Sheridan v. Police Jury

82 So. 386, 145 La. 403, 1919 La. LEXIS 1732
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 2, 1919
DocketNo. 23503
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 82 So. 386 (Sheridan v. Police Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheridan v. Police Jury, 82 So. 386, 145 La. 403, 1919 La. LEXIS 1732 (La. 1919).

Opinions

O’NIELL, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment rejecting his demand to annul the proceedings of the police jury, creating a road district, incurring a debt and issuing bonds, for $500,000, for the construction and maintenance of public roads and bridges.

The complaints, stated broadly, are:

(1) That the ordinance making one road district of the entire parish was null, because (plaintiff contends) the provisions of the constitution and the statutes on the subject contemplate a division of the parish into two or more road districts, or the making of a road district of less area than that of the parish.

(2) That the ordinance submitting the proposition to a vote of the property taxpayers was null, because the proposition submitted was to issue bonds of the parish and of the road district, two distinct political corporations.

(3) That the ordinance incurring the debt and ordering the bond issue is null, because it purports to issue bonds of the parish; whereas, the proposition stated in the ballot voted by the taxpayers was to issue bonds of the road district.

(4) That, by confusing the road district with the parish, in the ordinances complained of, the taxpayers, to whose vote the proposition' was submitted, were unable to determine' whether the bonds to be issued would be the obligations of the parish or of the road district.

(5) That the ordinance fixing the number of bonds to mature each year is null, because it does not make the sum of the principal and interest to be paid each year as near equal as practicable.

The proceedings relating to the bonds were conducted pursuant to article 281 of the Constitution and the Act No. 256 of 1910. Two propositions, however, were submitted to and approved by the vote of the property taxpayers. The first was to levy a 2-mill tax for 25 years, on all property subject to taxation in the parish, the proceeds of which tax were not to be funded into bonds but were to be used for maintaining and repairing the public roads and bridges of the parish. The second proposition was to incur a debt, and issue negotiable coupon bonds, bearing interest at 5 per cent, per annum payable semiannually, for $500,000, to run for a period of 25 years from their date.

A special tax of 3 mills has been levied for the first year, to pay the bonds maturing at the end of the first year and the interest to be paid that year on all the bonds.

Although plaintiff attacks all of the ordinances relating to the bond issue, it appears that he does not question the legality of the 2-mili tax that was authorized by the vote [407]*407of the taxpayers, to be levied for 25 years, the proceeds of which are to be used for maintaining and repairing the public roads and bridges of the parish, but are not to be funded into bonds. We mention that in order that the judgment which we are to render in this case shall not be construed as adjudging the 2-mill tax to be levied for 25 years either valid or invalid. For, if the question of validity of that tax were before us for decision, what we shall say hereafter regarding the 5-mill tax which the police jury might levy for 5 years, under article 291 of the Constitution, would have an important bearing if the tax is sought to be levied under that article; and so would our reference to the decision in Police Jury of Jefferson Parish v. Louisiana Petrolithic Construction Co., 132 La. 755, 61 South. 780, have an important bearing if the tax is sought to be levied under article 281, as amended in 1910.

[1] We find no merit in plaintiff’s contention that the police jury could not legally make one road district of the whole parish. Article 291 of the Constitution, as originally adopted, and as amended in 1912, declares that police juries “may form their respective parishes into road districts.” It is true, section 2 of the Act No. 30 of the Extra Session of 1917 (p. 45) authorizes the police jury of every parish to “divide” the “parish into one or more road districts.” But, as it is not feasible to “divide” a parish into one road district, within the ordinary meaning of the word, and as the statute plainly gives the police jury the right to make either one or more than one road district of the parish, we assume that the Legislature intended to say, what the Constitution declares, that the police juries may “form” their respective parishes into one or more than one road district. Th,at was our ruling to-day in Flanigan v. Police Jury of Jackson Parish, No. 23,496, 82 South. 722.1

[2] The complaint that the proposition submitted to and approved by /the vote of the taxpayers was to issue bonds of the parish of Washington is not serious. Section 1 of the Act No. 30 of 1917 (p. 44) declares that the police jury must first establish and publish the geographical limits within which such an election is to be held; which we take to mean that notice must be given that the election is to be held throughout the whole parish, if it is to extend over the whole parish, or notice must be given of the geographical limits of the road district in which the election is to be held, if it be of less area than the whole parish. For the section of the statute referred to concludes by saying:

“That all .bonds authorized within such limits as thus established shall be the obligations of the parish, to be paid from taxes levied and collected in accordance with article 281 of the Constitution, on all property within the territorial limits wherein the election is held as fixed by the terms of this section of this act, and all bonds issued and all elections under the conditions of this section [are] tó be held conformably to the terms and conditions of article 281 of the Constitution of the state and Act 256 of the Legislature of 1910 as amended; provided that all bonds issued by road or sub-road districts shall be the direct debt and obligations of such districts and issued in their names, through the police juries as their governing authorities.”

The idea conveyed by the statute is that bonds issued for construction and maintenance of public roads and bridges shall be, not merely the obligations of the road district (which section 8 of the act declares is a political corporation), but the obligations also of the parish in which the road district is situated; provided, of course, that taxes shall not be imposed upon property outside of the road district for paying bonds issued by and for a road district. The apparent reason for saying that bonds issued by a road district shall be the obligations of the parish, as well as of the road district, is that the police jury is, by the same statute, made the governing authority of every road district in the parish; hence it is to the police jury, as [409]*409the governing authority of the road district, that a bondholder must look for the levying of a tax sufficient to pay the bonds of a road district. But, in a case like this, where the road district and the parish are identical in their geographical limits, and as to the property to be taxed for paying the bonds, as well as having the same governing authority, it cannot make any difference, as far as the taxpayers are concerned, whether the bonds be called the bonds of the parish or the bonds of the road district. In fact, according to section 1 of Act No. 30 of 1917, the police jury might have incurred the debt and issued the bonds without having ordained that the parish be formed into a road district.

[3]

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Bluebook (online)
82 So. 386, 145 La. 403, 1919 La. LEXIS 1732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheridan-v-police-jury-la-1919.