Schmoldt v. Bolen

1938 OK 423, 80 P.2d 609, 183 Okla. 191, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 21, 1938
DocketNo. 28536.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1938 OK 423 (Schmoldt v. Bolen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmoldt v. Bolen, 1938 OK 423, 80 P.2d 609, 183 Okla. 191, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 223 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

Issuance of state treasury notes, as permitted by article 3, chapter 27, Okla. Sess. Laws 1937, is- here sought to be enjoined by this original proceeding brought by a taxpayer against the State Treasurer, the State Auditor, and the Governor, to whom the act has committed the responsibility of determining the amount of and approving the notes to he issued. The validity of the authorizing provisions of the act was questioned in the case of Davis v. Childers, 181 Okla. 468, 74 P.2d 930, but because the trial court did not pass upon the constitutional features presented, we did not consider them on the appeal. Some pertinent powers of the Legislature were discussed in that case, and principles were announced which are of concern here.

In section 1 of the act under consideration the Legislature announces an avowed intention to maintain by the provisions of the act a cash balance to meet current expenses. and to avoid issuance of nonpayable 6 per cent, warrants. By section 2 the Governor, Auditor, and Treasurer are given authority to issue negotiable notes in anticipation of receipt of revenues for the fiscal year, to pay any valid warrants. Section 3 provides that the notes shall not bear more than 5 per cent, interest and provides the procedure details for issuing the notes. Sections 4 and 5 provide for payment of the notes out of the fiscal year’s revenues and limit the amount to the appropriations made.

The proposed notes under consideration here total $5,000,000, bear 2 per cent, interest and are payable in April, 1939. It is asserted that they violate the debt provisions of our Constitution, sections 23, 24, 25 of article. 10: also section 3 of article 10, section 4 of article 10 section 55 of article 5, and have other infirmities which do not involve constitutional objections.

An original action in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania was. brought by a taxpayer under conditions very similar to those involved here and similar, points were presented. The Supreme Court denied the application. We quote the following from that case:

“This is a taxpayer’s bill to restrain cer: tain officers of the commonwealth, and the Security Bank Note Company of Philadelphia, a corporation, from printing, executing, and issuing tax-anticipation notes pursuant to the Act of June 22, 1935, and paying out any money under it. Plaintiff contends that the act is repugnant to article 9, sections 4 and 5, of the Constitution. An answer was filed. The issue is one of law.
“The principal question is whether the notes, if issued, will constitute a ‘debt’ of the commonwealth within the meaning of that word as used in article 9, section 4, reading as follows: ‘No debt shall be created by or on behalf of the state, except to supply casual deficiencies of revenue, repel invasion, suppress insurrection, delend the state in war, or to pay existing debt; and the debt created to supply deficiencies in revenue shall never exceed, in the aggregate at any one time, one million dollars: * * *’
"The power of the commonwealth to raise revenue by taxation and the power to borrow money are dealt with in article 9 of the Constitution. The fundamental principle originally applied was that, save for $1,-000,000, the state must pay as it goes, ‘the debt created to supply deficiencies in .revenue shall never exceed, in the aggregate at any one time, one million dollars.’
“This court has not hitherto been called, upon to determine the meaning of the word ‘debt’ in section 4 in relation to the limitations obviously imposed by the scope of article 9 on some of the commonly accepted meanings of the word. A different debt maximum was provided for municipalities in article 9, section 8, still, however, adhering to the rule of ‘pay as you go,’ subject to the specifically allowed exceptions. The word ‘debt,’ as used in the limitation on municipalities, has frequently come before the court for consideration, and the meaning suggested in the first case coming up after the adoption of the Constitution has been followed since, and is the meaning attributed to the word by most, if not all, of the states in which the question has arisen. See Dillon, Municipal Corporations, c. VI, secs. 193-195; McQuillin, Municipal Corporations, secs. 2378, 2379, note 92 A. L. R. 1299 (1933),
“We think, however, as appears to have been suggested in Keller v. Scranton, 200 Pa. 130, 135, 49 A. 781, 86 Am. St. Rep. 708, that the word ‘debt’ in section 4 is used in a still more limited and technical sense than in section 8 restricting action by municipalities ; certainly if a municipal obligation payable out of current revenues is not a debt within section 8, tax anticipation notes payable from current revenues levied and assessed are not within the prohibition of section 4. * * *
“The creation of these notes for payment out of current revenue adds nothing to the state debt as defined. The proceeds, by the terms of the act, will enable the common *193 wealth to make prompt payment of, its obligations and thus avoid conducting the government on credit until the taxes are received. The act merely provides a method of obtaining ready money in exchange for obligations not yet collectible from taxables. It substitutes one creditor (the note holder) for another (the person to whom the commonwealth must pay). * * *
“During a biennium many debts in the ordinary (though not the constitutional) sense, of the word must be incurred by the commonwealth; a debt, in one sense, results- from every purchase on credit of articles needed from day to day in the ordinary course of public business. But no one would suggest that such debts are within the in-tendment of section 4; in these transactions both the state as purchaser, and the seller, as creditor, deal on the faith of the implication that the purchase is necessary for the conduct of the state government pursuant to appropriation made by the Legislature and that payment •will be made in accordance with the appropriation; in other words, it is a transaction to be discharged out of current revenue.
“When legislation provides for the levy and collection of current revenues, assets are created, though the exact.amount receivable may not be determinable in advance. The act of 1035 refers to statutes providing for present taxation. As these taxes, though due, are not collectible at the moment, but only after lapse of time, it may be that, in the near future, to conduct the affairs of the government, money not in hand will be necessary, and that, later in the fiscal period, more will be available than is then required. As we understand it the legislature intended to provide for that contingency in the emergency referred to in the act. The solution of the problem involved immediate borrowing of money to be repaid out of current revenues when received, the money borrowed meanwhile being used for the purposes specified in the appropriation laws. In that light it cannot be said that the debt of the state is increased within the terms of article 9, see. 4, any more than the same thing can be said of municipal borrowing against current revenue. There is a mere exchange of one obligation for another. The total debt of the state is not increased.

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1938 OK 423, 80 P.2d 609, 183 Okla. 191, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmoldt-v-bolen-okla-1938.