Town of Warwick v. R. I. Hospital Trust Co.

96 A. 503, 38 R.I. 517, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 A. 503 (Town of Warwick v. R. I. Hospital Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Warwick v. R. I. Hospital Trust Co., 96 A. 503, 38 R.I. 517, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 9 (R.I. 1916).

Opinion

Sweetland, J.

In the above entitled case certain questions of law have been certified by the Superior Court to this court for determination under the provisions of Gen. Laws, cap. 298, § 5.

Under Public Laws, Chapter 942, passed November 20, 1901, the town of Warwick was authorized to issue bonds of the denomination of one thousand dollars each to an amount not exceeding four hundred thousand dollars. Section 2 of said act was as follows: “Sec. 2. At the annual financial town meeting in said town there shall be annually appropriated a sum sufficient to pay the interest due or to become due on said bonds before the next annual financial town meeting, and also a sum to be placed as a sinking fund sufficient for the redemption of said bonds when due, and all premiums arising from the sale of said bonds shall be placed to the credit of said sinking fund.”

Pursuant to said act the town of Warwick issued four hundred bonds of the denomination of one thousand dollars each; and thereafter in each year until 1913 the financial town meeting of said town appropriated a sum sufficient to pay the interest due or to become due on said bonds before the following annual financial town meeting, and also appropriated a sum to be placed as a sinking fund for the redemption of said bonds when due. The sums so annually appropriated to be placed as said sinking fund together with the premiums arising from the sale of said bonds were deposited by the town treasurer of said town with the defendant. The title of said deposit was “Town of Warwick Sinking Fund.”

By Chapter 1012 of the Public Laws, approved March 14, 1913, the General Assembly divided the town of Warwick into two new towns, one to constitute the town of Warwick and the other to constitute the town of West Warwick. Section 14 of said Chapter 1012 of the Public Laws, among *519 other things, provided as follows: ' ‘ All debts and liquidated liabilities of the present town of Warwick shall be and remain valid and binding. The Warwick Division Commission hereinafter created, shall apportion the payment of said debts and liquidated liabilities between the towns of Warwick and West Warwick in proportion to the ratable property in said towns, according to the assessment of taxes last made in the present town of Warwick. Such apportionment shall not bar the holder of such debt or liability against the present town of Warwick from recovering as fully as said holder might have recovered against the present town, but shall be made only for the purpose of determining which town shall be primarily liable for each debt and for establishing a right of recoupment between said town if the town primarily liable fails to pay any obligation apportioned to it.” Section 16 of said Chapter 1012 provided for the appointment by the governor of a commission of five members’ to be known as the Warwick Division Commission, and further provided that said “commission shall perform the duties imposed upon it by the provisions of this act, and which-is hereby authorized, empowered and directed to do and perform each and every act, necessary and essential to the complete division of the town of Warwick and not otherwise specifically devolved upon any official or person, and the acts of said commission in carrying out the provisions of this act shall be final.”

Pursuant to said Chapter 1012. of the Public Laws, the governor of the State of Rhode Island duly appointed the Warwick division commission; and said commission proceeded to perform the duties imposed upon it by the act. In its report said commission among other things set forth that, of the four hundred bonds issued by the former town of Warwick under the authority of said Chapter 942 of the Public Laws, said commission had apportioned bonds numbered 1 to 251, both inclusive, to the present town of Warwick and had apportioned bonds numbered 252 to 400, both inclusive, to the town of West Warwick. Said commission *520 further reported that to said sinking fund, at that time amounting ih all to the sum of $106,515.58, said commission had apportioned the sum of $66,799.11 to the present town of Warwick, and had apportioned the sum of $39,716.47 to the town of West Warwick.' On August 11, 1914, the town council of the town of Warwick authorized the town treasurer of said town to withdraw from the defendant “the proportional part of the sinking fund of the town of Warwick 1932 bonds belonging to the present town of Warwick as the same has been apportioned to said town by the Warwick Division Commission, together with the interest accrued thereon.” . After the refusal of the defendant to permit such withdrawal said town council directed the commencement of this suit to recover from the defendant said proportional part of said fund.

Of the questions certified by the Superior Court to this court for determination the first is as follows: ‘ ‘ First : Did the Warwick Division Commission created under Chapter 1012 of the Public Laws, passed by the General Assembly at its January session, 1913, receive authority by and under said act to apportion between the new town of Warwick and the town of West Warwick created by said Chapter 1012 the sinking fund established for the bonds of the old town of Warwick issued under the authority of Chapter 942 of the Public Laws, passed by the General Assembly in 1901?”

Under none of the provisions of said Chapter 1012 of the Public Laws is authority specifically given to said Warwick Division Commission to apportion said sinking fund between the towns of Warwick and West Warwick. If said commission had such authority under the act it must be found in the general provision contained in Section 16 whereby said commission was “authorized, empowered and directed to do and perform each and every act necessary and essential to the complete division of the town of Warwick.” Was the apportionment of said sinking fund between the newly created towns “necessary and essential to the complete division of the town of Warwick?” In our opinion it was *521 not. In view of the essential character of said fund and the purpose of its creation, it would be appropriate to keep said fund intact and undivided, although there was a division of the town. The plaintiff contends that said fund was the property of the old town of Warwick and hence that a division of that town would be incomplete unless such property be apportioned between its two successors. While said fund may be regarded as the property of the town, to which said town alone had the legal title, it was property impressed with certain characteristics arising from its nature as a sinking fund, accumulated in the manner and for the purposes provided by said Chapter 942 of the Public Laws.

The General Assembly, in authorizing the town to issue said bonds, coupled with that permission the requirement that the town should by annual appropriations accumulate a sinking fund sufficient to redeem the bonds when due. When the bonds were issued under the authority of said act, and afterwards purchased by the bondholders, the provision, that the town should create the prescribed sinking fund, became an essential part of the contract between the town and each bondholder, as binding upon the town as if expressly stipulated in the bond. Such requirement constituted a part of the obligation of the bond and could not be impaired by subsequent legislation. Louisiana v. Pilsbury,

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 503, 38 R.I. 517, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-warwick-v-r-i-hospital-trust-co-ri-1916.