Luhrs v. City of Phoenix

262 P. 1002, 33 Ariz. 156, 1928 Ariz. LEXIS 179
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1928
DocketCivil No. 2710.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 262 P. 1002 (Luhrs v. City of Phoenix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luhrs v. City of Phoenix, 262 P. 1002, 33 Ariz. 156, 1928 Ariz. LEXIS 179 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

— In this action Arthur Luhrs, a taxpayer of Phoenix, Arizona, seeks to enjoin that city and certain of its officers' from executing, issuing, selling and delivering any of the “street railway reconstruction and improvement bonds” that a majority of its voters authorized at an election held on April 30th, 1927.

The gravamen of the complaint is that Ordinance No. 928 of that city, under which the question whether the city should issue its bonds for the purpose of raising funds to reconstruct and rehabilitate its municipally owned and operated street-car system was submitted to the voters is void, because it contains two contradictory provisions relating to the amount of bonds it was proposed to issue, leaving the matter so *158 doubtful that no one can know just how many were intended, and also fails to state the exact rate of interest the bonds shall bear. The following language, which, it is claimed, is responsible for this uncertainty, appears in both the ordinance and the proposition submitted to the voters:

“Shall the commission of the city of Phoenix, Maricopa county, Arizona, be authorized to create an indebtedness for and on behalf of said city of Phoenix, upon the credit thereof, in excess of four per centum (4%) per annum of, etc., ... by issuing negotiable serial coupon bonds of the city of Phoenix in the amount of seven hundred fifty thousand ($750,-000.00) dollars for the purpose of acquiring funds for, etc., . . . said bonds to consist of seven hundred fifty (750) in denominations of one thousand ($1,000.00) dollars each, which bonds shall bear the date of their issuance, shall be payable to bearer and bear interest as evidenced by coupons attached thereto at the rate of not to exceed five ,per centum (5%) per annum, interest payable semiannually on the first days of January and July, and beginning January, 1932; said bonds shall mature and become due and payable serially thirty thousand ($30,000.00) dollars on the 1st day of January, of each of the years 1932 to 1957, inclusive.”

It appears further from the complaint that, notwithstanding these alleged defects, the City of Phoenix thereafter by ordinance directed that the bonds be issued and sold to the highest and best bidders, and invited bids therefor; that on June 8th, 1927, it accepted the bid of certain parties, and on the following day its commission enacted Ordinance No. 973, in which it approved the sale thereof and set forth the form of the bonds, the particular description of their numbers, the denomination and maturity of each, and directed that upon their preparation and execution they be delivered to the purchasers; that such bonds are drawn in conformity with this ordinance, but that its provisions are in conflict with *159 those of Ordinance 928 under which the bonds were authorized by the voters; that the said bonds therefore do not conform to and are not the bonds authorized by the voters, and the City of Phoenix has no right, power, or authority to issue and sell them, though the officers who are defendants herein will execute, issue, and deliver them to the purchasers unless enjoined and restrained from so doing.

To this complaint the defendants interposed a general demurrer, and, it being overruled, they filed a plea in bar and answer, to which the plaintiff demurred. This demurrer was overruled, and in support of their plea in bar the defendants introduced the abstract of record in the case of Buntman et al. v. City of Phoenix et al., 32 Ariz. 18, 255 Pac. 490. Thereupon the court sustained the plea in bar and dismissed the action declaring that the bonds when issued and sold would constitute a valid, legal and binding obligation against the City of Phoenix, and it is from this judgment that the plaintiff appeals.

The only errors assigned arise out of the order overruling appellant’s demurrer to the plea in bar and of the later one sustaining the plea itself. The basis of the assignments is that the matters alleged in the complaint were not raised or considered in the case of Buntman et al. v. City of Phoenix et al., nor are they such that they could have been considered if raised, and, this being true, the appellant is not concluded by the judgment in that case.

In answering this proposition, appellees contend, first, that it was determined in the cause of Buntman et al. v. City of Phoenix et al., supra, is therefore res adjudicata and necessarily not subject to attack in this case. Appellant, however, takes the position that the purpose of that action was to enjoin the holding of an election upon the question of issuing the bonds upon the ground that the proposed issue of $750,000 Would exceed the limit to which the City of Phoenix *160 could become indebted, whereas this action was brought to enjoin the issuance of the bonds authorized at the election upon the ground that both Ordinance No. 928 under which they were voted and the proposition submitting them to the voters do not comply with the statute. The subject matter of the two actions, it is claimed, is different; the questions raised and issues made in this case being in no sense involved in that one.

The plaintiffs in the two eases, it is true, are different persons, but appellant admits that, in contemplation of law, they are the same, since both sued in their capacity as taxpaying electors. And the abstract of record in the Buntman case discloses that Ordinance No. 928 upon which an attempt was made to enjoin the city and its officers from holding the election and the notice of election which it was alleged the city purposed to publish and which included in exact language the proposition later submitted to the voters were set forth in the complaint. It was also alleged that, unless enjoined, the City of Phoenix would publish and post the notice calling the election proposed by Ordinance 928, and the prayer was that the city and its agents be perpetually restrained from doing so.

It is true that, in passing on the question whether the bonds it was proposed by Ordinance No. 928 to issue would exceed the debt limit of the City of Phoenix the court did not consider whether this ordinance and the proposition submitted to the voters called for the issuance of bonds in the sum of $750,-000 or $780,000, or for a definite rate of interest. However, it is clear that both matters appeared upon the face of the complaint and would have been decided by the court if it had been claimed that either or both of them rendered this ordinance and the proceedings had in pursuance of it void. The mere fact that the complaint in that case was based upon the *161 theory that the issuance and sale of the bonds in question would result in the city’s exceeding the four per cent debt limit and did not specifically allege that these two defects in the ordinance and the proposition to be submitted to the voters invalidated both does not mean that they were not within the issues of that case. Nothing is clearer than that if assignments had been based upon them the court would have determined their effect at that time; hence they are presumed to have been adjudicated and cannot now be made the basis of another action. Shinkle v. Vickery et al. (C.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 1002, 33 Ariz. 156, 1928 Ariz. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luhrs-v-city-of-phoenix-ariz-1928.