Rowland v. Deck

195 P. 868, 108 Kan. 440, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1921
DocketNo. 23,185
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 195 P. 868 (Rowland v. Deck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowland v. Deck, 195 P. 868, 108 Kan. 440, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 192 (kan 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

John Rowland as a taxpayer of Reno county brought an action against the board of county commissioners, joining other parties in interest as defendants, seeking to enjoin the delivery to the Brown-Crummer Company of a quan[442]*442tity of bonds, in pursuance of a contract between that company and the county, the validity of which is attacked by the plaintiff. A temporary injunction was refused and this appeal is taken from that ruling.

1. The bonds were issued under provisions of the statute relating to improvement of highways, reading: “the board of county commissioners may issue from time to time as required, bonds of the county, bearing not to exceed five per cent interest, Said bonds . . . shall be disposed of by the county board in the manner provided by law, and the proceeds thereof shall be deposited with the county treasurer in the special fund for the improvement.” (Laws 1919, ch. 246, § 6.) The statute contains no more specific provision with respect to the manner in which the bonds are to be disposed of, either in the way of authorization or restriction. We think the intention clearly is that the bonds are to be sold by the county commissioners, the proceeds to form a part of the fund out of which warrants issued for the improvements shall be paid. The bonds in controversy bore interest at 5 per cent. The contract referred to provided for their sale at a discount of 10.03 per cent — an arrangement under which the county would be paying practically 6 per cent interest on the amount actually received for them. The plaintiff contends that the provision of the statute that the bonds shall bear not to exceed five per cent interest should be interpreted as meaning that the county shall not pay more than 5 per cent interest for the money it borrows by means of their issuance, and that the contract of the county with the Brown-Crumm'er Company is void because it calls for the payment of a higher rate. The defendants maintain that the provision is intended merely as a description of the kind of bond that is to be issued, and inasmuch as the statute contains nothing to the contrary the bonds may be sold for whatever they can be made to bring. This question is therefore presented, the plaintiff contending for a negative and the defendants for an affirmative answer: Where a statute authorizes the issuance of bonds bearing not more than a stated rate of interest, and provides for their sale, no express requirement being made as to the amount they shall bring, may bonds issued thereunder, which bear the maximum interest named, be sold at a discount?

[443]*443There are no Kansas cases bearing directly upon the question. The defendants quote this sentence in support of their contention: “Where a city places its bonds on the market it must dispose of them at the market price.” (Clay Center v. Williamson, 79 Kan. 485, 488, 100 Pac. 59.) This language was used in discussing the loss to a city occasioned by an injunction which delayed the sale of its bonds until their market value had depreciated, and can shed no light upon the interpretation of the statute here involved. The City of Atchison v. Butcher, 3 Kan. 104, has been cited (28 Cyc. 1597, note 47) as sustaining the view of the plaintiff. The statute there involved, however, was interpreted as in effect providing for the exchange of bonds for railroad stock rather than for their sale. The scope of the decision is.indicated by this extract from the opinion, the sentence deemed especially important in this connection being here, italicised:

“The act of the legislature authorizing the subscription and the issuing of the bonds . . . authorized the city ‘to issue bonds for the stock, or for money to pay for the same, bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum.’ It was not authorized to sell the bonds and thus raise money to pay for the stock. If that course were adopted and the bonds sold below par, the rate of interest would be increased above what the law authorized. It certainly was not contemplated that the value of the stock would be above par, nor could it have been expected that the bonds would have been worth less than the stock. If the bonds could lawfully be bartered at a discount, then if the money was borrowed upon them, the stock might have been bought at a premium, which certainly was not contemplated. The proper construction of the provision is that this stock might be paid for at par in bonds at par, or paid for in money borrowed at ten per cent per annum.” (p. 120.)

The supreme court of Washington in a series of decisions has apparently returned a negative answer to the question stated, although its conclusions may be due to a peculiarity of the local statute. (Uhler v. Olympia, 87 Wash. 1; Spear v. Bremerton, 90 Wash. 507; Hill v. Seattle, 108 Wash. 572.) These cases concede that the grant of authority to sell bonds carries with it the power to sell them below par unless by reason of some affirmative provision of law to the contrary, a doctrine that appears to be generally accepted. (Note, Ann. Cas. 1914 B, 257.) But the Washington court interprets a statutory provision that a city may issue and sell bonds or warrants, payable out of a special fund bearing interest not [444]*444exceeding six per cent per annum, as imposing a limitation on the rate of interest the municipality shall be required to pay computed on the amount of money it receives for its bonds. If under that statute the bonds had been so drawn as to bear five per cent interest on their face a sale at a discount would have been upheld so long as it was not less favorable to the municipality than six per cent basis. (Hill v. Seattle, supra.) In the first of the Washington cases above cited the transaction involved is condemned as “usurious,” the court saying, “A statute fixing a maximum rate of interest may not be evaded at will by any 'device or contrivance which will insure a greater return of interest than the law allows.” (Uhler v. Olympia, 87 Wash. 1, 11.) The statute described as “fixing a maximum rate of interest” is that authorizing a city to create a special fund for the purpose of defraying the cost of a public utility and “to issue and sell bonds or warrants bearing interest not exceeding six per centum per annum . . . payable only out of such special fund.” (Rem. & Bal. Code, [Wash.] § 8008.) It is possible that the exceptional phraseology, and the classification of the bonds with warrants in the provisions regarding the rate of interest and the special fund, may account for the court’s characterizing as usurious a transaction by which the city was to pay more than six per cent interest upon the money it obtained by the sale of its bonds.

On the other hand, the supreme court of Oregon has held that bonds issued under a statute fixing definitely their rate of interest may be sold at a discount, saying in the opinion:

“The provision as to the amount of bonds to be issued, their denomination, and the rate of interest they shall bear has reference only to the form of the bonds and the method in which they shall be executed, in order to prepare them for sale.” (Kiernan v. City of Portland, 61 Ore. 398.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 P. 868, 108 Kan. 440, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-v-deck-kan-1921.