Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. City of Richmond

61 S.W.2d 631, 249 Ky. 787, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 602
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 16, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 61 S.W.2d 631 (Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. City of Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. City of Richmond, 61 S.W.2d 631, 249 Ky. 787, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 602 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Couet by

Judge Thomas-

Affirming.

In December, 1931, the city of Richmond, Ky., which, is one of the fourth class in this commonwealth, ae- *788 quired from the Union Water Works Company its system of waterworks then owned and operated by it within the city. The same company also owned and operated a gas distributing plant within the city under a franchise that had not then expired, but the latter system was not acquired by the city. Later the owner and operator of the gas plant proposed to the city that if it would release the owner from the duty of operating the plant for the remaining period of the franchise the owner would transfer it and all of its equipment to the city, and which proposition the latter accepted, followed by the transfer of the property to it. The plant consisted of pipes laid in the streets, artificial gas-manufacturing equipment, and other facilities for the manufacture and distribution of artificial gas. A survey of the condition of the plant by the city after it became the owner demonstrated that much of the piping had worn out, resulting in much loss of gas; and, furthermore, that it would be much cheaper both to the city and consumers of gas, as well as much more efficient and satisfactory, if new equipment was installed, for the' distribution of natural gas.

An estimate of the cost of making such improvements revealed the fact that it would require $40,000 to do so, but the city was unable, for reasons not necessary to mention, to raise the necessary fund and to make it an obligation upon its treasury, and it conceived the idea of borrowing the amount needed for the purpose and pledging as security therefor the revenues to be derived from the operation of the plant, following the plan which we approved in the case of Williams v. City of Raceland, 245 Ky. 212, 53 S. W. (2d) 370, for the acquisition of water system by a city of the fifth class, and in the case of Wheeler v. Board of Commissioners of Hopkinsville, 245 Ky. 388, 53 S. W. (2d) 740, for the acquisition of a sewer system by a city of the third class, and in the case of Kentucky Utilities Company v. City of Paris, 248 Ky. 252, 58 S. W. (2d) 361, for the construction of a water plant in a city of the fourth class.

The city progressed with its. scheme to the point of obtaining an agreement from appellant, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, to advance the necessary funds, with which to make the required improvements and alterations to the gas plant, but it required, before doing *789 so, a judicial determination as to the right of the city to carry out the scheme in the manner outlined, and which was followed by the filing of this declaratory judgments action in the Madison circuit court by the city against the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and in plaintiff’s petition all of the facts which we have so generally stated were given in detail, including a copy of the ordinance initiating the scheme and a copy of the bonds proposed to be issued by the city, and which, of course, included the specific terms of each, clearly showing that none of the obligations so executed by the city should ever be payable out of its treasury, or with any funds to be derived through its power of taxation, or from any other source, save and except the revenue to be derived from the operation of the gas plant; the city obligating itself to operate the plant and to collect from patrons .thereof the charged rates for the utility product and to apportion a sufficiency thereof to meet the interest on and principal of the obligations executed for the indebtedness as each became due. The defendant demurred to the petition, which the court overruled, and upon its declining to plead further the cause was submitted on the petition, followed by a judgment upholding the right of the city to do the things contemplated for the improvement of the gas plant, and for its operation after being so improved, and from that judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.

We have not been favored with a brief for appellant, and which evidences the fact that it is indifferent as to the manner in which this court disposes of the appeal, since it is not personally interested in the matter further than to withhold the advancing of the money proposed to be borowed from it, if we should hold that the city was without authority to borrow it for the purpose indicated. However, counsel for the city, with commendable fairness and candor, truthfully point out that the only doubt upon the right of the city to borrow the money to be secured in the manner indicated, and to expend it for the proposed purpose, is that which might be furnished by the application of the principles announced in the recent case of Juett v. Town of Williamstown, 248 Ky. 235, 58 S. W. (2d) 411, wherein a city of the sixth claso proposed to issue and sell bonds to the extent of $75,000 for the purpose of raising funds to construct an electric light and power plant to he op *790 erated by the city, with the provision that the interest upon and principal of the bonds should he paid only out of the revenue to be derived from the operation of the plant. It-was held in the Juett opinion that a city of the sixth class was without charter authority to acquire and operate an electric lighting system under the plan proposed in that case. That conclusion was reached entirely upon our construction and interpretation of the applicable provision in the charter of cities of the sixth class as contained in section 3704-1 of. the 1930 edition of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, all of which is expressed in these brief words: “To contract for supplying the town with water and light.” No statute then-in force enlarged the power of cities of that class to. construct, acquire, and operate any public utility,. except chapter 92 of the acts of 1930, on page 331 of the session acts of that year, empowered and authorized all classes of cities below the first one to acquire, ■ maintain, and operate a waterworks system by the method of pledging only its revenues “for the purpose of supplying such city or town and the inhabitants thereof with water” (not light). But the above insertion from section 3704-1 of the. Statutes, a part of the charter of cities of the sixth class, in so far as it confers power and authority to construct, maintain, and operate a lighting system in such class cities, was not in any wise affected by the 1930 act, nor has it been done by any other act passed since the enactment of that section as it now appears in the statute. Therefore, the condition of the law when the Juett opinion was rendered, with reference to the power and authority of sixth class towns to acquire, maintain, and operate lighting plants therein, was confined exclusively to the “supplying the town with * * * light” (our italics), and the later enacted chapter 92, supra, of the session acts of 1930, in no wise enlarged the power of sixth-class cities with reference to the acquisition and operation of lighting systems within a town of that class. For which reason we held in that opinion that the city had no right to acquire and maintain the lighting plant there involved for any other purpose than supplying itself with light. But for that

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W.2d 631, 249 Ky. 787, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reconstruction-finance-corp-v-city-of-richmond-kyctapphigh-1933.