The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The .petitioner, who is a resident taxpayer of the town of Dillon, seeks to enjoin the *414 town council and the commissioners of public works from issuing the negotiable coupon bonds of said town to the amount of $77,000, which he alleges they are about to do. Of the amount which the respondents propose to issue, it appears that $39,000 are to be used in the establishing of a system of waterworks, and the balance, $38,000, in the building of a system of sewerage for the town.
The present value of all the property in the town as assessed for taxation by the State, is $550,000. The existing bonded indebtedness of the town is $26,000, and that of School District No-. 8, which embraces the same territory, in whole or in part, is $35,000.
Section 7 of article VIII of the Constitution contains the following limitation: “No city or town in this State shall Eereafter incur any bonded debt which, including existing bonded indebtedness, shall exceed eight per centum of the assessed value of the taxable property therein * * *and section 5 of article X of the Constitution includes a limitation similar to the above, prescribing an eight per centum limitation to the bonded debt of any political division, as well as the following additional limitation: “And wherever there shall be several political divisions or municipal corporations covering or extending over the same territory, or portions thereof, possessing a power to levy a tax or contract a debt, then each of such political divisions or municipal corporation shall so exercise its power to increase its debt under the foregoing.eight per cent, limitation that the aggregate debt over and upon the territory of this State shall never exceed fifteen per centum of the value of all taxable property in such territory as valued for taxation "by the State.”
*416 The foregoing provisions of the Constitution have been amended so that they do not now apply to bonds issued for the purposes for which the bonds here in question are to be issued. Section 7 of article VIII, above cited, was amended in 1910, and the amendment was ratified by the legislature in 1911 (27 Stat. 13) by adding at the tnd of said section the following: * * * “Provided, further, That the limitations imposed by this section and by section 5 of article X of this Constitution, shall not apply to the bonded indebtedness in and by any municipal corporation when the proceeds of said bonds are applied solely and exclusively for the purchase, establishment and maintenance of a waterworks plant, sewerage system, or lighting plant, and when the question of incurring such indebtedness is submitted to the freeholders and qualified voters of such municipality as provided in the Constitution, upon the question of other bonded indebtedness.” It is contended, however, that this amendment is invalid, because it was not submitted to the people and adopted in the manner prescribed by the Constitution itself for- the amendment thereof. To sustain that point section 2 of article XVT of the Constitution is relied upon. It provides as follows: “If two or more amendments shall be submitted at the same time, they shall be submitted in such manner that the electors shall vote for or against each of such amendments separately.”
It is clear, upon the slightest consideration, that the submission of the amendment to section 7 of article VIII, as above quoted, including the amendment, by reference thereto, of section 5 of article X, was not in violation of the provision of section
2
of article XVI, above quoted, because there was really only one amendment submitted, and that had reference to only one subject—the limitation upon the bonded debt of municipal corporations. And it was intended by that amendment to remove all limitations imposed 'by said sections of the Constitution upon the
*417
bonded debt of municipal corporations, when the bonds are issued for any of the purposes mentioned in said amendment. If section
7
of article VIII had been amended as above, without any direct reference to section 5 of article X. tíre provisions of the latter section in conflict with the amendiWtfit would have been repealed by necessary implication; ana^in like manner and for a like reason, so much of section 2021, volume I, Code 1902, as provides “that the aggregate bonded indebtedness of any city or town shall never exceed eight per centum of the assessed value of taxable property therein” has been repealed. That provision of the statute was really unnecessary, but it was enacted, presumably out of abundance of caution, to carry out the limitation implied by the Constitution, which has been removed 'by the amendment of section 7 of article VIII, as above quoted.
Bray
v.
Florence,
62 S. C. 57,
Petition dismissed.
