Pilcher v. City of Dothan

93 So. 16, 207 Ala. 421, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 4, 1922
Docket4 Div. 976, 977.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 93 So. 16 (Pilcher v. City of Dothan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pilcher v. City of Dothan, 93 So. 16, 207 Ala. 421, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 150 (Ala. 1922).

Opinion

McCLELDAN, J.

[1] The municipalities of

this state are authorized to construct and operate waterworks systems to supply wholesome water for municipal purpos’es and for the use of their inhabitants. They may locate their plants within or without their territories; and may issue bonds to provide funds for such purposes, as well as secure the payment of the bonds by mortgage on the systems or'pledge of the revenues to be derived therefrom. Code, §§ 1260, 1261, 1262; Acts Sp. Sess. 1921, pp. 6-8.

The municipal right and function to provide water systems for towns and cities is expressly recognized in the Constitution. The municipalities are invested with a discretion, to the end that this public right may be exercised and this public function performed. Where such a power is conferred'on a municipality, importing the discretion req *424 uisite to its exercise, the courts are without right or authority to interfere, except for fraud or palpable abuse of the discretion thus committed. Oakley v. Atlantic City, 63 N. J. Law, 127, 44 Atl. 651; Ryan v. Paterson, 66 N. J. Law, 533, 536, 49 Atl. 587; 1 McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, §§ 376-9; 3 Dillon on Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.) pp. 2114, 2115. See White v. Mayor, etc., 119 Ala. 476, 481, 23 South. 999. In determining the wisdom, propriety, and contractual elements of a proposal to electoral approval or disapproval of a bond issue for an authorized purpose,' the municipal government acts in a proprietary, not a legislative, capacity. Mayor, etc., v. Birmingham Water Co., 139 Ala, 531, 36 South. 614, 101 Am. St. Rep. 49; Bessemer v. Bessemer Water Co., 152 Ala. 391, 406, 44 South. 663; 1 Dillon, ubi supra, §§ 109, 110. Even when the municipal government acts in a proprietary, not legislative, capacity, it has been decided here that the courts cannot inquire into the motives of the members of the government, for the purpose of determining the validity of the government’s acts, except, it is said, in cases of corruption. Cramton v. Montgomery, 171 Ala. 478, 482, 55 South. 122, reaffirming Albes v. Southern Ry., 164 Ala. 356, 365, 55 South. 327.

This rule may and does consist with that before stated, viz. that for the fraudulent exercise of a discretion reposed in a municipal government, or a palpable abuse thereof, the courts may intervene, when the jurisdiction to do so is properly invoked. It is also established here that municipal governmental action, of which a record is required to be made, cannot be shown by parol; that the records themselves (unless lost or destroyed) are the best and only evidence of such governmental action. Greenville v. Greenville Water Co., 125 Ala. 625, 643, 27 South. 764; Mobile County v. Maddox. 195 Ala. 336, 338, 70 South. 259. According appropriate effect to the rules just stated, the only source of information to determine whether a municipal government has fraudulently exercised or palpably abused its discretion, otherwise than as the result of corruption, is the records and proceedings of the governmental body, whose exercise of discretion is the object of attack. Manifestly members of such bodies are not competent to testify in definition or explanation of the purposes or motives that induced their participation in the action under inquiry.

Bad faith is synonymous with fraud. 6 C. J. pp. 880, 881; Morton & Bliss v. Railway Co., 79 Ala. 590, 617. Error or mistake of judgment,' in the exercise of a discretionary power, is not the equivalent of bad faith or fraud. In such circumstances, error or mistake of judgment consists with honest intention, or freedom from unworthy or unlawful motive or design. If honest intention or freedom from unworthy motive or design characterize the act of exercising a discretionary power, neither bad faith nor fraud is imputable.

The abuse of discretion, justifying interference with the exercise of a discretionary power, “implies not merely an error of judgment, but perversity of will, passion, or moral delinquency.” Williams v. Board of Education, 79 Kan. 202, 99 Pac. 216, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.), 584; Citizens’ R. Co. v. Heath, 29 Ind. App. 395, 62 N. E. 107, 111; 1 C. J. pp. 372, 373. As recited in the statement of the case, the bill’s design is to bring into question the good faith of the city government in the premises — this upon the theory-that the act of the city government of Doth-an in the premises was colorable only; that the purpose, a pretense only, was and is to avoid the already practically attained debt limit (Const. § 225), through a perversion of the discretion to provide and operate a water system, indebtednesses for which are excepted by section 225 from its debt limit restraint ; and that the real, primary, major object sought by the city government is to create a water power at Chalker’s Bluff to generate electric energy for sale to private consumers.

It is not even intimated that the price to be paid for the contemplated development will exceed its legitimate cost. Other than as the stated averments import, no fraud, actual or legal, nor abuse of discretion by the city government, is asserted. The issue which, in the absence of special demurrer, we treat (for the occasion only) as tendered 'by the bill’s averments — supplemented, with perhaps undue favor to complainant, by the exhibit of plans, specifications, and explanatory reports — is not referable to the municipal power, in the abstract, to maintain and operate a water system. On the contrary, the attack upon this municipal action arises from, is alone predicated of, the collateral, yet important, consideration projected by the provision of section 225 of the Constitution excepting bond issues to provide “waterworks” from the debt limit therein prescribed. The contracted character of the issue tendered may be better defined by the observation that, if Dothan had been financially able to pay, in cash, the cost of the proposed development, there could be no legal objection based on section 225 of the Constitution to the execution of the design, whatever might be the excess energy, over present, or prospective needs, the hydroelectric plant would produce. The-effort to impeach the good faith of the city government in the premises is, in effect, grounded in these aver-ments of fact, associated with or amplified by the pleader’s express allegation of his conclusion adverse to the good faith of the city government in the action taken, viz.: (a) That the proposed hydroelectric plant *425 will generate practically eight times the energy necessary, now or hereafter, efficiently to operate Dothan’s waterworks system; (b) that the larger excess power generated or subject to employment will be sold for commercial purposes; and (c) that the cost of the contemplated plant, with transmission lines — a sum substantially equal to the amount of the proposed bond issue — will-very greatly exceed the moderate cost of the energy (electrically generated by the present steam plant) to operate the water system at this or any other time. Consistent with the principles earlier stated in this opinion, the pleader’s conclusion, denying the good faith of the city government in the premises, is to be measured by the facts to which it is referable for support.

Aside from the debt limit provisions -of the Constitution, there is, so far as we can discover, no restriction in our laws upon the municipality with respect to the cost or magnitude of an authorized municipal improvement or facility. That is left to the validly exercised discretion of the local government.

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Bluebook (online)
93 So. 16, 207 Ala. 421, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pilcher-v-city-of-dothan-ala-1922.