Walsh v. City Council of Augusta

67 Ga. 293
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 17, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 67 Ga. 293 (Walsh v. City Council of Augusta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. City Council of Augusta, 67 Ga. 293 (Ga. 1881).

Opinion

1, 2. The controlling question made by this record involves the construction of the first paragraph of the seventh section of the seventh article of the constitution, which is in the following words:

" The debt hereafter incurred by any county, municipal corporation or political division of this state, except as in this constitution provided for, shall'never exceed seven per centum of the assessed value of all the taxable property therein, and no such county, municipality or division shall incur any new debt, except for a temporary loan or loans to supply casual deficiencies of revenue, not to exceed one-fifth of one per centum of the assessed value of taxable property therein, without the assent of two-thirds of the qualified voters thereof, at an election for that purpose, to be held as may be prescribed by law; but any city, the debt of which does not exceed seven per centum of the assessed Value of the property at the time of the adoption of this constitution, may be authorized by law to increase, at any time, the amount of said debt three per centum upon such assessed valuation.”

The city of Augusta is indebted some fourteen per centum upon her taxable property, and was so indebted at the time of the adoption of the constitution. On the recommendation of her board of health, an ordinance was passed providing for the issue of bonds to the amount of four hundred thousand dollars, to. pay for a system of sewerage, drainage and water supply for the city, thus creating a new debt in addition to that already standing against her, which exceeds seven per centum upon the valuation of her taxable property. So that the question is, can she incur this new debt, in addition to what she now owes, without a violation of this paragraph of the constitution. It is conceded that she could not do so if her present indebtedness of more than seven per centum had been incurred subsequently to the adoption of the constitution, but it is argued that inasmuch as that debt [297]*297is an old debt, contracted prior to the date of the constitution, this new debt proposed to be levied is not within the prohibition of the constitution. In order to arrive at the true construction of all statute law, whether organic and fundamental, or legislative, the cardinal rule, if there be ambiguity in the words, is to consider the old law, the mischief or evil, and the remedy. The rule is taken by us from the English law, and of course applies to fundamental or organic legislation ; for the acts of parliament in that country are. supreme, and laws emanating from the legislature of England are fundamental. The rule has its application to statutes of all sorts’, whether the ukase of absolutism, the fundamental utterances of the people assembled in convention to ordain a written constitution, the acts of a legislative assembly limited by that written constitution, or the ordinances of a municipality controlled by the limitations of the legislative power which gave it being, or the' by-laws of an ordinary corporation, because the basis on which this universal rule of construction reposes is good sense and sound reason. Whosoever may be the law-maker, naturally he will examine the old law to see what evil existed therein, and he will frame the new enactment to guard against that evil for the future.

It is conceded by every one who reads this paragraph of the constitution of 1877 that the construction of it from its mere words is somewhat difficult. The difficulty arises from the use of the words, “ the debt hereafter incurred ” by any municipality “ shall never exceed seven per centum of the assessed value of all the taxable property therein.” “ Hereafter incurred ” would seem to fix the meaning as having reference to no debt at all theretofore incurred ; but the latter part of the paragraph expressly limits any city, whose debt, at the time of its adoption, does not exceed seven per centum, from incurring an additional debt of more than three per centum thereon, but enables it to do so by legislative grant of [298]*298power therefor, thereby by the strongest implication denying any city, whose debt did, at the time the constitution was adopted, exceed seven per centum on its taxable property, from increasing its debt at all, even though it procured legislative authority to increase it. Arid then the middle of the paragraph throws'additional trouble-in the way of a clear interpretation of the entire paragraph by prohibiting any city from incurring any new debt at all, except to the extent of one-fifth of one per centum, and that limited to the single purpose of supplying “ casual deficiencies of revenue,” without the assent of two-thirds of its qualified voters. So that, construing the whole paragraph together by the words used therein, the meaning thereof is not as clear as it might have been made. To give it, therefore, a rational construction, we must have recourse to the cardinal rule above recited.

What was the old law? It was the constitution of 1868. To revise that fundamental law, and ordain a new one, wherein it was evil, is the purpose which the legislature had in view when it called together the people in convention, in 1877. That purpose appears on the face of the legislative call. Acts of 1877, p. 26.

When that body assembled, inasmuch as it represented the people in their sovereign capacity, the legislative call could not limit the sovereign’s power, and the representatives of the sovereign power made a new constitution, revising and altering the old as they saw fit, submitting their work to their constituents, the sovereign people, who' ratified the act of théir representatives.

By the constitution of 1868, the taxing power of the municipal governments of the state was limited only by the legislative will of the state in general assembly convened, (Cons. 1868, Art. 1, Sec. 28, Code, §5020;) not repugnant of course to that constitution or the constitution of the United States. Art. III, Sec. V, Par. 1, Code, §5062. And such will of the legislature became repugnant to the constitution of 1868, when a citizen [299]*299against his will was made to contribute to any work of internal improvement unless sanctioned by the vote of a majority of the qualified voters of the city at an election held for that purpose. Art. 3, Sec. 6, Par, 4, Code, §5067.

Beyond this restriction, there was no limit on the power of a municipality to tax her citizens or to incur debts if authorized to do so by the general assembly. Such was the old organic law, the constitution of 1868.

What was the evil? It was the evil attendant upon all people who handle money not their own. The cities of the state incurred a very heavy indebtedness — some of them became insolvent. To levy taxes enough to pay them would work the ruin of the citizens and blight the prosperity of the city. Not to levy and pay them would be to destroy credit and soil honor. The cities are the arteries of the body politic. With them destroyed or sluggish, the heart, the very life, of the republic would cease to beat or pulsate with a feeble supply of vital fluid. So that in their health is involved that of the entire commonwealth, and to suffer their honor to be tarnished is to soil that of the state. Therefore, the strong language used by this court in 64 Ga., 286 and 498, in respect to the evils resulting from this unlimited power to incur city indebtedness with only the slight check of the sanction of a majority of the voters, without regard to their property- or intelligence, is sober though figurative — it is stern truth and no flight of fancy.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ga. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-city-council-of-augusta-ga-1881.