177 P. 388 | Idaho | 1918
Lead Opinion
It appears from the pleadings and from a stipulation of facts, submitted to the district court in lieu of evidence, that the city council of Idaho Falls passed an. ordinance declaring it to be necessary and advisable for the city to incur an indebtedness; and to issue bonds, in the sum of $35,000, for the purpose of providing necessary funds to pay the cost' of acquiring an adequate electric light and power plant “by enlarging, extending, repairing, altering and improving” the plant it owned. Pursuant to the ordinance an election was held which resulted in favor of the indebtedness being incurred and the bonds being issued for the purpose above -stated.
This action was commenced by a taxpayer to procure an injunction restraining the city, its officers and agents, from consummating the issuance and sale of the bonds. A judgment of dismissal was entered from which this appeal is prosecuted.
The power of municipalities to issue bonds must be found in a legislative enactment. Such an enactment is a grant of authority from the state to the municipality and must be construed with strictness against the grantee. -The rule is thus stated in Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., vol. 1, sec. 237: “It is a general and undisputed proposition of law that a municipal corporation possesses and can exercise the following powers, and no others: First, those granted in express words; second, those necessarily or fairly implied in or incident to the powers expressly granted; third, those essential to the accomplishment of the declared objects and purposes of the corporation, — not simply convenient, but indispensable. Any fair, reasonable, substantial doubt concerning the existence of power is resolved by the courts against the corporation, and the power is denied.....” (State v. Superior Court, 93 Wash. 267, 160 Pac. 755, L. R. A. 1917B, 354; City of Independence v. Cleveland, 167 Mo. 384, 67 S. W. 216; State v. Temple, 99 Neb. 505, 156 N. W. 1063; Sharkey v. City of Butte, 52 Mont. 16, 155 Pac. 266; People v. Western etc. Traction Co., 214 N. Y. 526, 108 N. E. 847; Farwell v. City of Seattle, 43 Wash. 141, 10 Ann. Cas. 130, 86 Pac. 217; State v. Wilder, 200 Mo. 97, 98 S. W. 465; Boise City v. Boise Artesian H. & C. Water Co., 186 Fed. 705, 108 C. C. A. 523.)
The law of this state which grants to cities and villages authority to issue bonds in cases of this kind is to be found in Rev. Codes, sec. 2315.' That section has been frequently amended since the codification of our laws in 1908, and the portion of it relating to waterworks and light and power plants, as it was prior to the 1917 amendment, appears in Sess. Laws 1915, chap. 44, p. 130, as follows:
“Every city, town or village, incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Idaho or of the State of Idaho shall have power qnd authority to issue municipal coupon bonds in a
“Every city, town or village, incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Idaho or of the State of Idaho, shall have power and authority to issue municipal coupon bonds in a sufficient amount to acquire, by purchase or otherwise, a light and power plant for such municipality.”
See. 2315 was last amended in Sess. Laws 1917, chap. 16, p. 43, and now provides:
“Every city, town or village, incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Idaho or of the State of Idaho shall have power and authority to issue municipal coupon bonds in a sufficient amount to acquire, by purchase or otherwise, a waterworks plant for such municipality and a water supply therefor, and to construct, enlarge, extend, repair, alter and improve such plant.....
“Every city, town or village, incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Idaho or of the State of Idaho, shall have power and authority to issue municipal coupon bonds in a sufficient amount to acquire, by purchase or otherwise, a light and power plant for such municipality.”
It will be observed that by the amendatory act express authority was granted to issue bonds in order to raise funds with which to enlarge, extend, repair, alter and improve a waterworks plant belonging to a city or village, but that the express authority with respect to bond issues for light and power plant purposes remains as it was before the amendment and is confined to acquiring such plants by purchase, or otherwise.
The manifest purpose of permitting municipalities to issue bonds and to apply the proceeds of the sale of them to acquiring light and power plants is that they and their inhabitants may procure adequate light and power at reasonable rates and under management responsive to the will of their citizens. It does not follow, nor may it be fairly implied in, or as incident to, the power to acquire such a plant and to issue and sell bonds to raise funds with which to pay the cost of
It appears to have been the legislative intent that, while a light and power plant may be acquired by means of a bond issue, it must be enlarged, extended, repaired, altered or improved, if found necessary or desirable to do so, with funds derived from its operation, or, at least, from some other source than the sale of bonds. Some of these items clearly are, and others may be, within the scope of maintenance, and there is nothing in the law to suggest a legislative intent that a municipality may raise money with which to maintain its light and power plant by the means here sought to be employed.
Assistance in discovering the legislative intent is to be derived from’ the fact that authority has been expressly granted to issue bonds to enlarge, extend, repair, alter and improve waterworks plants, while such authority has not been so granted, for like purposes, with respect to light and power plants, although both subjects were treated in the same amendatory act. Had it. been intended to grant to municipalities the power here sought to be employed by the city of Idaho Falls, the legislature would have made that intention as clear and unmistakable in the one instance as it did in the other.
