and special purposes. But it provides further, that “they shall levy for municipal purposes, on all real and personal property within the city, except such as is exempt by law, a tax of one hundred cents on one hundred dollars.”

Section 35 provides that “the revenue derived from and within the city limits for municipal purposes,—namely, taxes, licenses, harbor dues, water-rents, and fines collected in the mayor’s court, or otherwise,—when paid into the treasury, shall he set apart and appropriated as follows: Fifty-five per cent, to an interest and sinking fund, which shall he applied to the payment of the annual interest and the final redemption of bonds issued for city indebtedness, in accordance with the provisions of this act,” referring to the bonds which were to be issued in liquidation of the prior indebtedness of the city in pursuance of the terms of the act.

Section 38 provides: “The annual interest, and principal of all hands issued for claims against the city shall he paid from the interest and sinking fund provided in section 3d, and in the manner otherwise provided in this act.”

There is, then, a provision for funding the prior indebtedness of the city to the amount of $1,600,000, and provision that 55 per cent, of the taxes and other revenues of the city shall be set apart to pay the interest, and to secure the ultimate extinguishment, of the bonds; and it is provided that “none of the claims herein specified shall he liquidated or paid, except in the manner herein,provided;” and it is further provided that there shall be no suit against the city on those or any other claims, aud that no execution or other process shall issue by which any of the property or revenues or moneys or other resources of the city shall be reached.

The rate of interest was 6 per cent, per annum, to bo paid upon the indebtedness. The parties who surrendered their prior evidences of indebtedness and took these bonds, took them under the proyis[582]*582ions of this act, which was a contract made between the city and them; that the bonds should be collected only in that particular manner, and paid in that particular mode, and no other; that there should be no other remedy for them; that the city should not be sued. The advantages which they obtained are subject 'to the provisions made for their payment—to the limitations put upon their remedy. The advantage to the city was that it should not be harassed by any other kind of suit ; an extension of the time for payment; and the reduction of the rate of interest. The advantage to the holders was the specific, certain, and permanent provision made for prompt payment in future. This was a fair contract, entered into between the city on the one hand and its creditors on the other, in virtue of the provisions of this act. There were advantages gained and rights surrendered by each, and a valuable consideration moving from and to-both contracting parties. In 1863 that charter was repealed and another one passed. The city and county were restored by the charter of 1863. In that charter it is provided that the city of Sacramento may be sued upon bonds or covenants, etc., “provided, however, that such bond, covenant, agreement, contract, matter, or thing, that was the cause of action, has been made or entered into after the passage of this act,” (St. 1863, p. 415, § 1;) so that, by implication, in providing the kinds of bonds upon which suit might be brought, it was limited to the covenants or bonds or liabilities accruing after-the passage of the act. Thus, as to these bonds in question, there is no change in the law with reference to the liability of the city to be sued. And in that act it is also “provided further that none of the lands, tenements, hereditaments, taxes, revenues, franchises, action, choses in action, property, or effects of any kind or nature whatsoever, of said city or of either or any of its trusts or uses, shall be attached, levied upon, or sold, on any process whatever, either original, mesne, or final,” thereby continuing, as to all demands against the city, that provision of the charter of 1858 having reference to the inability to execute a judgment'when obtained, by virtue of any process, mesne or final, against the city itself. With reference to the city of Sacramento, therefore, and with reference to these bonds, in both of these particulars, the law as laid down in the act of 1858 is continued.

The third clause of section 2 of the the act of 1863 also provides that the board of trustees shall have power “to levy and collect taxes and assessments on all property within the city, both real and personal, made taxable by law for state or county purposes, which taxes shall not exceed 1 per cent, per annum upon the assessed value of all property.” St. 1863, p. 416. That is the same amount that they could levy under the old charter. Section 26 continues the provision for the payment of the bonds in question with one exception in language. In this act the words “net water rents” aré used instead of “water rents. ” This is the only change. The provision is as follows, viz,:

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. 580, 10 Sawy. 29, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-city-of-sacramento-uscirct-1884.