149 S.W.2d 728 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1941
Affirming.
The parties named above joined in a proceeding carried on under our Declaration of Rights Act, Civil Code of Practice, Section 639a — 1 et seq., in which it was sought to have rights declared under the following circumstances:
In 1929 the citizens of Ashland voted to issue $500,000 of bonds to raise funds to be used in procuring school sites, erecting, improving, repairing and enlarging school buildings. Bonds were thereafter issued at various periods — 1930 to 1940 — to the amount of $315,000. These issues bore different rates of interest, the average being about 3.93 per cent. Recently the school board concluded that there was no further need of the fund for the purposes mentioned, and having a surplus arising from the bond sales, reflected that conclusion in the following resolution:
"There is now in the hands of the treasurer of the Board of Education, applicable for the use only of school buildings the sum of thirty-eight thousand dollars. Due to the steady decreasing number of pupils in the school system this money is not needed for the building of new school buildings, and should be applied on the principal and interest of the school bonds used to produce it."
The resolution further directed the treasurer to pay to the city's sinking fund commission the surplus "so that said money may be applied to the payment of principal and interest of said school bonds." The city authorities, though in full accord as to beneficial results to be gained by the transfer, hesitate to carry out the order of the educational board by accepting the sum and applying it to the designated purpose, until the procedure be sanctioned by the courts. The doubt arises by reason of Section 180 of the Constitution, which in part provides:
"Every * * * ordinance and resolution passed by any county, city, town, or municipal board or *71 local legislative body, levying a tax, shall specify distinctly the purpose for which said tax is levied, and no tax lexied * * * for one purpose shall ever be devoted to another purpose."
The case was submitted on the city's demurrer to the petition, and the following agreement: "The parties hereto stipulate that the purpose for which the bonds mentioned in plaintiff's petition were issued no longer exists." The chancellor overruled the demurrer, and defendants, declining to plead further, declared that the board had the right to turn the surplus over to the city, and directed the latter "to receive and expend said sum for the payment of principal and interest of school bonds."
The section of the Constitution, in respect to that part quoted above, has been before us in a number of cases, the most recent being Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Savage,
However, we are presented with a different situation, and these cases are not controlling. There is no effort to divert, in the sense in which we have applied the prohibition, in the cases, supra. The tax imposed was for the purpose of paying accrued interest and retiring the bonds at maturity. We must accept the agreed statement of parties to the effect that the purpose for which the bonds were sold has been accomplished, and that the board charged with the application of the funds finds itself with a surplus.
In the early case of Field v. Stroube,
In the instant case, however, there is no intention to use the surplus for general purposes; under the resolution the educational body must transfer, and the city must accept and use, the surplus for the sole purpose expressed in the judgment, that is, in paying principal of and interest on outstanding bonds of the 1929 issue. In the case of Whaley et al. v. Com. (Ratliff, Sheriff, et al. v. Com.),
In Lawrence County v. Lawrence County Fiscal Court,
"What Section 180 means is revenue raised for road purposes, for example, cannot be applied to educational purposes; and that a tax levied to build a courthouse cannot be used to repair a bridge, unless as in the case of Field v. Stroube [supra.] * * * The discretion of the fiscal court over such details is left to the good business sense and right judgment of that body."
See also Taylor v. Riney,
It is not our purpose, nor are we called upon to apply to the fullest extent the principles announced in the line of cases just cited to the instant case, since there is an obvious distinction. In those cases, or some of them at least, the funds diverted were the results of a levy of taxes for general purpose which had been allocated to *73 specific purposes by the controlling body. Here the bonds were voted by the citizens for a specific purpose, and as a general proposition, a diversion to an entirely different and distinct purpose would encounter the force of Section 180 of the Constitution.
We find authority for upholding the plan and purpose here proposed in the recent case of Fiscal Court of Estill County v. Debt Commission,
Judgment affirmed.