Wade v. Travis County

174 U.S. 499, 19 S. Ct. 715, 43 L. Ed. 1060, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1514
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 15, 1899
Docket267
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 174 U.S. 499 (Wade v. Travis County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wade v. Travis County, 174 U.S. 499, 19 S. Ct. 715, 43 L. Ed. 1060, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1514 (1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves the validity of certain bonds issued by the county of Travis in payment to the King Iron Bridge Manufacturing Company for-the construction of a bridge over the Colorado River; and, incidentally, the weight to be given to alleged conflicting decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas as to the validity of such bonds.

As bearing upon this question, the following sections of Article XI of the constitution of Texas, upon the subject of “ Municipal Corporations,” are pertinent:

“ Sec. 2. The construction of jails, court houses and bridges, and the establishment of county poor houses and farms, and the laying out, construction and repairing of county roads, shall be provided for by general laws.”
“ Sec. 7. All counties and cities bordering on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico are hereby authorized, upon a vote of two-thirds of the taxpayers therein, (to be ascertained as may be *502 provided by law,) to levy and collect such.tax for construction of sea walls, breakwaters or sanitary purposes, as may be authorized by law, and may create a debt for such works and issue bonds in evidence thereof. But no debt for any purpose shall ever be incurred in any manner by any city or county unless provision is made, at the time of creating the same, for levying and collecting a sufficient tax to pay the interest thereon and to provide at least two per cent as a sinking fund; and the condemnation of the right of way for the erection of such works shall be fully provided for.”

In apparent compliance with the sections above quoted, the legislature in 1887 enacted the following law, c. 141, § 1 :

Sec. 1. That the county commissioners’ court of the several counties of this State are hereby authorized and empowered to issue bonds of said county, with interest coupons attached, in such amounts as may be necessary, for the purpose of buying or constructing bridges for public uses within such county, said bonds to run not exceeding twenty years, and bearing interest at any rate not to exceed eight per cent per annum.
“ Sec.‘2. The commissioners’ court shall levy an annual ad valorem tax, not to exceed fifteen cents on the one hundred dollars’ valuation, sufficient to pay the interest on and create a sinking fund for the redemption of said bonds. The sinking fund herein provided for shall not be less than four per cent on the full sum for which the bonds are issued.”

It is admitted that no provision was made on July 8, 1888, “ at the time of creating ” the debt, for levying and collecting a sufficient tax to pay the interest thereon, and two per cent for a sinking fund, as required by the second clause of section seven, if said clause be applicable to a debt incurred for building bridges. It was alleged in the petition, however, that in the February preceding the commissioners’ court ordered an ad valorem tax of twenty cents for general purposes, and an annual ad valorem tax of fifteen cents for road and bridge purposes; and it also appeared that in the following February (1889) it ordered an annual ad valorem tax of twenty-five cents for general purposes; fifteen cents for road and bridge purposes ; court-house and jail tax of five cents, and an ad valorem. *503 tax of five cents to create a sinking fund for bridge bonds to pay the interest on' said bonds.

Plaintiff insisted in the court below that the language of the last clause of section seven, requiring a provision to be made for the levying and collection of a tax to pay the interest and to provide a sinking fund, must be read in connection with the preceding clause of -the section, and, taking the two together, that the last clause must be held to apply only to counties bordering on the Gulf of Mexico. Both the Circuit Court and the Court of Appeals, however, held that the last clause contained a separate and independent provision, and was applicable to the contract made by the county for the building of this bridge, and that, the petition of the plaintiff failing to show compliance with it, the contract was void and the bonds issued without authority of law. Both courts relied upon the construction given by the Supreme Court of Texas in numerous cases to this section of the constitution.

It is important in this connection to note that the opinion of the Circuit Court was pronounced on March 13, 1896, and that of the Court of Appeals on June 16, 1897. Since that time, it is asserted that the Supreme Court of Texas has taken a somewhat different view of the law, and an examination of these several decisions becomes important. In the earliest of them, Terrell v. Dessaint, 71 Texas, 770, 773, (1888,) which was an action on a promissory note given by the city in payment for material for water works supplies, it was squarely held that the last clause of section, seven, above quoted, must be held to apply to all cities alike, and that the clause contained no word or words which restricted its application to the cities previously mentioned in the same section. “The language is general and unqualified,” said the court, “and we find nothing in the context to indicate that the framers of the .constitution did not mean precisely what it said; that is, that no city shall create any debt without providing, by taxation, for the pajment of the sinking fund and interest.” It was also held that a debt of $1500 for materials to extend its water works was within the clause in question, and that as the current expenses proper of the city exceeded its resources for *504 general purposes, and no appropriation was made for the payment of this debt, there could be no recovery.

In Bassett v. El Paso, 88 Texas, 168, (1895) it was held that the language and purpose of the constitution were satisfied by an order for the annual collection by taxation of a “ sufficient sum to pay the interest thereon and create a sinking fund,” etc., although it did not fix the rate or per cent of taxation for each year by which the sum was to be collected, but left the fixing of such rate for each successive year to the commissioners’ court or the city council. It was contended that the ordinance, which provided for the issue of water works bonds, was void, because it did not levy a tax, but delegated to the assessing and collecting officers the power to make such levy from year to year. But it was said that “ to so construe these provisions as to require, at the time the debt is created, the levy of a fixed tax to be collected through a long series of years, without reference to the unequal ‘sums’ that would in all probability be realized therefrom, instead of the collection annually of a certain ‘ sufficient' sum ’ to pay the annual interest and create the sinking fund required by law,' would be doing violence to the language used, and authorize, in cases where values rapidly increase, the extortion from the taxpayers of large amounts of money in excess of the amount necessary to satisfy, the interest and principal of the bonds, and this in turn would invite municipal corruption and extravagance.”

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Bluebook (online)
174 U.S. 499, 19 S. Ct. 715, 43 L. Ed. 1060, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-travis-county-scotus-1899.