Lang v. City of Cavalier

228 N.W. 819, 59 N.D. 75, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 126
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 228 N.W. 819 (Lang v. City of Cavalier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lang v. City of Cavalier, 228 N.W. 819, 59 N.D. 75, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 126 (N.D. 1930).

Opinion

*80 ' Nuessle, J.

The city of Cavalier is a municipal corporation. The defendants Garvey, Sveinson and Green are its mayor, auditor and treasurer, respectively. The plaintiff Lang is a citizen of and taxpayer in the city. He brings this action to restrain the defendant city and its officers from carrying out that certain contract for the installation of an electric light plant and the payment of the cost thereof. The case was tried to the court without a jury. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the defendants and ordered judgment accordingly. The plaintiff appeals from this judgment and demands a trial de novo in this court.

For many years Lang owned and operated the electric plant which supplied light and power to the city of Cavalier. In 1926 Lang sold his plant to the Otter Tail Power Company, a corporation engaged in the manufacture, distribution and sale of electricity. About this time, and probably because of this sale, there was some agitation in Cavalier *81 directed toward municipal ownership of public utilities. As a result of this -agitation an election was held on May 31, 1927, on tbe question of whether or not the city should purchase or erect and operate an electric plant and distribution system. The vote by a large majority was in favor of the city so doing. On July 26, 1927, an election was called and held to vote on the question of whether the city should increase its debt limit from 5 to 8 per cent of its assessed valuation. The vote was in the affirmative. In the meantime the IT airbanks-Morse Company had been negotiating with the city authorities for the sale by the company to the city of an electric generating plant. A survey of the city was made and its power and light requirements estimated. On the basis of the estimate as thus made, and on- the representations of the Fairbanks-Morse Company as to the expense entailed in the operation of a plant such as it was proposed to provide and install, the city and the company on August 24 entered into an agreement under the terms of which the city was to provide a distribution system and a building in which an electric generating plant might be erected and installed, and the company was to furnish and install the plant in the building so provided. The city was to pay therefor the sum of $27,161.40 in fifty-eight equal instalments of $468.30. Such payments were to be evidenced by pledge orders, the first of which was to be payable thirty days after the installation of the plant and the others thereafter at intervals of thirty days until all were paid. Until all of these pledge orders were paid the plant so installed was to be considered as personal property belonging to the company, and if the city failed to pay any order according to the terms thereof, then the company might repossess itself of the machinery and equipment. Pursuant to the estimates as to the electric requirements of the city and its inhabitants and the cost of maintenance and operation of the plant, the city agreed as to the minimum charge that it should make for light and power, and the maximum that it might pay for salaries and labor in the operation of the plant. The city further agreed to create a special fund to be made up out of the net profits resulting from the operation of the plant, to keep the same intact for use in payment of the pledge orders, and to operate the plant until they were paid. It was also expressly stipulated that the city should not be *82 held liable in any way on account of tbe purchase of said plant other than for the monthly payments thus to be made out of any net profits resulting from its operation. An ordinance was duly enacted establishing rates and creating a special fund pursuant to the terms of the contract entered into with the Fairbanks-Morse Company. Thereupon the city procured a site, began the erection of the building to contain the plant and the distribution system, and the company began to assemble machinery and equipment and to erect and install the same. On September 29 an election was held upon the question of the issuance of not to exceed $16,000 -worth of bonds, the proceeds of which were to be used in the erection of the building and distribution system. The proposition carried. On September 28 the instant action was begun, but service of the papers therein was not made until September 30, after the bond election had been held. The plaintiff also applied for an order pendente lite restraining the defendants from going forward under the contract. The hearing on the application for this order came on to be heard in October and the matter was fully considered. The trial court denied the application. In the meantime the bonds voted at the election on September 29 were issued and sold, and the city used the proceeds thereof to pay for the building and distribution system. The generating plant was installed and at the time the instant action came on for trial the city was operating the plant and distributing current over the system. The net profits over the expense of operation were more than sufficient to meet the monthly payments which the city had contracted to make. The plaintiff now seeks to enjoin the city from proceeding further pursuant to the terms of the contract, contending that the city threatens to expend public money under a void and ultra vires contract; that it has exercised or attempted to exercise a power not conferred upon it to construct a light plant in a manner other than that prescribed by the statutory enabling act; that the obligations arising out of such transactions are in excess of the debt limit fixed by the Constitution; that the bonds issued by the city to provide money for the building of the transmission system were invalid and void; that the contract is invalid because of the failure of the city to make an appropriation for the moneys to be expended under it; that the elections which were conditions precedent to the exercise of the *83 power to acquire an electric system were not legally conducted. On tbe other band, the city contends that in entering into the contract and in carrying out the terms thereof it was and is acting wholly within its power ; that the plaintiff is not a proper party to bring the action; that there is a defect of parties defendant in that the Fairbanks-Morse Company is not joined.

At the outset we will consider the defendants’ challenge to the right of the plaintiff to institute this action. Defendants’ contention is that the plaintiff has not shown any damage to himself as an individual that will be likely to result as a consequence of the city’s entering into the contract with the Fairbanks-Morse Company. It seems to us that there is no ground for the challenge thus interposed. The plaintiff is a citizen and taxpayer of the city of Cavalier. He complains that the city has entered into a contract with the Fairbanks-Morse Company without authority of law, and, as a result of that contract, is about to unlawfully expend and dissipate the funds of the city and incur a debt contrary to the prohibition of the Constitution and of the statute. If this be so, plaintiff, as a taxpayer, has a right to bring the action in his own behalf and on behalf of all other taxpayers. He need not show any interest other than that which he has as a taxpayer, or any damage or injury to him other than that which he will suffer as a taxpayer in common with all other taxpayers. He has the right as a taxpayer to have his complaint heard. See Engstad v. Dinnie, 8 N. D. 1, 16 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
228 N.W. 819, 59 N.D. 75, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lang-v-city-of-cavalier-nd-1930.