Yancey v. City of Searcy

212 S.W.2d 546, 213 Ark. 673, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 516
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 21, 1948
Docket4-8631
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 212 S.W.2d 546 (Yancey v. City of Searcy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yancey v. City of Searcy, 212 S.W.2d 546, 213 Ark. 673, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 516 (Ark. 1948).

Opinion

Ed. F. McFaddin, Justice.

Searcy is a city of tlie second class; and this is a suit brought by a citizen and taxpayer against the city and its officials to test the legality of certain purchases and plans contemplated by the city. The appellant, as plaintiff below, claimed that the city proposed to act ultra vires; the appellees (defendants below) in their answer detailed exactly how and why <the city was about to proceed. The appellant’s demurrer to the answer was overruled. Thereupon the appellant refused to plead further; and the chancery court dismissed the complaint for i^ant of equity. On this appeal the issue is, whether the allegations of the complaint, as amplified and explained by the answer, show that the city is about to engage in an ultra vires undertaking.

The complaint alleged, inker alia: ‘ ‘ The inhabitants of said city (Searcy) are supplied with water by the White County Water Company, a Delaware corporation, duly licensed to do business in the State of Arkansas, which owns and operates a pumping and filtering plant and reservoir on Little Red River. After pumping the water into the settling basins and treating it, the company distributes the water through a large single main which supplies not only the City of Searcy, Arkansas, but also the municipalities of Judsonia and Bald Knob, the service main running through Judsonia to reach Bald Knob. The company also owns and operates the waterworks system at Beebe, but this has an independent source of supply, derived from wells in the vicinity, and there is no physical connection between the Beebe waterworks system and the rest of the White County Water Company’s properties.

“The City of Searcy is proposing to buy the entire plant of the White County Water Company, w;hich will include all of its pumping station, reservoirs^ settling tanks, and filtering and treating plant on the Little Red River, the supply main from there not only to the City of 'Searcy but on through Searcy to Judsonia and Bald Knob, tbe distribution systems in tbe three cities, and their franchises and licenses, as well as the entire waterworks system serving the incorporated town of Beebe; , . . that this action will have the City of Searcy, Arkansas, engaged in business as a public utility, since it will be selling water to three other communities; that this is ultra vires and will involve the city in the hazards of a commercial enterprise, subjecting it to the losses and expenses incident to the operation and maintenance of public utility systems.”

The answer alleged, inter alia: “Defendants admit that they have negotiated a contract with the White County Water Company for the purchase of all of its properties, which will include the source of supply and distribution of water, the other physical assets of said company, and the franchises for supplying water to the residents of Searcy, Beebe, Judsonia and Bald Knob, for the reason that the City of Searcy is in urgent need of additional facilities both for supply and for a distribution system to serve sections of the City that have been recently improved, creating a greatly increased demand for water, and is in need of additional water pressure for the protection of the life and health of its citizens and has been notified by the Arkansas Inspection and Rating Bureau that if these improvements are not made, the classification of Searcy will be reduced from the 7th class to the 8th class, with the result that its insurance rates will be substantially increased . . . ; that the company refuses to sell the Searcy plant as a separate unit from its entire system for the reason that the Searcy distribution system is the profitable part of the company’s entire operation and if it were to be taken by the City under right of eminent domain it would so damage and impair the value of the rest of the property that the severance damages added to actual value would make the cost substantially greater than the actual value of the Searcy water properties, and that therefore it is cheaper for the City to acquire the entire property of the company than to acquire only that part thereof which serves the City of Searcy; that the City would either have to acquire and pay for the company’s present pumping station, settling basins, filter tanks and water mains, or it would have to build new ones to serve its own needs; that present day costs would make this an extravagant undertaking; that if the City did not do this it would be a consumer of the White County Water Company and would not be able to secure the additional water supply and to make the extensions and improvements which it urgently needs.

“ . . . the estimated cost of the needed improvements is $225,000, which the city can secure from the sale of the three municipal properties which it does not need, and if necessary it can issue some ad valorem bonds under the authority of Amendment No. 13. . . .
‘ ‘ The city can buy the entire property of the White County Water Company for $358,390, from which the company will pay all of its debts so that the city will have clear title to the properties; the city has a firm offer for a series of revenue bonds to be issued under the provisions of Act No. 131 of 1933 and the amendments thereto, in an amount sufficient to pay for the entire properties, and it can use the money to be received from the sale of the Beebe, Judsonia and Bald Knob properties for extensions and improvements to the Searcy system. The bonds will be revenue bonds and cannot possibly be a charge upon the property of the plaintiff and will not increase his taxes, since the cost of the project will be paid entirely by the users of water. ...
“The system is now the only available source of supply of water to Judsonia and Bald Knob, and for that reason, if the defendant city acquires the entire property, it will be necessary for it to continue to supply water to Judsonia and Bald Knob until such time as it can sell these two systems, but it is not the intention of the city to engage in the business of a public utility; and it lias found buyers for the distribution system at Bald Knob, the distribution system at Judsonia, and the entire system at Beebe, and these transfers can be made shortly after the defendant acquires the property, so that it will then own only the necessary source of supply, treatment and filter plants, and the transmission lines. The cities of Judsonia and Bald Knob are not financially able .to pay for the water main which extends from the corporate limits of Searcy and runs through Judsonia on to Bald Knob, but they have sufficient water revenues respectively to enable each to sell a series of water revenue bonds to pay for its distribution system, and the City of Searcy can, over a reasonable period of years, amortize the cost of the supply main from Searcy to these cities through the water rates to be charged to them.
“The money which the city will receive from the sale of the Beebe, Judsonia and Bald Knob properties will be used by the city to carry out the entire program for improvement of supply and distribution and extension of the mains of the service in Searcy, in order to afford better protection for the property and the lives of the inhabitants of Searcy and to meet the requirements of the Arkansas Inspection and Rating Bureau.”

We have copied rather extensively from the plead-' ings so that the full picture will be visible in its correct proportions.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W.2d 546, 213 Ark. 673, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yancey-v-city-of-searcy-ark-1948.