139 Tenn. 532 | Tenn. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The hill was filed by a taxpayer of Shelby county, in behalf of himself and all other taxpayers to have declared void $150,000 of bonds which the county was about to issue, under chapters 295 and 479 of the so-
Chapter 295 is entitled: “An act to authorize Shelby county .to aid Bolton College by the issuance of $150,000 in bonds, to levy a tax for the benefit of said school, and to secure the payment of the bonds and the interest thereon.”
The act recited in its first section that its purpose was to raise means necessary to erect buildings upon the property of Bolton College, and to purchase necessary equipment therefor. It further provided that Bolton College should execute a trust deed on all its real estate, together with improvements thereon, and that this trust deed was to. secure the payment of these bonds to be issued by Shelby county; that the bonds and coupons should not create any general liability against Shelby county, but the holders should look solely to the security of the trust deed. The next section gave to Shelby county the right to levy a special Bolton College tax annually so long as the bonds should remain outstanding, and provided that
Chapter 479 amended section 2 of the act just referred to by adding at the end of that section the following:
“Provided, that in case Shelby county shall issue said bonds, then it shall be the duty of the county to levy a sufficient tax each year to provide for the payment of the interest on the bonds, and to provide a sinking fund, so long as any of said bonds are outstanding, and this duty is made mandatory on the county.”
Pursuant to these two acts the county court of Shelby county entered upon its minutes certain orders directing that $150,000 of bonds should be executed by the county in aid of Bolton College, and should be sold and the proceeds turned over to the trustees of the college. Accordingly the bonds were prepared and a
Neither the original act nor the amended act provided for a submission of the proposition to a vote of the people.
Bolton College is an institution of learning arising out of the will of Wade Bolton. He died about the year 1869, and left three hundred acres of land and a considerable sum of money for the erection and financing of an institution of learning for the benefit of the poor and orphan white children of the First civil district of Shelby county. In the course of time the management of the trust fell into the hands of the chancery court of Shelby county, where it has rested for many years. Buildings have been erected upon the property, and a school has been conducted there for a long time. The. chancellor directed that the charity he incorporated, and this was done, but the trustees of that date are all dead, and it does not appear that the corporate functions have since been used, the school acting, as stated, practically always under the direction of the chancellor.
About the year 1910 the board of education of Shelby' county began to take an interest in the college. Through the efforts of that body an agricultural school was established at Bolton College, and the county aided it for a term of two years by a tax of one cent on each $100 of all the taxable wealth of Shelby county. This was continued for another two
We are of tbe opinion that the two legislative acts referred to are void, because they are in violation of the second paragraph of article 2, section 29, of’ our Constitution of 1870, since they attempt to authorize one of the counties of this State without a preliminary popular election to lend its aid to an entity distinct from itself, by the issuance of bonds to be paid by taxes assessed upon, and collected from, the property of the citizens of the county. The result is the same whether Bolton College be regarded as a corporation, or simply as a charitable organization represented by trustees acting at all times under the direction of the chancery court of the county.
The section of the Constitution referred to reads: “Sec. 29. The General Assembly shall have power to authorize the several counties and incorporated towns in this State, to impose taxes for county and corporation purposes respectively, in such manner as shall be prescribed by law; and all property shall be taxed according to its value, upon the principles established in regard to State taxation.
“But the credit of no county, city or town shall be given or loaned to or in aid of any person, company, association or corporation, except upon an election to be first held by the qualified voters of such county, city or town, and the assent of three-fourths of the votes cast at said election. Nor shall any county,
The first paragraph was the same in the Constitution of 1834. The second originated with the Constitution of 1870.
Many of onr cases on the general subject were either decided before the adoption of the Constitution of 1870 or, if decided afterwards, were based upon facts arising before that time, and so were decided under the Constitution of 1834, that is, under the first paragraph quoted supra. Among these .cases are the following: Nichol v. Nashville, 9 Humph. (28 Tenn.), 252; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Davidson County, 1 Sneed (33 Tenn.), 637, 62 Am. Dec., 424; Winston v. T. & P. R. R. Co., 1 Baxt. (60 Tenn.), 60; Lauder-, dale County v. Fargason, 7 Lea (75 Tenn.), 155; City of Memphis v. Gayoso Gas Co., 9 Heisk. (56 Tenn.), 531; University v. Knoxville, 6 Baxt. (65 Tenn.), 166. In applying these cases it is important to bear this fact in mind, so that we may not confuse the act of 1852 carried into the Code of 1858, providing a method by which the popular will might be ascertained on a proposition for granting aid by a subscription to stock, or in other forms, with the positive requirement of the Constitution of 1870 that a popular vote of approval shall be essential to the loan or other aid granted to a corporation, company, association, or other person. The propriety of this suggestion is illustrated by the case of Lauderdale Co. v. Fargason, supra, wherein it
So it is that, although the legislature may itself, without the intervention of county or municipal authorities, levy taxes directly for the support of such county or municipal corporation (Luehrman v. Taxing District, 2 Lea [70 Tenn.], 425, 441-445; Williams v. Taxing District, 16 Lea [84 Tenn.], 531, 536, 538; Demoville v. Davidson County, 3 Pickle [87 Tenn.], 214, 224, 10 S. W., 353; State ex rel. v. Cummings, 3 Thompson [130 Tenn.], 566, 569, 573, 172 S. W., 290, L. R. A., 1915D, 274; Quinn v. Hester, 135 Tenn., 373, 186 S. W., 459), yet it cannot authorize such county or municipal corporation, and to these only can it delegate the taxing power (Waterhouse v. Board, 8 Heisk. [55 Tenn.], 857; Ballentine v. Mayor, 15 Lea [83 Tenn.], 633, 639; Luehrman v. Taxing District, supra; Smith v. Carter, 131 Tenn., 1, 7, 173 S. W., 430), to lend its aid by taxation to any corporation, company, association, or person, or to subscribe for stock in or with any such body or person, unless it also authorizes the submission of the matter to a vote of the' people, and unless such vote be had approving by a three-fourths majority such lending of aid or subscription for stock, thus complying with the act author
Furthermore, such lending of aid or subscription of stock must he for -a county or corporation purpose, under the express terms of the constitutional provision quoted; and Mr. Justice Tueley, in Nichol v. Nashville, supra, suggested that this would be true even without a formal requirement of the Constitution. However, such is the positive requirement.
