Warden v. City of Grafton

26 S.E.2d 1, 125 W. Va. 658, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 40
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1943
DocketCC 668
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 26 S.E.2d 1 (Warden v. City of Grafton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warden v. City of Grafton, 26 S.E.2d 1, 125 W. Va. 658, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 40 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinions

Rose, Judge:

In this case we have for determination ultimately the question of the legality of a series of general obligation *660 bonds in the amount of $40,000.00, and a series of so-called revenue bonds in the amount of $160,000.00, authorized by the City of Grafton by separate ordinances adopted on June 22, 1942, and the 14th day of January, 1943, respectively.

The Charter of the City of Grafton is Chapter 79 of the Acts of the Legislature of 1913, by Section 19 of which the city is empowered “to acquire, hold, maintain, control, or dispose of a hospital or a public library, or any property for eleemosynary purposes or any interest therein”. Pursuant to this provision the" city many years ago established, and has ever since maintained, a small hospital which has long since proved to be inadequate. Accordingly, in the year 1938 the city, partly from funds provided from general taxation and partly by assistance from the Works Progress Administration, undertook to construct a new hospital building on property then owned by the city. The Works Progress Administration, however, in 1940 terminated its assistance and the city being without further funds, the structure was left incomplete. In 1942 the city authorities determined that in order to complete and equip the institution an additional sum of $200,000.00 would be necessary, and applied to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation for a loan for that purpose. That corporation has offered in writing to lend the sum of $160,000.00 toward the project, upon various conditions, including the requirement that the city from other sources furnish and first use toward the completion of the building the sum of $40,000.00. Not having available funds for that purpose, the city, by ordinance, submitted to its voters, as required by law, the question of issuing general obligation bonds of the city in the amount of $40,000.00, the proceeds of which should be used toward the completion of the hospital, but upon condition that the loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation should be obtained. These general obligation bonds were authorized by a vote of 1813 to 143; were approved as regular and valid by the Attorney General of the State, as required by law; and were sold to the Sinking Fund *661 Commission of the State, and the proceeds thereof are now being held in cash in a depository bank.

'Certain questions of law arose from the fact of the previous and now proposed present investment of the city in the hospital enterprise, which the Reconstruction Finance Corporation required to be settled judicially before completing its loan. The plaintiff, therefore, as a resident, citizen and taxpayer of the city, on behalf of himself and all other persons in like situation, instituted this suit in chancery to enjon the expenditure of the proceeds of the $40,000.00 bond issue and the issuing or sale of the proposed revenue bonds, making the corporation, and members of the commission who constitute its governing body defendants. The bill of complaint charges both issues of bonds to be invalid. The grounds of invalidity pleaded may be indicated, though not fully stated, in the following summarization: (1) That the requirement that the city pay for its future use of the hospital constitutes a continuing, unascertained and unlimited debt and perpetual contract; (2) that revenue bonds for construction of a municipal public works cannot be issued by the city unless the entire project is financed from the proceeds thereof; (3) that from the fact that such revenue bonds are proposed to be made a lien on the completed hospital and to be paid for from the proceeds thereof, while the structure was partly paid for from taxes and general funds of the city, makes it a general debt of the city by which the total indebtedness of the city is increased beyond the constitutional and statutory amount permissible; (4) that the later bond ordinance purports to pledge the net revenues of the whole of the hospital to the payment of the revenue bonds, whereas only part of the hospital will be constructed from the proceeds thereof; (5) that the ordinance in question was not legally and regularly adopted; (6) that the revenue bonds, while in effect general indebtedness of the city, were not approved by the voters of the city; (7) that by statute the $40,000.00 is forbidden to be used in connection with the proceeds of revenue bonds for such *662 project; (8) that the proposed statutory mortgage securing the revenue bonds is illegal because it covers property, part of which was paid for by general taxation and other funds of the city.

With the bill were filed as exhibits, certified copies of the complete records of the municipal authorities showing all their actions in detail relating to these bond issues.

The defendants demurred to this bill, assigning, in substance, the grounds that the bill on its face, together with the exhibits filed therewith, shows as a matter of law that none of the grounds assigned therein for attack on the validity of the two issues of bonds, or either of them, is well taken and that it is, therefore, legally insufficient. The court sustained this demurrer and thereupon, on its own motion, certified to this Court the points of law made and the questions arising upon said demurrer, as follows:

“I. Whether revenue bonds issued by authority of the provisions of Chapter 68, Acts of the Legislature, 1935, (Code, Article 4A of Chapter 8), constitute indebtedness of the City of Grafton under the provisions of Article 8, Section 10 of the Constitution of West Virginia?
“II. Whether the proposed revenue bonds in the sum of $160,000.00 will constitute a general indebtedness of the City of Grafton and as such be added to the total of all other indebtedness owing by the said city to determine whether or not the indebtedness of the City of Grafton exceeds the two and one-half percent (21/2%) of the value of the taxable property in said city as shown by the last assessment for state and county purposes next prior to the issuance of said bonds under the provisions of Section 3, Article 1, Chapter 13 of the Code, or the five per cent (5%) thereof under the provisions of Article 8, Section 10 of the Constitution of West Virginia?
“III. Does the fact that during the year 1938 and subsequent thereto about One Hundred Thirty Thousand Dollars ($130,000.00) was expended, whereby the hospital was started, but not completed, and was left in unusable and in *663 complete condition, a part of which sum was expended by the City of Grafton from funds derived from general taxation and a part of which was' obtained from the Works Progress Administration, prevent the said City from now issuing revenue bonds to obtain the money with which to complete said hospital, and from pledging for the purpose of retiring said bonds the entire net revenue to be derived from the hospital after completion?
“IV. Does-the fact that the City of Grafton voted bonds in the amount of Forty Thousand Dollars ($40,000.00), which said bonds are to be repaid by direct levy upon, and taxation against, all property in the City of Grafton, and which said Forty Thousand Dollars ($40,000.00) is to be expended as.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.E.2d 1, 125 W. Va. 658, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warden-v-city-of-grafton-wva-1943.