Ruff v. Womack

298 S.W. 222, 174 Ark. 971, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 570
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 222 (Ruff v. Womack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruff v. Womack, 298 S.W. 222, 174 Ark. 971, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 570 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Humpheeys, J.

This is an appeal from the decree of the chancery court of Pulaski County sustaining the demurrer to and dismissing appellants’ complaint against appellees, which sought to permanently enjoin them from taking any steps or doing anything looking to the enforcement of act No. 119 of the General Assembly of 1927, known as the revolving loan fund law, upon the g'round that said act is void.

The purpose and intent of the act in question is to create a ’revolving loan fund to be borrowed from the permanent school fund and loaned to needy school districts, to repair, erect and equip necessary school buildings, and to pay outstanding indebtedness on buildings already erected and equipment already purchased. The act is lengthy, and we deem it unnecessary to set it out in order to determine the questions involved on the appeal. Section 2 of the act provides that the State.shall sell its own bonds and use the proceeds to discharge its debt to the permanent school fund. Section 3 provides that, immediately after the cancellation of so much of the State’s debt to the permanent school fund as can be retired by the proceeds of the sale of bonds authorized by § 2, the State shall immediately reborrow from the permanent school fund on new non-interest bearing State bonds for the purpose of creating said revolving loan fund. The same arrangement is made in § 4 of the act for the use of the cash on hand to the credit of the permanent school fund the first of July in each year. Section 5 of the act empowers the State Board of Education to make loans out of the revolving fund to needy school districts, under certain restrictions. Section 9 provides that loans made to school districts shall be secured by the bonds of the district which does the borrowing, the whole debt of the borrowing- school district to be secured by mortgage on its physical property, together with the pledge of the sinking fund created for the purpose of paying the loan and interest.

The first reason alleged and urged in support of the invalidity of the act is that it authorizes the State to lend its credit to school districts which secured loans thereunder, contrary to § 1 of article 16 of the State Constitution. The constitutional inhibition is that the State shall not lend its credit for any purpose whatever. There is nothing in this inhibition to prevent the State from using its credit for proper purposes. If the State could not use its credit for governmental purposes, a situation might arise where it could not function. In considering this section of the Constitution, our court has sanctioned the right of the State to borrow money to pay obligations incurred by governmental agencies, as well as money with which to construct a highway system. Hayes v. McDaniel, Treasurer, 130 Ark. 52, 196 S. W. 934; Bank of Commerce v. Huddleston, 172 Ark. 999, 291 S. W. 422; Bush v. Martineau, ante p. 214. Certainly, if it can be said that the construction and maintenance of highways throughout the State is a proper purpose for which the State may use its credit, it may be said, with equal propriety that the education of the children of the State is also a governmental purpose for which the State may use its credit. In fact, article 14 of our Constitution recognizes the importance of the education of the young children of the State, and imposes the duty upon the Legislature to provide for a public school-system. Section 1 of said article is as follows:

“Intelligence and virtue being the safeguards of liberty and the bulwark of a free and good government, the State shall ever maintain a general, suitable and efficient system of free schools whereby all persons in the State between the ages of six and twenty-one years may receive gratuitous instruction.”

The education of the young people of the State, then, is distinctively a governmental and proper purpose for the use of the State’s credit. In using its credit to obtain money to lend to needy school districts for the purposes mentioned in said act, is not in any sense lending its credit.

The next reason alleged and urged in support of the invalidity of the act is that it authorizes the State to assume and pay debts which are prohibited under article 12, § 12, of the State Constitution. That section prohibits the State from assuming or paying- the debts or liabilities of corporations unless such debts or liabilities shall have been created to repel invasion, suppress insurrection, and to provide for the public welfare or defense. If reborrowing the permanent school fund on non-interest bearing bonds of the State for the purpose of lending the money to needy districts upon security could be characterized as assuming the debt of needy school districts, the prohibition would have no application to school districts. Corporations referred to in the section are private corporations, or corporations engaged in private enterprises. Bank of Commerce v. Huddleston, and Bush v. Martineau, supra.

The next reason alleged and urged in support of the invalidity of the act is that it violates § 2, article 14, of-the Constitution of the State, which is as follows:'.

“No money or property belonging to the public school fund, or to this State for the benefit of schools or universities, shall ever be used for any other than for the respective purposes to which it belongs.”

The contention is that the permanent school fund is made up largely of proceeds of the sale of the sixteenth section lands which were granted by Congress and accepted by the State for the use and benefit- of the inhabitants of the townships in which said sections were situated, and that in providing that the fund may be loaned to needy school districts indiscriminately constitutes a diversion of the fund and violates said section of the Constitution. The question was settled adversely to the contention of áppellant by this court in the case of Sloan v. Blytheville Special School District, 169 Ark. 77, 273 S. W. 397, in which statutes were upheld as constitutional directing, that the funds arising from the sales of the sixteenth section school lands be credited to the permanent school fund of the State rather than to the fund of the -school district in which the sixteenth section was situated. .

The next reason alleged and urged in support of the invalidity of the act is that it violates the eighteen-mill school tax amendment to the State Constitution, which is as follows:

“The General Assembly shall provide by general laws for the support of common schools by taxes, which shall never exceed in any one year three mills on the ■dollar on the taxable property in the State, and by an annual per capita tax of one dollar, to be assessed on every male inhabitant of this Stale over the age of twenty-one years. Provided,..that the General Assembly may, by general law, authorize school districts to levy by-a vote of the qualified electors of such districts a tax not to exceed eighteen mills on the dollar in any one year, for the maintenance of schools, the erection and equipment of school building's and the retirement of existing indebtedness for buildings. Provided, further, that no such tax shall be appropriated for any other purpose nor to any other district than that for which it is levied.”

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 222, 174 Ark. 971, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruff-v-womack-ark-1927.