As to what is a county or corporation purpose our cases declare that this is incapable of an exact and all-inclusive definition, and that each case must turn on its own facts. Nichol v. Nashville, supra; McCallie v. Chattanooga, 3 Head (40 Tenn.), 317, 321; Shelby County v. Judges, 3 Shan. Cas., 508, 512, 513, 518, 521, 522; Shelby County v. Exposition Co., 12 Pickle (96 Tenn.), 659, 36 S. W., 694, 33 L. R. A., 717. Some illustrations from our cases will indicate the general views of the court on the subject: A county bridge is a county purpose, Burnett v. Maloney, 13 Pickle (97 Tenn.), 697, 37 S. W., 680, 34 L. R. A., 541; an exhibit of the county’s resources at an exhibition of the resources of the State, Shelby County v. Exposition Co., 12 Pickle (96 Tenn.), 653, 659-661, 36 S. W., 694, 33 L. R. A., 717; a drainage district, State ex rel. v. Powers, 16 Cates (124 Tenn.), 553, 137 S. W., 1110; In re Forked Deer Drainage District, 133 Tenn., 684, 182 S. W., 237; juvenile courts, State ex rel. v. Brown, 132 Tenn., 685, 690, 179 S. W., 321; public
Each one of the following has been approved as a municipal corporation purpose: A public library, University v. Knoxville, 6 Baxt. (65 Tenn.), 166; subscription for the lighting, of the city, City of Memphis v. Memphis Gayoso Gas Co., 9 Heisk. (56 Tenn.), 531; waterworks, Newman v. Ashe, 9 Baxt. (68 Tenn.), 380, 381-383; public schools, Ballentine v. Pulaski, 15 Lea (83 Tenn.), 644; the improvement of the streets of a city, Imboden v. City of Bristol, 132 Tenn., 562, 179 S. W., 147; the building of a railroad into or near a city, Nichol v. Nashville, supra; McCallie v. Chattanooga, supra.
The cases illustrating a county purpose and those illustrating a municipal corporation purpose are mutually helpful.
It is perceived that some of the purposes are direct; as public bridges, public schools, waterworks, gasworks, and some others catalogued in the list just given, whilst others, as the construction of a railroad into a county, or into or near a city, are indirect. The former promote directly the welfare of the county or city, while the latter effect this result only in an incidental way, in the increase of the value of lands, the improvement of trade and commerce, and the like.
But even a direct purpose may he made effective through the device of the county’s or the city’s lending its credit to some other corporation, company, association, or person, or by subscribing stock therein. In that event the case falls within the second paragraph of the section of the Constitution quoted. This is illustrated by the case of Colburne v. Railroad, 94 Tenn., 43, 28 S. W., 298. There it appeared the county of Hamilton, through its county court, entered into a contract with a railroad company to unite with it in the building of a public county bridge, the lower part to be used by the railroad company, and the upper part, or upper story, so to speak, to he used by the county. There was a special act purporting to authorize the contract, hut this act did not provide for a submission of the matter to a vote of the people, and there was no such submission. The court held that for this reason the contract was void; that it consti
The illustration is an apt one in respect of the case before us. Public schools are a county purpose, and the county may be authorized to levy taxes directly for them, to be appropriated directly to their support, without the necessity of a popular vote. This would fall under the first paragraph of section 29. But if the county, instead of applying its taxes directly to its public schools, desires to lend its aid to some other educational institution, as in the ease before us, engaged in substantially the same work, that is, educating and training the young people or children of the county, that desire can be rendered effectual, and its fruition secured, only by an act of the legislature authorizing it, and the approval of a three-fourths majority obtained by a popular vote thereon. Whether the statute must provide for a submission to the people, or whether the vote may be taken without the act’s requiring it, has not been heretofore decided. Mr. Justice Wilkes, in the case just cited, in a dictum, inclined to the latter view. Mr. Justice. Calu-well, in the later case of Shelby County v. Exposition Co., supra, likewise in a dictum, expressed the very decided opinion that the act must provide for the
Another point should he noted in respect of Shelby County v. Exposition Co., supra, which is common to all the cases illustrating the effectuation of a county purpose through the direct action of the county authorities, and that is the county handles its own funds, and applies them directly to the matters in hand. Thus in the case just referred to the county appointed its own agents to manage and disburse the fund, and to make effectual the county purpose, the exhibition of its resources. It did not turn the money over to the exposition company. The opposite is true in the case before us. The money, according to the scheme outlined in the acts, is to be turned over to Bolton College to be expended in the construction and equipment of certain desired buildings. Moreover, when the work is completed Bolton College will own the buildings, and the county will have nothing to show for its money.
There is one further thought that should be expressed. We have spoken of a direct and an indirect purpose. This has reference, in addition to the exposition of the matter appearing on a former page, to the
On the grounds stated the chancellor’s decree must be reversed, and a decree entered here declaring the bonds void, and perpetually enjoining their issuance.
The defendants will pay the costs.