Powell v. City of Madison

8 N.E. 31, 107 Ind. 106, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 306
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1886
DocketNo. 13,109
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 8 N.E. 31 (Powell v. City of Madison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. City of Madison, 8 N.E. 31, 107 Ind. 106, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 306 (Ind. 1886).

Opinion

Niblack, J.

This was a suit for an injunction. The complaint was as follows:

Edward E. Powell, on behalf of himself and others who are citizens of the city of Madison, in the county of Jefferson, in the State of Indiana, and taxpayers to said city, but whose names are too numerous to mention, plaintiff, for substituted complaint in sa.id cause, complains of the city of Madison, a municipal corporation, situated in said county and State, and incorporated under the general laws of said State, for the incorporation of cities, and Joseph T. Brashear, the mayor of said city, and John A. Zuck, the clerk of said city, defendants, and says that he, the plaintiff, is a resident citizen of said city and a taxpayer to said city, and that said defendant, city of Madison, ivas, on the 14th day of March, 1881, and long prior thereto, such municipal corporation. [107]*107That at said time, to wit, March 14th, 1881, the said city of Madison was indebted in the sum of two hundred and thirty thousand dollars, and that the value of the taxable property within said city as valued in the assessment for State and county taxes for the year 1880, which was the last assessment for the State and county taxes previous to said time, to' wit, March 14th, 1881, was three million, three hundred and two thousand, eight hundred and fifty dollars, and that said indebtedness was largely in excess of two per centum of the said valuation of the said taxable property within said city, and was .almost seven per centum of the said valuation of said property. That said indebtedness of said city was, on March 14th, 1881, evidenced by the negotiable bonds of said city, and the notes or orders of said city, to wit, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars in the negotiable bonds of said city, known :as the “Water-Works bonds,” which bore interest at eight per centum per annum, and mature August 1st, 1892, and the further sum of one hundred and thirty thousand dollars in the notes or orders of said city, and which matured at different times, and bore interest at six per centum per annum. That of the said indebtedness of one hundred and thirty thousand dollars, consisting of the notes or orders of said city, and .so existing on March 14th, 1881, only six thousand eight hundred and seventy-one dollars and eighteen cents remain unpaid or not renewed; that the residue of said debt has been paid or renewed from time to time since March 14th, 1881, by the issue of new notes or orders of said city, and in many cases with accumulated interest, which could not be paid by the city out of its revenues after paying the necessary expenses of the city government, and lighting the city, for street repairs, schools, etc., until now the debt ’of said city, evidenced by such notes or orders, is the sum of one hundred and forty-one thousand, nine hundred and eighty-seven dollars and forty-three cents, which sum is in excess of the said sum of one hundred and thirty thousand dollars more than eleven thousand dollars, and that the said indebt[108]*108edness of one hundred and forty-one thousand nine hundred and eighty-seven dollars and forty-three cents, so evidenced by the notes or orders of said city draws interest at six per centum per annum. That, on the 4th day of March, 1886,, the said city was indebted in the sum of two hundred and forty-one thousand dollars or more, which debt consisted of said one hundred thousand dollars Water-Works bonds,”' which were still outstanding and unpaid, and the further sum of one hundred and forty-one thousand dollars or more, of the notes or orders of said city, and that the whole of said indebtedness is still outstanding and unpaid, and that the value of the taxable property within said city as valued in the assessment for State and county purposes for the year-1885, is three million, three hundred and thirty-seven thousand and two hundred and twenty-five dollars, and which is. the last assessment made for State and county purposes, and that said indebtedness of said city is now greatly in excess of two per centum of the said valuation of the said taxable-property within said city, and is more than seven per centum, of the said valuation of said property.

The plaintiff further says that for the alleged purpose of funding the sum of one hundred and four thousand dollars, of said indebtedness of said city in the four per centum negotiable bonds of said city, payable eight thousand dollars each year for a period of thirteen years, commencing two years from date, to bear interest at four per centum per annum, payable semi-annually, principal and interest, at the National Branch Bank in said city, and called the “ Funding Bonds of the City of Madison,” the common council of said city did, on the 4th day of March, 1886, pass the preamble and ordinance which read as follows, to wit:

“An Ordinance

“Adopted by the common council of the city of Madison, State of Indiana, to fund a portion of the indebtedness of said. [109]*109city, under section 3230, Revised Statutes 1881, enrolled March 4th, 1886.

Whereas, Said city of Madison has a voting population of less than sixteen thousand, as shown by the votes cast •for governor at the last preceding election, and having an indebtedness evidenced by the bonds, notes, and other obligations of said city, exceeding $104,000, which debt is drawing a rate of interest of six per cent, per annum, and some of it .a greater rate of annual interest, and,

“ Whereas, Said city had not the present means for payment of said debt or any considerable part thereof, without the levy of most oppressive taxes, and,

“ Whereas, On, and ever since the 14th day of March, 1881, said city has been and is now indebted by her bonds, notes and other obligations in an amount greatly exceeding two per cent, on the amount of her taxable property, as shown each year since 1881 by the assessment of taxable property of said city for State and county purposes for the last and each preceding year of said period, and,

Whereas, Many of said outstanding city bonds, notes and other city obligations of debt have been renewed by the like city evidences of debt, because of the inability of the city to pay the same, and,

Whereas, We, the common council of said, city, believe it will be for the best interest of the city, and taxpayers, to fund one hundred and four thousand dollars ($104,000) of said indebtedness into 4 per cent, city bonds, payable within fifteen years in equal annual instalments, at the ^National Branch Bank of Madison, in said city, bearing interest pay.able semi-annually. Said bon,ds to be of the denominations . of $50, $100, $500 and $1,000 each, and to be exchanged for the said outstanding city bonds, notes and other obligations, representing city indebtedness prior to March 14th, 1881, at par, therefore,

“Be it ordained by the common council of the city of Madison, .by a vote of more than two-thirds of her said common coun[110]

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.E. 31, 107 Ind. 106, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-city-of-madison-ind-1886.