Mayfield Woolen Mills v. City of Mayfield

61 S.W. 43, 111 Ky. 172, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 43 (Mayfield Woolen Mills v. City of Mayfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayfield Woolen Mills v. City of Mayfield, 61 S.W. 43, 111 Ky. 172, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 169 (Ky. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE DuRELLE

Affirming.

Appellants, taxpayers of the city of Mayfield, brought suit against the city and its tax collector, seeking to enjoin the collection of 25 cents of the tax rate of $1 on the $100 worth of taxable' property, levied for the year 1900. By the averments of the petition, it appears that Mayfield is a city of the fourth class; that in all the years since it became a city of the fourth class, until the year 1900, it levied a tax of only 75 cents on the $100; that tlie city had not created snore indebtedness for the year 1900 than, existed for any of the preceding years; and that the rate of taxation complained of was not for school purposes, nor necessary to enable the city to pay interest on indebtedness previously contracted, nor to provide a sinking fund for the extinguishment of indebtedness contracted before the adoption of the Constitution. For the year 1900, the levy ordinance fixed the rate of taxation at $1 on each $100 worth of property, the ordinance providing that “seventy-five per cent, of such tax is levied for the purpose of paying the current expenses of the city, of Mayfield for the year 1900, other than the water rent, and twenty-five per cent, of the tax is levied for the purpose of paying the Graves County Water & Light Company for rent of water for the year 1900, said debt for water having been contracted for, and being an existing indebtedness against [174]*174said city, at and prior to the adoption of the present Constitution of Kentucky.” It was averred that the ordinance, to the extent of 25 per cent, of the taxes levied by it, was void, under section 157 of the Constitution. A demurrer having been sustained to the petition, an amended petition was filed, averring that at the adoption of the present Constitution, and continuously since that time Mayfield has been a city of more than 3,000, and less than 8,000, inhabitants; that it was made a fourth-class city by the act of the General Assembly approved September 30, 1892, and that the act of the government of cities of the fourth class became a law June 28, 1893; that under subsection 2, section 3190, Kentucky Statutes, being part of the act for the government of cities of the fourh class, the city has power to levy an ad valorem tax of 75 cents only on the $100 worth of property, and in addition not exceeding 50 cents on the $100 worth of property for the maintenance of schools, and not exceeding- 50 cents to meet the principal and interest of any bonded debt thereinafter authorized, such bonded debt referred to being the bonded debt authorized to be incurred by a vote of the people; that the indebtedness sought to be met by. the taxes complained of was not created by a vote of the people, nor were such taxes for school purposes, or for the erection or improvement of any public school building or buildings, nor levied under the provisions of any law existing prior to the adoption of the present Constitution, nor was such “indebtedness contracted under any law providing for any levying or collecting any taxes” by the city. It was further alleged that the boundary of the city has not been changed; that there are no more streets to be kept in repair, and no more necessity for an increase of the current expenses, than had existed continuously since the adoption of the Gonstitu[175]*175tion, and that all the current expenses of the city, and the indebtedness for which the tax complained of was levied, had been paid in prior years with the levy of only 75 cents on the $100 worth of property; and that the assessed valuation of the property in the city had continuously increased during that period, and that the increased rate of 25 cents was not necessary to enable the city to pay that indebtedness. It was further alleged that, without any vote of the people, the city had increased its annual indebtedness in the sum of $8,581, the averments showing that this 'increase of annual indebtedness was an increase of expenses caused by increasing the number of policemen, the number of street lights, for brick streets, etc., and that the city had no right to contract such increased indebtedness, or any indebtedness which, added to- the existing one, would necessitate the 25 per cent, increase of the tax rate. In an additional paragraph, it was alleged that in 1893 the city entered into a contract with the Graves-County Water and Light Company, in which it agreed to pay the company the sum of $1,6G0 per year for ten years thereafter to furnish electric ligihts for the city, and that by that contract it became indebted to the Craves County Water and Light Company in the sum of $16,600; tira only two years of its contract with that company for water hydrants had then expired, and it was liable on that contract for 23 years, at $3,840 per year, or a total sum of $88,320; that the assessed value of the taxable property of the city for the year preceding the year the additional contract for lights was made was $1,200,000, and that the existing indebtedness for water hydrants exceeded 5 per cent, of the assessed value of the taxable property of the city, and therefore the contract for the electric lights was in violation of section 158 of the Constitution; that 16 cents [176]*176of each dollar of the tax levied, was levied for the purpose of paying- what was due on the contract for said lights for the year 1900, and that the levy was void to that extent. A demurrer to the petition as amended was sustained, and, the plaintiff declining to plead further, the .petition was dismissed.

A number of questions are made as to misjoinder of .plaintiffs, departure in the amended petition, and upon motions to 'strike out parts of the pleadings; but, in the view we have taken of the law of the case, it is not necessary to determine any of these.

By section 157 of the Constitution, which is relied on in the original petition, it is provided that the tax rate of cities having less than 10,000 inhabitants shall not exceed, for other than school purposes, 75 cents on the $100, “unless it should be necessary to enable such city . . . to pay the interest on, and provide a sinking fund for the extinction of, indebtedness contracted before the adoption of this Constitution.’'' The contention, therefore, upon the original petition, is that, admitting the contract for water hydrants to be an indebtedness existing at the time the Constitution was adopted, nevertheless, because a tax rate of 75 cents had, for a number of years after the adoption of the Constitution, been sufficient, not only to pay the current expenses of the city, but also to provide for the current installment due under that contract, such’ current expenses should never be increased so as to require a tax levy in addition to the 75-cent rate to meet such liability existing at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, or, at least, that the expenses should not be so increased unless there existed a necessity for the increase, and that the courts must determine the existence of the necessity.

[177]*177It is nowhere averred that the contract with the water company for water rent had not. been entered into prior to the adoption of the present Constitution, though some of the averments of the 'amended petition seem framed with the intention of approaching such an averment, and the existence of the facts relied upon to make the tax illegal should appear Clearly by the averments. Indeed, appellants’ brief seems to concede the existence of this contract, and it is practically conceded by the recital in the aimended petition averring the length oh time it had run when the additional contract for lights was entered into'.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 43, 111 Ky. 172, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayfield-woolen-mills-v-city-of-mayfield-kyctapp-1901.