168 Ga. 41 | Ga. | 1929
The ruling announced in the first headnote does not require elaboration.
The proposed contract begins with certain preliminary statements explanatory of the reasons for making it. In sections 1 to 6 the company agrees to construct and equip, under the city’s supervision and with its approval, the pumping and transmission system to be paid for and owned by the company. The city is to continue to own and maintain its existing system of waterworks, so that it may be used as a distributing system. The two systems are to be physically connected, so that they may be jointly operated for the purpose of drawing water from the river and distributing it to users of water in the city and its suburbs. The city agrees to pay the company the sum of $100,000 “on or before the first day of January, 1929, out of funds now in the treasury of the city.” Section 7, which has several subdivisions, provides that as soon as the pumping and transmission system is completed the city will “lease” it and operate both systems jointly for a period of years, on a basis of division of the net profits from the joint operation, in the ratio of 10 per cent, to the city and ninety per cent, to the company, the last-named amount to be annually applied to payment of principal and interest as it should become due on bonds of .the company running through a period of twenty years. The ninety per cent, is based on an estimated cost to the company for the
In section 8 the city is given an “option, at any time within the life of this contract, to purchase the company’s interest in the pumping and transmission system,” and its properties “for a sum sufficient to discharge the company’s outstanding obligations, to retire its outstanding bonds with accrued dividends, and to pay the expenses of dissolving the corporation, including one thousand ($1,000) dollars to be distributed to the holders of the common stock, with accrued dividends as provided in the charter. And upon the exercise of the option, and the payment of the purchase-price, the company shall convey to the city all of its properties and assets.” And further, “whenever the amounts paid the com-' pany as provided in sec. 7 hereof have been sufficient to retire the bonds with all accrued interest, and to pay the expenses of dis
From the foregoing statements it is obvious that the primary purpose and plan of the city was to acquire, in its own right and title, the pumping and transmission system. It could not raise sufficient funds by direct issue of its own bonds, because when added to its existing bonded indebtedness the amount would exceed the constitutional limit of seven per cent, of the assessed value of all
The constitutional limitation upon municipal power to create debts can not be circumvented by a plan to acquire a water system by expenditure of a large amount of available funds in the treas
In the opinion it was said: “It is impossible to read this
Again it was said: “When read in the light of the facts of the case 'then under discussion, there is nothing in the decision in City Council of Dawson v. Dawson Waterworks Company [106 Ga. 696, 32 S. E. 907], or other cases preceding or following it, decided by this court, on which counsel for defendants in error rely, which conflicts with what is here held. Much stress was -laid upon the following statement in the opinion of Mr. Justice Cobb in that case (106 Ga. 711) : ‘Debt therefore, as used in the constitution, is to be understood as a liability which is undertaken and which must be discharged at some time in the future, but which is not to be discharged by a tax levied within the year in which the liability is undertaken. The purpose of the framers of the constitution was to prevent an accumulation of liabilities upon municipal corporations which could be enforced against such corporations in the future by the compulsory levy of taxes. . . If the character of the undertaking is such that he who deals with a municipal corporation can,
Again it was-said: “In this State, as already mentioned, it has been held that a municipal corporation could not contract for a supply of water on the credit of the city for a longer period than one year, without the preliminary sanction of a popular vote as required by the constitution. In the case last mentioned and others like it, where the city could have contracted for a supply of water for one year at a time, though the contract provided for more than one year, yet where the city actually used the water by the year, and all parties were acting in good faith, there was strong equitable ground for holding that during the time the water was
In McCrary Co. v. Glennville, 149 Ga. 431 (100 S. E. 362), it was held: “Where a contractor enters into a contract with a municipal corporation for the construction and equipment of a light and water plant under a written agreement whereby some of the contract price is to be paid in instalments through a series of years after the contract is completed, the effect of such contract is to create a debt within the meaning of article 7, section 7, paragraph 1, of the constitution of this State (Civil Code, § 6563), which limits the power of municipalities to contract debt, and is prohibited by that provision of the constitution. . . Where the contract also provides for retention of title in the contractor until the contract price is fully paid, for delivery of the plant after its completion to the municipality as lessee, and for a rental of one dollar per annum until all the deferred payments for the contract price have been made, which when done shall cause title to the property to vest immediately in the municipality, the contract is one of conditional sale as distinguished from a mere lease. Hays v. Jordan, 85 Ga. 741 (11 S. E. 833, 9 L. R. A. 373); Ross v. McDuffie, 91 Ga. 120 (16 S. E. 648); North v. Goebel, 138 Ga. 739 (76 S. E. 46).”
Judgment reversed.