Wheeler v. City of Blackfoot

45 P.2d 298, 55 Idaho 599, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 98
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1935
DocketNo. 6235.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 P.2d 298 (Wheeler v. City of Blackfoot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. City of Blackfoot, 45 P.2d 298, 55 Idaho 599, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 98 (Idaho 1935).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

The City of Blackfoot, one of appellants herein, in accordance with law and the ordinances of the city, created Special Improvement District No. 18 and issued and sold seventy bonds for construction purposes, sixty of which were for $1,000 each, nine were for $271.95 each and one for $271.98, aggregating in all the sum of $62,719.53; all were dated October 1, 1916, and provided for semi-annual interest at six per cent. Proceeds from the sale of the bonds were applied in payment of the expenses and construction charges for improvements within the district. The cost of the improvements and expenses was assessed against the property within the district and the assessment-roll was filed with the county treasurer. Assessments were to be collected in ten annual instalments and turned over to the city treasurer, less one-fourth of one per cent collection charge. Special Improvement District No. 18 Fund was established and charged with- assessments as paid in and credited as bonds and interest were paid therefrom. The county treasurer collected from property owners within *601 the district the sum of $81,355.24 as assessments. This amount was disbursed as follows:

Retirement of bonds principal..................$58,947.55

Retirement of Interest Coupons on Bonds........ 19,200.72

Costs of collection............................ 1,326.94

Correction of error, mistake in figuring and collecting assessments ....................... 194.19

Interest on Warrant #2664, etc................ 809.50

Exchange ................................... 23.32

Cash on hand in fund........................ 853.02

$81,355.24

The correctness of this account is admitted.

Before any assessments were due or collected in 1917 the first instalment of bonds and interest became due. In order to prevent default, Warrant No. 2664, upon the city’s general fund, was issued on September 13, 1917, by the mayor and cleric (without authority of the city council) and sold to the bank. The bank thereupon drew its draft on a New York bank in favor of the Hanover National Bank for the sum of $8,153.54 and the amount of this draft was applied in payment of maturing bonds in the sum of $6,271.95 and the balance of $1,881.59 was used in payment of maturing interest coupons on the entire bond issue. This warrant No. 2664 was “called” and paid by the city to the holder (the First National Bank) on February 28, 1919. On the latt&r date there was transferred from the general fund of the city to the Improvement District No. 18 Fund, $8,153.54, which represented the face of the warrant. On that date and prior to the transfer of this sum there -was in the Improvement District No. 18 Fund $5,555.68. The amount loaned from the general fund to the Improvement District Fund No. 18 remained in the Improvement District Fund without payment of interest or any of the principal from February, 1919, to September 30, 1926. On the latter date the city council ordered a transfer of the sum of $8,963.04 (original sum loaned the district plus interest on the same to February, 1919) from the Improvement Dis *602 trict Fund to the city’s general fund, and the advance or loan was thus paid.

All of the bonds of District No. 18, together with interest coupons, had- been paid except bonds numbered 67 to 70, inclusive, and one coupon on each for six months interest, totaling principal of $3,271.98. The Improvement District defaulted in the payment of these last four bonds mentioned above on October 1, 1926, the date of their maturity; no action was taken by respondents (the bondholders) to foreclose the delinquent assessments until five years, (lacking one day) after default, — complaint in this cause being filed on September 30, 1931.

Plaintiffs alleged that the money withdrawn from the Improvement District Fund in the sum of $8,153.54 was “unlawfully and • wrongfully withdrawn from said Local Street Improvement District No. 18 Fund and transferred and credited to the current expense fund of said city,” and alleged the same amounted to a conversion of. so much of the improvement district funds. The complaint then prayed for a pro rata payment to the several defendants from the sum of.$853.02 remaining in the fund and “that plaintiffs have judgment against the City of Blackfoot .... for the amount of principal remaining unpaid on each of plaintiffs’ bonds after the application of the sum admittedly in the hands of the' treasurer. ’ ’

Upon the trial of the issues an accounting was had, and the court made findings of fact and entered judgment as follows:

“That the city treasurer of the defendant City of Blackfoot shall pay to the plaintiff the full amount of the face of said bonds amounting to the principal sum of $3271.98 and interest amounting to- $98.16 on surrender of the said bonds owned by the respective plaintiffs; that said City of Blackfoot shall pay into the fund of said Local Street Improvement District No. 18 the sum of $2571.11, failing which the plaintiffs shall have judgment and execution therefor; that plaintiffs recover their costs and disbursements incurred in this action taxed at the sum of $14.40.” *603 The City and the Treasurer have appealed and in this court insist that the only sum available for the payment of respondents’ bonds is the balance of $853.02, which the books of the city showed was in the fund on October 1, 1926, when these bonds matured. These are the material and essential facts of the ease.

Here a loss must be suffered by someone. That loss must fall either upon the general fund of the City of Blackfoot, which means, in the finish, the taxpayers of the city, or else it must be borne by the owners of the improvement district bonds. We are therefore confronted with the question: Upon whom should this loss fall; or in other words, which of the parties litigant stands in the most favorable position to merit consideration in the present case?

In the first place it must be admitted that all funds collected by the city by means of the improvement district assessments were trust funds pledged exclusively to the payment of the bonds issued against the special assessments. (Meyers v. City of Idaho Falls, 52 Ida. 81, 11 Pac. (2d) 626; Jewell v. City of Superior, 135 Fed. 19.) On September 30, 1926, one day before the bonds here in question matured, there was enough money in the improvement district fund to pay these bonds. On that date, however, the city withdrew from the fund $8,153.54, being enough to pay its claim, so that on the next day when respondents’ bonds matured there was only left in the fund the sum of $853.02; whereas the bonds held by respondents aggregated $3,271.98, principal, and $98.16 interest. We then have a case where the city as a general creditor of the improvement district prefers its claim over and above the claim of a bondholder who has a trust lien on the fund.

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Bluebook (online)
45 P.2d 298, 55 Idaho 599, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-city-of-blackfoot-idaho-1935.