Louisville Trust Co. v. Com'rs. of Sinking Fund, Etc.

84 S.W.2d 20, 260 Ky. 219, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 435
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 21, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 84 S.W.2d 20 (Louisville Trust Co. v. Com'rs. of Sinking Fund, Etc.) 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
Louisville Trust Co. v. Com'rs. of Sinking Fund, Etc., 84 S.W.2d 20, 260 Ky. 219, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 435 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas —

Reversing.

Section 3010-1 to and including section 3010-19 compose parts of the charter of cities of the first class in this commonwealth. They 'create and prescribe for a sinking fund for cities of that class, to be applied on its bonded indebtedness as it matures, and for the meeting of interest installments due thereon. They provide for an administrative agency called “Commissioners of the Sinking Fund of the City of Louisville,” and which will hereinafter be referred to as “commissioners.” Their duties are outlined in the statutes referred to, including what they may do with a temporarily idle fund which may not be immediately needed for the purpose for which it was created, including (a) its investment, but if not so invested then (b)'its deposit in financial institutions located within the city. Duty (a) is prescribed in section 3010-9, and it is in *221 these words: “The funds, estate and income belonging now or hereafter to said fund shall be and is vested in and be under the control and management of the board of commissioners for the purposes herein declared; and if injured, withheld or abstracted, said board of commissioners may sue for and recover the same or any part thereof in their corporate name. The said commissioners shall apply said fund to the payment of the city’s debts chargeable on the samé, when they can do so on fair terms; but whenever there shall be a surplus of said fund, which cannot be applied on fair terms, to the extinguishment of said liabilities, the said commissioners may invest the same in bonds of said city, or for which it is bound, or bonds of the state of Kentucky, or-in United States bonds.”

Duty (b) is prescribed in section 3010-12, and it is in these words: “The commissioners of the sinking fund shall deposit the funds in their hands as commissioners in some incorporated bank, state or national, located or doing business in said city. The bank selected by the commissioners aforesaid shall give bond with good and sufficient security to secure the said commissioners the payment of all moneys and other things of value deposited by them with such bank; and upon such bond recovery may be had for any breach of the conditions thereof by suit in any court of competent jurisdiction. The moneys or other things of value belonging to the sinking fund, or which may be placed to the credit of the commissioners of the sinking fund, can only be withdrawn upon the order of the treasurer and secretary, approved and certified by the president of the commissioners of the sinking fund.”

The commissioners are incorporated by the statute with the usual powers and incidents of corporations, including the right to contract and be contracted with, and to sue and be sued. On March 30, 1935, they had on hand as a part of the city’s sinking fund the sum of $1,000,000, which could not be applied to the payment of the city’s nondue indebtedness, “on fair terms” because of the high premium on its unmatured bonds, and it became and was necessary to either invest it for the time being, which is provided for in section 3010-9, supra, of our Statutes; or to deposit it pursuant to the provisions of section 3010-12, supra, of the Statutes. It could not be invested in bonds of the “state of Ken *222 tucky” because there are no such bonds. The high premium on the unmatured city bonds was such as to create the possibility of loss if the fund was invested in them, and United States bonds bore a small rate of interest and the market value of which, though now at a premium, constantly fluctuates, so that a possible loss, after paying the premium, might be incurred by the time the idle surplus fund in the hands of the commissioners would be needed, and at which time the investment, whatever it may be, would have to be disposed of; for all of which reasons the commissioners saw proper not to make the investment in the securities expressly mentioned in section 3010-9, supra. '

The commissioners then entered into a tentative agreement with appellant, Louisville Trust Company, the substance of which was: That they would deposit the $1,000,000 fund with that company on a time deposit bearing 2% per cent, interest from that date, the principal to be paid $200,000 subject to cheek and payable 22 months thereafter, and like sums payable 24 months, 26 months, 28 months, and 30 months thereafter. To secure the payment of the entire deposit, plaintiff, trust company, agreed to deposit in a safety box to be kept in its vaults under the joint control of it and the commissioners, United States bonds in the aggregate sum of $250,000, which the commissioners might appropriate to the payment of any due and unpaid installment of the. entire deposit that might not be met by the depository upon its due date and demand therefor, and to the extent of the depletion of the $250,000 security the- depository should replenish it with like securities.

Before that agreement was carried into execution, this declaratory judgment action was filed by plaintiff against the commissioners in the Jefferson circuit court for a declaration of rights, and which involves only the authority of the commissioners to enter into such ah arrangement under the facts meticulously set out in the petition, some of which were the future dates when the entire deposit, or portions of it, will be required to meet maturing indebtedness of the city and for which the tentative deposit contract considered and provide^ for. The petition discloses facts that would in all probability create loss of the 2% per cent, interest to be paid by plaintiff under the tentative agreement, unless it was carried out. Counsel for the commissioners, the defend *223 ant in the action, filed a demurrer to the petition which the court sustained, and upon plaintiff declining to plead further, it was dismissed, to reverse which plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

But two questions are involved, and they are: (1) "Whether or not the tentative contract or arrangement referred to is an investment of the fund, or a deposit of it? and (2) if it should be held to be a deposit, such as is comprehended by section 3010-12, then whether or not the commissioners, should require plaintiff as the depository to secure the entire deposit by a 100 per cent, coverage, i. e., by the execution of a bond, or the giving of other acceptable security, of the solvent value of $1,000,000? We will endeavor to answer them in the order named.

1. With reference to question (1), it is contended by counsel for defendant that a time deposit constitutes a loan, and, therefore, an investment of the amount lent, and that the transaction by which a time deposit is made strips it of the elements of an ordinary deposit which latter, counsel insist, is the only one referred to and dealt with in section 3010-12, supra. From such premise they also argue that the only investments mentioned in section 3010-9 that may be made by the commissioners are in bonds of the city, bonds of the state of Kentucky and United States bonds, and which they insist constitute mandatory limitations, i. e., that the commissioners are forbidden by that section to invest the surplus fund ip their hands in any other securities than the ones mentioned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.2d 20, 260 Ky. 219, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-trust-co-v-comrs-of-sinking-fund-etc-kyctapphigh-1935.