State Ex Rel. State General Obligation Bond Commission v. Koontz

437 P.2d 72, 84 Nev. 130, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 322
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1968
Docket5486 and 5487
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 437 P.2d 72 (State Ex Rel. State General Obligation Bond Commission v. Koontz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. State General Obligation Bond Commission v. Koontz, 437 P.2d 72, 84 Nev. 130, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 322 (Neb. 1968).

Opinion

*132 OPINION

By the Court,

Mowbray, J.:

These cases concern the effect of the state debt limit upon the financing of a facility for the treatment of water from the Colorado River for use in the metropolitan area of Las Vegas.

Since its adoption, the Constitution of this State has imposed a limit upon the amount of debt which the Legislature may contract. The general limitation, originally $300,000, was *133 amended to its present form in 1916, and appears as the first paragraph of the debt limit section as printed in the margin. 1

The second paragraph was added in 1934. It was designed to enable the State to take over and put to beneficial use the electric power allotted to it from the Boulder Canyon project, now Hoover Dam.

Meanwhile, the rights to another resource, even more vital in the desert Southwest, were being determined: the waters of the Colorado River. Five times, beginning in 1930, litigation came before the Supreme Court of the United States. The last case, begun in 1952 and lasting 12 years, decreed to the State of Nevada, subject to certain conditions, the right to consume 300,000 acre-feet of that water annually. Arizona v. California, 376 U.S. 340 (1964).

The decision came at an opportune moment. The metropolitan area of Las Vegas had since World War II experienced an explosive growth in population. Its natural water resources were those of the artesian basin in which it lies. By 1964, it was estimated that water was being withdrawn from the artesian reservoir at a rate 50 percent greater than the rate of input. To meet this situation, the Congress of the United States *134 authorized the Secretary of the Interior to construct the Southern Nevada Water Project, 2 by which Colorado River water will be diverted from Lake Mead and transported to places of public use within Clark County at an estimated cost of $52,-000,000. A single link remained to be forged: a means of treating this water to make it potable and thus suitable for domestic use.

The Nevada Legislature responded by authorizing the Colorado River Commission of Nevada to issue bonds in an amount not to exceed $10,000,000 to build such a treatment plant. 3

In Case No. 5487, the Colorado River Commission, pursuant to this enabling act, adopted a resolution to sell the bonds and directed its secretary to give notice of the sale to prospective bidders.

The secretary refused, challenging the validity of the proceedings on two grounds: (1) That the amount of the bonds would exceed the state debt limit and (2) that the repayment provisions (a) exceed the 20-year limit 4 and (b) require the levy of taxes only generally and authorize the use of other moneys for the payment of principal and interest. 5

The Commission, contending that both the amount and the repayment of the bonds are within the terms of the second paragraph of section 3 of article 9 as quoted above, applied to this court for a writ of mandate to require the secretary to give notice.

In Case No. 5486, the State General Obligation Bond Commission, acting after the adoption of the resolution to issue the Colorado River bonds as stated above, resolved to sell $50,000 worth of general obligation improvement bonds previously authorized by the Legislature, 6 and directed the Secretary of State to give notice of the sale to prospective bidders. The Secretary of State refused, on the grounds (1) that these bonds, if issued in addition to the Colorado River bonds, would be in excess of the State debt limit and (2) that the enabling act provides for the diminution of the tax levied for repayment of the bonds to the extent of their repayment from other moneys made available.

The Commission seeks a writ of mandate to compel the *135 giving of the notice. The issue raised by its contentions are discussed at length below.

Because of the close relationship of the issues and the public importance of a speedy decision, we consolidated the cases for argument.

All parties agree that the outstanding debt and debt limit of the State are substantially as set forth in the affidavit of the State Controller, filed in Case No. 5486 as follows:

Outstanding general obligation bonded indebtedness September 1, 1967...... $8,442,000.00

Additional bonds authorized by the 1967 Legislature — sold September 12, 1967................................................................

General obligation bonds pursuant to chapter 520, Statutes of Nevada 1967, page 1393.............................. 4,085,000.00

Total bonded indebtedness, outstanding and sold........................................... $12,527,000.00

1967 assessed valuation........ $1,479,572,673.00

Limitation: 1 percent............................. $14,795,727.00

Outstanding and sold on September 12, 1967................................................ 12,527,000.00

Balance — unused limitation, September 12, 1967.......................................... $2,268,727.00

Both respondents likewise concede the appropriateness of the remedy. Marlette Lake Co. v. Sawyer, 79 Nev. 334, 383 P.2d 369 (1963); City & County of San Francisco v. Linares, 106 P.2d 369 (Cal. 1940).

The first issue to be resolved is whether the bonds whose issuance is proposed by the Colorado River Commission fall within the exemption provided by the second paragraph of the debt limit. This court held in Marlette Lake Co. v. Sawyer, supra, that a water supply is one of the natural resources of the State, and that the exemption extends to all natural resources found within the geographical limits of Nevada. We are not convinced by respondent’s argument in Case No. 5487 that a specified amount of the waters of a boundary river cannot be definitely located as within this State. If the intake is within this State, the waters taken must come within this State to reach it.

*136 The subsidiary issue of the propriety of the repayment provisions of the Colorado River bonds then turns on the meaning of the words, “notwithstanding the foregoing limitations,” which introduce the second paragraph. We hold that these words apply to all the limitations formed in the first paragraph: the amount of debt, the term for which it may be contracted, and the requirement of a specific tax appropriated for its repayment. The last sentence 7

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Bluebook (online)
437 P.2d 72, 84 Nev. 130, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-general-obligation-bond-commission-v-koontz-nev-1968.