Peltason, Tenenbaum & Harris, Inc. v. Refunding Board

16 F. Supp. 179
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 2758
StatusPublished

This text of 16 F. Supp. 179 (Peltason, Tenenbaum & Harris, Inc. v. Refunding Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peltason, Tenenbaum & Harris, Inc. v. Refunding Board, 16 F. Supp. 179 (W.D. Ark. 1935).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by the holder of Arkansas road district refunding bonds, series B, to enjoin the execution of an order of the refunding board of the state of Arkansas, which order would cause all the moneys in the state highway fund to be applied to the purchase of bonds in series A, leaving none for the purchase of plaintiff’s bonds; and to compel the application of a part of the money in the fund to the purchase of plaintiff’s B bonds. Other holders of B bonds, in the same situation as plaintiff have intervened, praying similarly as to the B bonds which they have tendered. The B bonds were issued on account of outstanding interest coupons attached to earlier bonds, and the A bonds were issued for the principal. Both the A bonds and the B bonds mature in 1949, [180]*180but the A bonds draw interest at the rate of 3 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually, and the B bonds are payable without interest. The state officers claim the right to apply all the moneys now in the special fund to the purchase of A bonds which have been tendered to them for a price less than 75 cents on the dollar of face value of the bonds. The plaintiff and interveners insist that such application of the moneys and the refusal to take up their B bonds at the price at which they have been tendered to the board are violative of the contract, due process, and equal protection clauses of the Federal Constitution (article 1, § 10, cl. 1; Amend. 14, § 1), and of section 17, article 2, of the Constitution of Arkansas. Hearing on the application for temporary writ was had before the statutory three-judge court. 28 U.S. C.A. § 380.

Act No. 11 of the Second Extra Session of the General Assembly of Arkansas for the year 1934 (page 28) provides for the creation of an account in the state treasury out of the proceeds of taxes from the sale of gasoline and oil and the use of automobiles, to be known as the state highway fund, the moneys in the fund being first applicable to the maintenance of the highways and toll bridges and to the payment of interest upon bonds and other obligations. The act further provides that for the year 1935 68.6 per cent, of the excess revenues in the fund shall be placed in a special account declared to be a trust fund for the purchase or redemption of the principal of road district refunding bonds series A and series B. The surplus receipts for 1934 which were so accumulated in the special account in 1935 amounted to $697,022.76, all of which" was applicable to the purchase or redemption of the A and B bonds in accordance with sections 37 and 38 of the act (pages 62, 64). Those sections require that such surplus shall be used each year to purchase A and B bonds “at the lowest price submitted, not exceeding par and accrued interest, in the manner hereinafter provided.” The state treasurer shall advertise for tenders to be made by the owners of the bonds in sealed envelopes, and “all funds on hand available for the purchase of the respective obligations shall be applied immediately in the purchase of obligations tendered at the lowest price submitted. In determining the" lower of the tenders the Board shall take into consideration the rate of interest of the tendered obligations.” “In determining what is the best bid submitted the Board shall consider the interest rate, maturity and all other proper elements which have a bearing upon fixing the value of the respective bonds offered.”

In response to the advertisement calling for tenders of bonds, the plaintiff and interveners duly tendered to the refunding board their series B bonds at prices ranging from 44% to 45fio per cent., the largest amount of the B bonds ($144,192.29 par value) being tendered at 44.97 per cent, of the par value thereof. But the board refused to accept any of said B bonds, and ordered instead that all of the money in the fund applicable to the purchase of refunding bonds should be applied to the purchase of series A bonds tendered at prices of 75 or less, with the exception of one bidder with a large block of A bonds tendered at 75, and in that instance the board accepted a portion of the bonds tendered by that bidder.

In order to determine the comparative price of the bonds of the two series tendered to the board, it is necessary to make a mathematical computation, taking into consideration the fact that the series A bonds bear interest while those of series B do not. The evidence before us shows that such mathematical computation was made, and it was determined thereby that series B bonds tendered at 44.97 were equivalent in price to series A bonds at 72.753. It was further determined that series A bonds at 75.10 are equivalent to series B bonds at 46.88; and that series A bonds at 74.72 are equivalent to series B bonds at 46.58. It was further determined that, if no series B bonds were purchased, the refunding board could accept the tender of all series A bonds offered at 74.99 or less, and could accept a large number of the series A bonds tendered at 75; that, had the refunding board accepted offers of series B bonds which were tendered at lower prices than the prices at which series A bonds were tendered, the sum of $119,279.16 would have been required for that purpose, and the remaining available funds could have been used for the purchase of all series A bonds tendered at prices of 74.96 or less; that all of the series B bonds tendered by the plaintiff and the interveners were offered at prices lower than 46.76, which is the equivalent of series A bonds at 74.95.

It is contended for the defendants that . the statute vests a discretion in the refunding board to determine which of the ten[181]*181ders of bonds of either series A or series B or both it shall accept and that the board is not bound to accept the bonds offered at the figure which is shown to be lowest by mathematical computation. It is argued that, aside from the fact that the A bonds draw interest and the B bonds do not draw interest, definite advantages would accrue to the state of Arkansas and its citizens if the A bonds are taken up instead of the B bonds. The position of the state officers is that, if the mathematical computation shows that the B bonds are tendered at a very small reduction below the comparative price at which the A bonds are tendered, having regard to the interest payable on the A bonds and not on the B bonds, the discretion may be exercised consistently with the statute in favor of taking up the A bonds instead of the B bonds, and, in the present case, the difference in the price offered between the A bonds and the plaintiff’s B bonds is admittedly small.

We are not persuaded that the statute can be construed as contended for by the defendants. We think the clear intendment is that the duty of the board in the situation here presented is ministerial merely, and requires that the board shall “take into consideration the fate of interest of the tendered obligations and the maturity,” and, having made the necessary mathematical computation, shall accept the tenders “at the lowest price submitted, not exceeding par and accrued interest.”

Defendants’ reliance is upon the following language of the act (section 37) : “In determining what is the best bid submitted the Board shall consider the interest rate, maturity and all other proper elements which have a bearing upon fixing the value of the respective bonds offered for sale. The purpose of the Board being to act for the best interest "of the State of Arkansas and its citizens.”

We do not deem it necessary to hold, as contended for the plaintiff, that such provision is entirely surplusage.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Supp. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peltason-tenenbaum-harris-inc-v-refunding-board-arwd-1935.