95 S.W.2d 285 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1936
Reversing.
In 1931 the city of Catlettsburg purchased from the Fabric Fire Hose Company certain fire hose and other equipment for its fire department. The city failed to pay the debt, and the appellee brought an action in the Boyd circuit court to recover the amount alleged to be due it under the contract, and on November 20, 1934, obtained a judgment against the city for the sum of $1,250, with interest thereon from December 1, 1931, and for the further sum of $97.50, with interest thereon from December 18, 1931. Upon this judgment an execution was issued and returned no property found. Thereafter the appellee brought this action in which it asked for a mandatory injunction compelling the members of the board of council of the city of Catlettsburg to meet and levy a tax sufficient to pay the judgment. From the judgment granting the relief sought, this appeal is prosecuted.
The appellants insist (1) that the appellee's remedy, if it has one, is by a writ of mandamus and not by a mandatory injunction; (2) that no demand was first made upon the board of council to lay a special levy before the filing of its petition; and (3) that the additional levy, when added to the levy already made for general purposes, exceeded the rate of 75 cents on each $100 of property assessed for taxation purposes, and therefore is in contravention of section 157 of the Constitution, which limits the rate of taxation to 75 cents. These grounds were pleaded as defenses in the answer to which a demurrer was sustained.
The first two grounds relied upon by appellants were decided adversely to their contention in City of Catlettsburg v. Davis' Adm'r,
"The limitations contained in that section apply to indebtedness created or attempted to be incurred by a municipality by contract. They have no application where the liability incurred by the municipality is for a tort caused by or resulting from its own negligence. Such is the meaning we have repeatedly given this section."
The debt in the instant case was created by contract. The city cannot now, in view of the judgment that has been obtained against it, question the validity of the debt on the ground that it exceeded the revenue for the year in which it was incurred but to compel the city to levy a tax in excess of 75 cents on the $100 of taxable property in the city to pay a contractual debt would violate the plain provisions of section 157 of the Constitution. It is conceded that the city had made a levy of 75 cents, and that the revenue which this levy would produce had been appropriated for other purposes by the city before the judgment herein was entered. *597
In support of its contention that the board of council can be compelled to levy a tax in excess of the constitutional limit to pay a judgment debt, appellee relies upon the following cases: Hardwicke v. Young,
"not to shield municipal corporations from the liability imposed by law for wrongs occasioned by their negligence, but to protect them from their own improvident acts, and extravagance. In other words, the limitations contained in that section apply *598 to indebtedness created or attempted to be incurred by the municipality by contract."
In City of Frankfort v. Fuss,
We conclude, therefore, that the circuit court erred in directing the board of council to levy an additional tax to pay appellee's judgment. It should have ordered the board of council to include the judgment in its estimate of expenditures when the succeeding annual levy is made. So far as the record discloses, the debt is a just and valid one and should be paid. If it is inconvenient for the city to pay it out of the current levy, it and other valid floating indebtedness of the city should be funded as the law permits. Pace v. City of Paducah,
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer to the defendants' answer.