Roberts v. Taft

116 F. 228, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 162, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4753

This text of 116 F. 228 (Roberts v. Taft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Taft, 116 F. 228, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 162, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4753 (circtsdoh 1901).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

When the contract In question was made the following sections of the Revised Statutes of Ohio were, and still are, in force, namely: Section 2701, which provides that:

“The trustees or council of any municipal corporation, for the purpose of extending the time of the payment of any indebtedness, which from its limits of taxation such corporation is unable to pay at maturity, or when it appears to the said trustees or council for the best interest of the said municipal corporation, shall have power to issue bonds of such corporation or borrow money so as to change but not to increase the indebtedness, in such amounts and for such length of time and at such rate of interest as the council may deem proper, not to exceed the rate of six per centum per annum, payable annually or semi-annually.”

Section 2709, Rev. St., which provides that:

"In no case shall the bonds of the corporation be sold for less than their par value; nor shall such bonds, when so held for the benefit of such sinking fund or debt, be sold, except when necessary to meet the requirements of such fund or debt.
“All sales of bonds, other than to the sinking fund, by any municipal corporation, shall be to the highest and best bidder, after thirty days’ notice in at least two newspapers of general circulation in the county where such municipal corporation is situated, setting forth the nature, amount, rate of interest and length of time the bonds have to run, with'time and place of sale. * * *
“Provided, further, that when it shall appear to the trustees or council of any municipal corporation to be for the best interests of such corporation to renew or refund any bonded indebtedness of such corporation which shall not have matured, and thereby reduce the rate of interest thereon, such trustees or council shall have authority to issue for that purpose new bonds, with semi-annual interest coupons attached, and to exchange the same with the holder or holders of such outstanding bonds, if such holder or holders shall consent to make such exchange and to such reduction of in. terest.
“But the rate per annum of interest on any such new bonds thus issued in exchange by any city of the first class, or by any city of the first or second grade of the second class, shall not exceed four and one-half (4%) per cent. * * * Such new bonds shall not in any case be so issued in an amount in excess of such outstanding bonded indebtedness so to be renewed or refunded, and may be in such denominations and payable at such, time or times and at such place as may be determined by such trustees or council.”

Sections 2729a, 2729b, 27291!, and 2729c, which, with 2729c (repealed in 1887), constituted the law of April 9, 1880.

Section 2729a, Rev. St., reads as follows:

“Sec. 2729a. (Sinking Fund Commissioners in Cities of the First Grade, First Class, Authorized to Issue Certain Bonds for Certain Purposes.) The sinking fund commissioners in cities of the first grade of the first class, for the purpose of refunding the bonded debt, exclusive of street improvement bonds of the city for which such trustees act, at a lower rate of interest, and for the purpose of buying the fee simple of real estate held by the city under perpetual leases, wherein is secured to the city the option to buy the fee simple at a fixed price, and where the money to buy can be procured at a smaller rate of interest on the price than is represented by the stipulated rents, shall have power to make and issue the bonds of such city, with coupons or registered, due fifty years and redeemable thirty years from date, bearing interest at a rate not greater than five per centum per annum, payable semi-annually, to an aggregate amount not exceeding twenty-six millions of dollars, to be known as the- consolidated sinking fund bonds (filling the blank with the name of the city issuing the bonds). The bonds shall be signed by the president of the trustees of the sinking fund, counter[230]*230signed by the auditor of the city, and have the seal of the city issuing them affixed.”

Sections 2j2gg(2) and 272911(2), Rev. St., read as follows:

“Sec. 2729g(2). (Cincinnati Consolidated Sinking Fund Bonds; Interest, Redemption, Sale, etc.) That in any city wherein trustees of the sinking fund have been appointed under the provisions of section 2715, Revised Statutes, such trustees, in addition to their other powers, shall have the power to make and- issue for the purpose hereinafter specified in section 2729h the bonds of thpir. city, with, coupons or registered, running for such length of time, not exceeding fifty years, as the trustees may determine, and bearing interest at a rate not greater than four per centum per annum, payable semi-annually. Such bonds shall be known as the-consolidated sinking fund bonds (filling the blank with the name of the city issuing the bonds). The bonds shall be signed by the mayor of the city, countersigned by the auditor or corresponding officer, and have affixed the seal of the city issuing them. The principal and interest may be made payable at such place and in such kind of lawful money as the trustees may determine. Such bonds shall be sold as provided by section 2709, Revised Statutes.”
“Sec. 2729h(2). (Purpose of Above; Amount; Renewal; Taxes.) The purpose for which alone the bonds provided by section 2729g 'may be made, issued, and sold shall be the renewal or extension of existing bonded debt of the city which from.any reason the trustees of the sinking fund of such city are unable to pay at maturity. The bonds authorized by section 2729g shall never, for any city, aggregate in outstanding amount more than what may at any time be unpaid of the bonded debt of such city now outstanding and hereafter lawfully authorized to be issued, it being the object of section 2729b to provide only bonds for renewal or extension of legally existent bonded debt which at maturity is not paid and extinguished; and to that end the power herein and by section 2729b conferred is a continuing power, and includes renewal of, bonded debt now existing, hereafter lawfully created by said cities respectively, for which the trustees of the sinking fund act, and extends to one or more renewals of .any of the bonds issued hereunder; but nothing herein shall be construed to excuse said trustees from levying .and applying taxes for sinking fund and the earnings from investment thereof, as now provided and required by law.”

And the act of the general assembly of Ohio passed April 25, 1898 (93 Ohio Laws, p. 672), entitled “An act supplementary to an act relating to cities of the first class having a population exceeding one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants, passed May 4, 1869 (66 Ohio Laws, p. 30[80]),” the second section of which reads as follows:

“Sec. 2. The trustees of the said railway are hereby authorized, by a proper endorsement or stamping on any of the outstanding bonds and the coupons thereof, issued under the act to which this is supplementary, to agree to extend the time of payment of said bonds for a period not to exceed forty years from the maturity thereof, upon the holders, of such portions of said bonds as said trustees may agree with, agreeing to reduce the interest thereon to such rate as said trustees shall fix, nót exceeding three and one-half per cent, per annum.

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Bluebook (online)
116 F. 228, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 162, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-taft-circtsdoh-1901.