Moon v. Thomas

261 S.W. 476, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 906
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 1924
DocketNo. 10945.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 476 (Moon v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moon v. Thomas, 261 S.W. 476, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 906 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

By an act of the Legislature, which was approved March 17, 1909 (Loc. & Sp. Laws 1909, e. 81), the city of Gainesville was granted a special charter which was” duly adopted by the qualified voters of the city at an election held in accordance with the provisions of the charter. By virtue of the powers given by the charter, bonds were issued by the city, known as the waterworks bonds. The bonds were issued for the purpose of acquiring and improving the waterworks system of the city. There were 150 of those bonds, in denominations of the principal sum of $1,000 each, or in the aggregate of $150,000. They were dated March 1, 1911, bore interest, at the. r&te of 5 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually, the principal being payable 40 years from date, with the privilege, however, to the city to pay the whole or any part of the principals of said bonds after the expiration of 10 years from date. In accordance with the requirements of the charter at the time of their issuance, provision was made for the creation of a sinking fund sufficient to pay the bonds at maturity and for the payment of interest thereon as it matures.

By another act of the Legislature, approved February 25, 1911 (Loc. & Sp. Laws 1911, c. 12), the charter of the city was so amended as to authorize and require the city council of Gainesville to appoint a board of water commissioners composed of five members, and the act contained the following:

“Such commission shall have the power to control, manage and operate any water plant now owned, or to be hereafter owned, by said city, and to make contracts for the improvement, betterment and extension of such works, and shall have general supervision of said works. * * * Said water commission shall have the power to do whatever is necessary for the management, control and .efficient operation of such waterworks.”

*477 By another act of the Legislature, approved March 6, 1917 (Loc. & Sp. Laws 1917, c. 43), the charter was again amended, and section 1 of that act, amending section 4, reads as follows:

“Said water commission shall have power to prescribe rules and regulations concerning the use-of water furnished by said works, and shall subject to the approval of the city council, prescribe the water rates; and said commission shall have the power to employ a superintendent and such other employees as may be necessary for the successful operation of such works, and subject to the approval of the city council, shall prescribe the wages of such superintendent and other employees; provided, however, that subject to the provisions hereof, said commission shall turn over to the city treasurer of said city any and all money now on hand and that may hereafter be derived from the sale of water by said commission for the use and benefit of said city; provided, further, said commission shall retain in its possession and subject to its control a sum of money not to exceed fifteen thousand dollars for operating, betterment, improvement and extension of such works.”

By charter provisions the fiscal year of the city begins the first Tuesday in April of each year and closes with the last day of the twelve months next ensuing thereafter, and it is made the duty of the council at its first meeting in April to fix an annual budget of current expenses of the city for the next ensuing year and to assess taxes to meet the same. By article 3 of the charter the city council is given the power f;o levy an annual ad valorem tax for general purposes and for the purpose of paying interest and providing a- sinking fund on the city’s outstanding bonded indebtedness.

On August 14, 1923, at a regular meeting of the city council, a motion was made and carried by unanimous vote that there should he appropriated “from the revenues derived from the operation of the waterworks a fund sufficient to pay the interest and sinking fund' on the waterworks interest payment, due September 1.” At the same meeting of the council a motion was passed by a majority vote of 7 to 1 of the council fixing the tax rate for the year 1923 to serve as a basis for the levy of taxes for that year. The total rate so fixed was $1.70 on the $100 valuation, apportioned for numerous 'purposes specified; and .482 was for general purposes.

On September 4, 1923, an ordinance was passed by the city council levying the tax for the purposes and at the rates theretofore determined by the motion referred to above, except that the rate of taxation for general purposes was reduced to .462 and that for the public library was raised from 4 cents to 6 cents, making the aggregate, hotvever, $1.70 on the $100 valuation. That ordinance was adopted by a majority vote of 8 to 1. But that ordinance contained a provision which was to the effect that the tax levy so made would not be applied on the waterworks bonds because payment of interest and a sinking fund on those bofads had already been provided, for by appropriation made out of the revenues derived from the -waterworks, as shown by the motion referred to above, passed August 14, 1923.

J. J. Moon and H. L. Frasher, property taxpaying resident citizens of the city of Gainesville, instituted this suit against the members of the city council and its mayor and other executive officers to restrain the defendants from applying $8,850 of the net revenues of the city arising from the ad valorem tax for the year 1923 to any other purpose than the payment of interest and providing a sinking fund on said outstanding waterworks bonds, and to require said fund to be set aside for those purposes. It was alleged in the petition that 48 of the bonds had already been taken up and canceled by the city, leaving 102 bonds still outstanding in the hands of bona fide purchasers.

Plaintiffs alleged that the city was bound by contract with the bondholders to levy an ahnual tax to meet interest and provide for a sinking fund on all the outstanding waterworks bonds, and that under the charter the city council was required to make such levy. It was further alleged that, the future earnings of the waterworks system being contingent and uncertain, the council could not discharge the city’s obligation to the bondholders by appropriating such revenues in advance for that purpose, and especially since the board of waterworks commissioners is vested with authority, under the charter provision above copied, to retain within its control as much as $15,000 out of the earnings of the system to cover expenses of operation, betterment, improvement, and extension.

It was charged in the petition that the action of the council in refusing to levy a tax to meet the annual interest and to provide a sinking fund for the outstanding bonds would amount to a repudiation of the bonds, and that such was the purpose of the council. It was further alleged that the levy of $1.70 on the $100 property valuation was the maximum levy that could be made under the special charter of the city, and that it was the intention of the council to appropriate the entire levy of taxes to purposes other than the payment of the interest and sinking fund on the outstanding waterworks bond's. The plaintiffs’ petition contained this further allegation:

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Bluebook (online)
261 S.W. 476, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moon-v-thomas-texapp-1924.