The supreme court of the United States, in Thomas v. West Jersey R. R. Co., 101 U. S. 71, 25 L. Ed. 950, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes, said: “Conceding the rule applicable to all statutes, that what is fairly implied is as much granted as what is expressed; it remains that the charter of a corporation is the measure of its powers, and that the enumeration of these powers implies the exclusion of all others.”
Power of municipal corporations in Idaho, to issue and sell bonds for the purposes sought to be served in this case, is neither expressed nor implied in the grant of authority from
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting. — The sole question involved is whether the power given to municipalities by Bev. Codes, see. 2315, as amended by chap. 16, Sess. Laws 1917, p. 43, is broad enough to authorize them to issue bonds for the purpose of constructing, enlarging, extending, repairing, altering and improving electric light and power plants. Subdivision (c) of the section, as amended, reads as follows:
“(c) Every city, town or village, incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Idaho or the State of Idaho, shall have power and authority to issue municipal coupon bonds in a sufficient amount to acquire, by purchase or otherwise, a light and power plant for such municipality.....”
In my opinion, the words “acquire by purchase or otherwise,” confer powers upon a municipality sufficiently broad to enable it to procure an adequate light and power plant by whatsoever means it deems best, whether by purchasing an existing plant, by constructing a new plant, or by enlarging, extending, repairing, altering and improving any such plant owned by such municipality.
The word “acquire” is defined by Webster’s New International Dictionary as follows: “To gain by any means, usually by one’s own exertions; to get as one’s own; as to acquire a title, riches, knowledge, good or bad habits.” Judicial decisions defining the meaning of the word “acquire,” when used in the connection employed in the statute above quoted, seem to be very meagre. However, the supreme court of California has given the following definition in an analogous case: “The word ‘acquire,’ within a proposition to issue bonds to acquire electric works, has a broad meaning, including both purchase and construction.” (Clark v. City of Los Angeles, 160 Cal. 30, 116 Pac. 722.)
The legislature has not seen fit to limit or define the manner or method by which a municipality may acquire a
“In this country, all corporations, whether public or private,, derive their powers from legislative grant, and can do no act for which authority is not expressly given, or may not be reasonably inferred. But if one were to say that they can do nothing for which a warrant could not be found in the language of their charters, we should deny them, in some cases, the power of self preservation, as well as many of the means necessary to effect the essential'objects of their incorporation. And therefore it has long been an established principle in the law of corporations, that they may exercise all the powers within the fair intent and purpose of their creation ichich are reasonably proper to give effect to powers expressly granted. In doing this, they must (unless restricted in this respect) have a choice of means adapted to ends, and are not to be confined to any one mode of operation.” (Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., see. 238.)
A case somewhat similar to the one at bar, and which clearly illustrates the principles underlying this case, is that
“2. But it is insisted by respondent that section 12a, art. 10, of the Constitution proposed by the Legislature in 1901, and ordered to be submitted to the qualified voters of this State at the general election to be held in November, 1902, and adopted at said election, does not authorize a city of 2,000 inhabitants and not more than 30,000 inhabitants, with the assent of two-thirds of the voters thereof voting at an election for that purpose, to become indebted to an amount not exceeding an additional 5 per centum on the value of the taxable property therein over and above' the amount specified in section 12 of article 10 of the Constitution of this state, for the purpose of purchasing waterworks and for improving the same, but such cities are restricted to one of two alternatives, and they must submit to the voters either a proposition to incur indebtedness to build and construct a new system, or a proposition simply to buy an existing system. A kindred contention was made in the case of State ex rel. Town of Canton v. Allen, 178 Mo. 555, 77 S. W. 868, and it was held by this court in banc that it was competent to submit such a proposition in the alternative. We think that case disposes of this point. Here the proposition is one only; i. e., to buy the old waterworks and electric plant and improve them. While it is true that municipal corporations have only such powers as are either expressly granted to them, or such as are necessarily implied, and that grants of power are strictly construed, so as not to extend them beyond the purpose of the Legislature, yet, as said by this court in Bank v. How, 56 Mo., loc. cit. 59, ‘the construction must not be so strict or technical as to defeat the evident objects and purposes of their creation.’ We think the amendment to the Constitution was designed by the people to enable cities of the population named to provide themselves with water and light, and to encourage municipal ownership of the water supply and lighting facilities. Their power to incur indebtedness for such purposes was found by experience insufficient, under the restrictions of our Constitution; and it was within the obser
The question here is not whether the city may bond for the purpose of maintaining or operating its light and power plant, but solely whether or not the language used by the legislature is sufficiently broad and was expressly designed to give municipalities the power, by a bond issue, to get or aequire and to own a cbmplete and adequate light and power plant, taking into consideration their varying and growing needs. It certainly could not have been the intention of the legislature to preclude a municipality from acquiring an electric light and power plant where none already existed, nor to require such municipality to get along with a plant which it might kcquire and which might prove grossly inadequate. I am, therefore, of the opinion that the addition of the. words in subdivision (b) of sec. 2315, supra, “and to construct, enlarge, extend, repair, alter and improve such plant,” gave
I agree with that portion of the majority opinion which holds that it was the manifest purpose of the legislature to permit municipalities to issue bonds and apply the proceeds thereof to acquiring a light and power plant, that it and the inhabitants may procure adequate light and power at reasonable rates and under management responsive to the will of the inhabitants of such municipalities, but I am not in accord with that portion of the opinion which states that “it does not follow, nor may it be fairly implied .... that the power to acquire such a plant and to issue and sell bonds to raise funds with which to pay the cost of acquiring it, that bonds may be issued and sold in order to raise funds with which to enlarge, extend, repair, alter and improve one already owned by a city, nor is power to do so essential to the accomplishment of the objects and purposes of such a municipal corporation.” Neither am I in accord with that part of the
That a municipality may acquire a light and power plant, either by constructing a new plant or by purchasing one already constructed, and that it may issue bonds for that purpose, there can be no question, under the decision of this court in the case of Ostrander v. City of Salmon, 20 Ida. 153, 117 Pac. 692.
