CITY OF HARRISON v. BRASWELL
4-7904
Supreme Court of Arkansas
April 15, 1946
Rehearing denied April 13, 1946
194 S. W. 2d 12
Virgil D. Willis, for appellee.
MсHANEY, Justice. Sometime in 1945, the date not being shown, the city council of the city of Harrison, a city of the second class, passed ordinance No. 371, entitled “An ordinance to provide for the health and safety of the inhabitants of the city of Harrison, Arkansas, by improving, enlarging, extending, repairing, altering, correcting and rebuilding the present water and sewer systems of said city; to authorize the issuance of water and sewer revenue bonds of said city, including the refunding of sewer revеnue bonds of said city now outstanding; pledging water and sewer revenues for the payment of the bonds herein authorized; and declaring an emergency.”
The preamble to the ordinance sets out a number of reasons for its enactment, some of them being, (a) that the city owns a debt-free waterworks system which is inadequate and is supplied by an inadequate water source, and that the council has determined the need of improving same, has caused plans and specifications to be made for such improvements, and that the cost thereof will be $140,000; (b) that it also owns a sewerage system which is inadequate, but on which it owes a balance of $97,000 in sewer 4 per cent. revenue bonds to the R. F. C., which has agreed to sell same to the city at a substantial discount and without accrued interest, a great saving to the city, and reciting the imperative need for enlarging and extending same, according to plans already made, at an estimated cost of $175,000, an amount sufficient to refund the R. F. C. debt and to make the improvements contemplated; and (c) that the council believes “the two improvements can be carried on as one project, although their respective costs can be separately determined and charged to each operation, but the city will receive a better offer for its bonds and will receive the advantage of a lower interest rate if it can sеll the two issues to-
The ordinance contains 13 sections, the last being the emergency clause. The other sections provide (1) for the expansion of the existing waterworks system at an estimated cost of $140,000; (2) the improvement and extension of the existing sewer system at an estimated cost of $175,000, including the refunding of the debt to R. F. C.; (3) finding the value of the present water system to be $40,000, and of the improved systеm to be $180,000; (4) finding the present value of the sewer system to be $97,000, and of the proposed improvements to be $78,000, or a total value of $175,000, when improved; (5) appoints a water and sewer committee, naming them, to have charge of construction of improvements and of operations after completion for both projects. Section 7 provides for advertising the sale of bonds under three alternatives: “(1) a sale of water revenue bonds separаtely; (2) a sale of sewer revenue bonds separately; and (3) a sale of a joint issue of water and sewer revenue bonds.” It provides the form of the advertisement, setting out the date of the proposed issues (May 1, 1945) and the maturities each year to 1975 for each alternative. It also provides for the following in the advertisement: “If separate revenue bonds are issued, they will be separately secured by a pledge of the revenues from the respеctive operations for which they are issued, but with the additional provision that the surplus in each operation will be pledged, if necessary, to meet any deficiency in the revenues of the other operation, and if the bonds are combined in a joint issue, then the revenues of the two operations will be treated as a single fund and will be pledged to the payment of the joint revenue issue.”
Section 8 of the ordinance pledges the city to use, when necessary, any available net surplus revenue of either system to pay the bonds and interest of the other, or the whole net revenue if the two are combined, in accordance with said advertisement. Section 9 provides the city will pass the necessary ordinance or ordinances for the execution and delivery of the bonds, including the pledging of revenues of the systems, “the granting of
Appellee, a resident property owner, taxpayer and user of both the sewer and water systems of the city, brought this action to have said ordinance declared invalid and to enjoin its enforcement on several grounds, some of which will be hereinafter discussed. The city answered admitting the allegations relating to the status of appellant and that the water system of the city is debt free, that the sewer system owes $97,000, and that the above ordinance had been passed. It denied all allegations of invalidity of said ordinance. Further answering, the city set up certain affirmative defenses and prayed that the complaint be dismissed. Appellee demurred to said answer upon the ground that it did not state a defense to the complaint. The court sustained the demurrer, holding that said оrdinance is unconstitutional and that the city should be restrained from proceeding under it. The city declined to plead further and its answer was dismissed. This appeal followed.
It appears to be conceded, and it must be admitted, that the city can make the proposed improvement to its debt-free waterworks system and issue $140,000 in revenue bonds payable solely from the net revenues from such system under the provisions of
Appellee contends, however, that the city of Harrison, while it has the power to pledge the net revenue from each system to the payment of the revenue bonds issued by each it does not have the power to pledge or to apply any surplus net revenue of one system to payment of the bonds of the other system. In other words, that if there be any surplus net revenue arising from the operation of the waterworks, the city may not use such surplus to pay bond obligations of the sewer system and vice versa. We cannot agree that this is true. A case in point to the contrary is Johnson v. Dermott, 189 Ark. 830, 75 S. W. 2d 243, where it was held that the city of Dermott might lawfully pledge and use “the рrofits derived from the operation of these plants” (water and light) as security for bonds issued to build a city hospital.
“. . . ; and if a surplus shall exist in the bond and interest redemption account, the same may be applied by the legislative body in its discretion, subject to any limitations in the ordinance authorizing the issuance of bonds or in the trust indenture, (a) . . . ; (b) . . . ; (c) . . . ; or (d) to any other municipal purpose.”
