McAnulty v. City of Pittsburgh

131 A. 263, 284 Pa. 304, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 9, 1925
DocketAppeal, 5
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 131 A. 263 (McAnulty v. City of Pittsburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAnulty v. City of Pittsburgh, 131 A. 263, 284 Pa. 304, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 511 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

Pursuant to an ordinance of the City of Pittsburgh, there was submitted to its electors, inter alia, the question of whether its indebtedness should be increased in the sum of $801,000, “For the city’s share, of the cost, damages and expense (including engineering expenses) *306 of opening......and improving......grading and regrading, curbing and recurbing, relaying sidewalks and laying and relaying sewers and drains, constructing and reconstructing retaining walls and street foundations and surfaces (including any and all such improvements as may be incidentally necessary to intersecting and adjacent streets) [of]......Mount Washington Boadway, a new highway (in part along existing streets) to extend from Grandview Avenue at Merrimac Street eastwardly along the hillside to Manor Street, and thence to a point near the intersection of Sarah Street and South Seventh Street, including the construction of a highway bridge, and undergrade crossings.”

The electors consented to the $801,000 increase of debt, the bonds therefor were issued and sold, and the city has expended or made contracts for the expenditure of $746,166.15, covering, however, but a fractional part of the work to be done. It was admitted, at the trial below, “that the cost of the entire improvement...... will be at least $1,200,000 or approximately $400,000 in excess of the amount provided by the bond issue...... and that said excess in amount will be charged against and borne by the City of Pittsburgh, except so far as it may be reduced by assessments against properties specially benefited by the improvement......that the city’s share of the cost, damage, and expense......will be in excess of $801,000, the amount provided by the bond issue......[and] that there are no present funds in the treasury of the city available to pay any of the excess amounts,” the city solicitor also then saying “that the excess of said amounts will be provided from the general city funds.” Under these facts, the court below enjoined the execution of any additional contracts for the improvement, and the making of any further payments on those already executed; from this decree the defendants appeal.

Evidently the indebtedness of the city has been increased, since the present Constitution went into effect, in *307 sums aggregating more than two per centum of the “assessed value of the taxable property therein,” and more than that percentage thereof is still outstanding; hence it cannot further “increase its indebtedness.....without the assent of the electors” at a public election (article IX, section 8, Constitution of Penna.; Pike County v. Rowland, 94 Pa. 238, 248; Pepper v. Phila., 181 Pa. 566; Bell v. Waynesboro Borough, 195 Pa. 299), unless it has in its treasury, or in good faith provides, by a special tax or out of its current revenues, a fund or funds, which will, with reasonable certainty, pay the excess not authorized by the electors: Appeal of the City of Erie, 91 Pa. 398, 403; Wade v. Oakmont Borough, 165 Pa. 479. It is a matter of no moment that the municipal authorities may have thought, when they submitted to the electors the question of increasing the debt for this improvement, that the sum specified would cover the entire expense thereby imposed on the city. When the contracts were made, they knew the $801,000 would be far from sufficient, and they had no right to then provide for an unlawful increase of the debt. The contractors knew this also, and hence have only themselves to blame if they have commenced performance; for the contracts must be declared void in their entirety: Borough of Millerstown v. Frederick, 114 Pa. 435.

Apparently the city officials think they may increase her debt to the extent of the $1,200,000, by the simple device of inserting in the ordinances authorizing the contracts already made, and declaring an intention to insert in each later ordinance, a provision “that the cost, damages and expenses [of the improvement] shall be assessed against and collected from the properties specially benefited,” for the purpose of reimbursing the city for the moneys which the contracts require her to pay to the contractors. If the benefits are inadequate to pay the excess over the $801,000, of course it will have to be paid by the city, and, until then, will be a part of her outstanding indebtedness: Addyston Pipe and Steel Co. *308 v. City of Corry, 197 Pa. 41. In the present instance, no steps have been taken to ascertain if any of the properties have been benefited, and, hence, it is of course problematical whether there will be any recovery from their owners, and if so, in what amounts.. For this reason we held in Schuldice v. Pittsburgh, 251 Pa. 28, that, until such benefits are represented by undisputed liens actually filed against the properties benefited, they cannot be considered as an offset in computing the city’s debt. No other conclusion is possible, so long as section 5 of the Act of April 20, 1874, P. L. 65, 68, remains in force, for it provides that, “The word ‘indebtedness,’ used in this act, shall be deemed, held and taken to include all and all manner of debt, as well floating as funded, of the said municipality; and the net amount of such indebtedness shall be ascertained by deducting from the gross amount thereof, the moneys in the treasury, all outstanding solvent debts, and all revenues applicable within one year to the payment of the same.” The possible benefits here, if they can properly be called even that, certainly never were either “moneys in the treasury,” or “outstanding solvent debts,” or “revenues applicable within one year to the payment” of the indebtedness incurred by those contracts.

Though unimportant, legally speaking, it is not without interest that the majority of the court below say that an inspection of the locality of the improvement, makes “plain that the benefits, if any, will be trifling.” Appellants, while differing from this broad statement, do not aver that they will be sufficient to pay the excess cost over the $801,000 authorized by the electors, or any material part of it. On the contrary they expressly admit, as above quoted, “that the city’s share of the cost, damages and expense......will be in excess of $801,000 ......[and] that there are no present funds in the treasury of the city available to pay any of the excess,” and only say that at some time in the indefinite future it will be “provided for from the general city funds.” *309 Of course this statement is likewise of no moment, especially as no action has been taken by the city authorities to make it reasonably certain that the excess above the bond issue will be, or even that it ever can be, met as the payments under the contracts fall due, much less that there will be any “revenue applicable within one year to the payment” thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
131 A. 263, 284 Pa. 304, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcanulty-v-city-of-pittsburgh-pa-1925.