If the plant acquired by purchase or otherwise is or becomes inadequate to supply the city with light and power, the object sought to be accomplished is not attained, and the city has not acquired a light and power plant within the meaning of see. 2315, as amended by Sess. Laws 1917, chap. 16, p. 43, subdivision (c), and it is essential that it be permitted by the sale of bonds to construct, enlarge, extend, repair, alter and improve such light and power plant, in order to accomplish the object and purpose in view. To hold that the city may acquire by purchase or otherwise a light and power plant, and to deny it the power to enlarge, extend, alter and improve the same, might deprive the city of acquiring an adequate light and power plant, and leave it in possession of a light and power plant which would not serve its needs.
“Repair” as used in the statute does not mean maintenance. A power plant might be enlarged by the installation of a larger wheel, dynamo, switchboard, transformers or in many other ways. It might be extended by the erection of additional poles, stringing of wires, placing of cross-arms and insulators, placing in position transformers of whatever size and capacity found necessary. It might be altered and improved in the same manner. And whatever repairs might be necessitated by the enlargement, extension, alteration or improvement of the plant would simply constitute a part of the extension, enlargement, alteration or improvement. All of
A fair and reasonable construction of the language of subdivision (c), supra, would, as it seems to me, be that the statute gives municipalities full power to acquire by purchase or otherwise, i. e., by any other means the municipality may see fit, a light and power plant of sufficient magnitude to supply the needs of the municipality. The mere purchase of a single plant does not exhaust the power of a municipality under the statute, which clearly gives a continuing power to acquire such a plant. It may well be that a plant purchased, constructed or otherwise acquired, might be adequate at the time, but in a rapidly growing community, it might become grossly inadequate within a very short period, but the statutory authority still remains to acquire a light and power plant adequate for the uses of the municipality. They may purchase another if it is available or as many others as may be necessary. They may build or construct such a plant, if none is available. They may enlarge, extend, alter or improve such a plant until one is acquired which adequately meets the requirements of the municipality. The following language of the New York court of common pleas will serve to illustrate the principle:
“This provision is contained in a statute purporting to provide the necessary powers for the government and regulation of the city, and which evidently looked forward to its future growth and rapid increase. Under such circum-'
No reason can be assigned why the legislature should have given or should have intended to have ¿pven municipalities larger authority with respect to municipal waterworks than with respect to municipal light and power plants. The object and purpose in the one instance is to procure a municipally owned and controlled water supply, and in the other instance to procure a municipally owned and controlled light and power supply. As was said by the supreme court of Texas in Brown v. Graham, supra:
“Such a consideration would not, in itself, authorize us to infer a power when-not expressly given or necessarily implied. Yet when the language used is capable of including authority to do an act not mentioned in terms, such construction of it is greatly aided by considerations of public advantage, which it would certainly produce.”
The bond issue was well within the power and authority granted by the legislature and the judgment should be affirmed.
Rehearing
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING.
Respondents have filed a petition for rehearing in this case. In this petition reference is made to the situation confronting the city of Idaho Falls. It is suggested that the growth of the community makes it necessary to build a new power-house, install new machinery, blast an intake channel to supply water for the new machinery, and do whatever would be necessary in case the eity constructed an entire new plant. It is also suggested that the law would permit the city to issue bonds for the purpose of acquiring a new plant, or to build one immediately adjoining the existing plant already owned by the city.
Had the ordinance in question, by appropriate language, limited the expenditure of the proceeds of the proposed bonds to the purposes suggested in the petition for rehearing, a different question would have been presented. By the ordinance in question it was proposed to use the funds derived from the issue of the bonds for the purpose of acquiring an adequate electric light and power plant, by enlarging, extending, repairing, altering and improving the plant now owned and controlled by the said city. Under this ordinance the entire proceeds of the bonds might have been expended in repairs, alterations or improvements of the existing plant.
We must adhere to the views expressed in the original opinion, that the law does not contemplate the issuance of bonds for such purposes.
The petition for rehearing will be denied.
I still adhere to my views as expressed in the dissenting opinion on the original hearing.