We think this language authorizes the proposed pledge of net surplus of one system to pay the bonds of the other. It is well known that many municipalities use the surplus revenue arising from utilities owned and operated by them to finance many municipal purposes. We do not think the case of Mathers v. Moss, 202 Ark. 554, 151 S. W. 2d 660, relied on by appellee, is in point here. This decision was prior to
We are also of the opinion that the city may, if it so elects, combine the two systems and issue water and sewer rеvenue bonds with a pledge of the net revenue
If the city can issue two sеparate series of revenue bonds and support each issue by a pledge of the surplus revenue for the other, as we have already held, we fail to see why the two proposed issues may not be combined into one issue with a pledge of the entire net revenue of both systems to support the revenue bonds issued for both. Nor does the fact that the water system improvements will be financed under the provisions of said
Appellee argues that a pledge of the surplus revenues of one to pay the bonds of the other wоuld be an
We have several times held that the revenue bonds issued pursuant to the acts here involved payable solely from the revenues, do not constitute debts of the municipalities. McCutcheon v. Siloam Springs, supra.
Appellee also contends that said Ordinance No. 371 is unconstitutional because it contemplates the placing of a lien or mortgage on the debt-free water system, in violation of
Other incidental questions have been argued, all of which we have carefully considered and find them without merit.
Ed. F. McFaddin, Justice, dissenting. The majority holding is revolutionary! The reasons for my dissenting opinion:
1. The rule has always prevailed in Arkansas that a municipality possesses and can exercise only such powers as are granted in express words, or such powers as are necessarily implied from or incident to the powers expressly conferred, or such powers as are essential to the accomplishment of the declared objectives and purposes of the municipality. Bennett v. City of Hope, 204 Ark. 147, 161 S. W. 2d 186; McGehee v. Williams, 191 Ark. 643, 87 S. W. 2d 46; Cumnock v. Little Rock, 154 Ark. 471, 243 S. W. 57, 25 A. L. R. 608; Argenta v. Keith, 130 Ark. 334, 197 S. W. 686, L. R. A. 1918B, 888; Merrill v. Van Buren, 125 Ark. 248, 188 S. W. 537; LaPrairie v. City of Hot Springs, 124 Ark. 346, 187 S. W. 442; Willis v. City of Fort Smith, 121 Ark. 606, 182 S. W. 275; and Bain v. Fort Smith Light & Tr. Co., 116 Ark. 125, 172 S. W. 843, L. R. A. 1915D, 1021. See, also, 37 Am. Juris. 722.
There is no statute in Arkansas that allows a municipality to combine water improvement bonds with sewer refunding and improvement bonds. So, the majority, in allowing the City of Harrison to so combine its bond issues, is giving the City of Harrison a power that the Legislature has never granted. That the majority is doing this very thing is shown by the following quotation from the majority opinion: “We are also of the opinion that the city may, if it so elects, combine the two systems, and issue water and sewer revenue bonds with a pledge of the net revenue of both as the sole security’ therefor.”
The Legislature has always kept water works bonds separate and distinct from sewer system bonds. Witness the fact that
2. There is no statute in Arkansas allowing a city to pledge a debt-free water works system to secure an already existing bond issue on the sewer system, yet that is exactly what the majority is permitting the City of Harrison to do in the case at bar. As long as the water works system remained debt-free (or bonded only for its own improvements under
3. To sustain the pledge of excess net revenues of the water system to pay the sewer bonds, the majority cites the case of Johnson v. Dermott, 189 Ark. 830, 75 S. W. 2d 243. But the situation existing in the reported case does not exist in the case at bar. The net revenue of the Dermott Water Works went into the general revenue of the city and was expended therefrom. In holding that the City of Dermott might pledge the excess revenue from the water works system, we said: “But this power may not be exercised in violation of
In the case at bar the revenue from the water works will be pledged first to secure the $140,000 of revenue bonds, and the excess net revenue from the water works, when pledged over against the sewer bonds, must be governed by
Furthermore, the case of Johnson v. Dermott—in so far as it allowed the City of Dermott to pledge the net excess of water works revenue as security for the hospital bonds—has been considerably weakened by the later case of Mathers v. Moss, 202 Ark. 554, 151 S. W. 2d 660. In that case we held that the revenues from the water system could not be devoted or appropriated to the payment of the cost of operation of the sewer system. Hence the language: ”
This quoted language says that the revenues from one system are not authorized to be devoted or appropriated to the cost of the operation of the other system; and yet in the face of this quoted language the majority is granting the City of Harrison a right that was denied the City of Dumas in the reported case.
4. Finally, the majority says that
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
GRIFFIN SMITH, Chief Justice, dissenting. Express provisions of Pope‘s Digest, § 10005—the so-called Water Act—are that bonds “. . . shall be payable solely from revenues derived frоm the waterworks system.” Section eight of
The majority opinion in the appeal before us appears to rest upon the precarious proposition that if the city wishes to accomplish a purpose thought to be desirable by those who have acted officially, the result should not be impaired for want of legal authority.
Johnson v. Dermott, 189 Ark. 830, 75 S. W. 2d 243, held that the municipality might pledge profits earned
The City of Harrison-Braswell opinion says that
Certainly there is nothing in
The majority says that
This is a transposition or transportation of language so much clearer to the majority than it is to me that, in
The primary difficulty would seem to be that neither statute contains such a provision.
In holding that contraсts such as the one now being approved are not in violation of
“But this power must not be exercised in violation of
Amendment No. 10 to the Constitution . Any contract which the city makes in regard to uncollected revenues from any source must be construed with reference to this amendment. . . . This amendment [provides that] no allowance shall be made ‘for any purpose whatsoever in excess of the revenues from all sources for the fiscal year in which said contract or allowance is made.’ Beyond this inhibition there is a lack of power to contract.”
The Dermott case was heard on demurrer. It admitted that the city would not exceed its budget through use of revenues in the manner they were sought to be applied.
