252 P. 929 | Wash. | 1927
Lead Opinion
The purpose of this suit is to test the validity and constitutionality of what is known as the local improvement guaranty fund provided for by statute. To achieve that result, this action was brought to set aside a tax levy made by the city of Tacoma in 1925, for the benefit of its local improvement guaranty fund. Upon the sustaining of a demurrer, plaintiffs have appealed.
A brief history of the statutes and ordinances and their purposes will be helpful to an understanding of the points raised.
Prior to 1917, many of the cities of the state of Washington had outstanding local improvement bonds which were unpaid, and practically valueless. The failure to *251 meet these bonds at maturity was due to many causes, including the lack of necessary restrictions to prevent pyramiding assessments, but the ultimate result thereof was to impair the credit of the cities of the state, and a consequent lowering of the value of the bonds. Countless numbers of these bonds were purchased by persons unskilled in such matters who failed to grasp the fact that the obligations which the bonds represented were not legally those of the city, but were restricted to the particular fund created by the assessment, although bearing upon their face words indicating to the casual observer a promise to pay by the municipality.
The legislature, in an endeavor to remedy this state of affairs, passed a statute (Laws of 1917, p. 576, ch.
Thereafter the legislature, by chapter
[1] The first contention of appellant is that, since the contracts entered into for improvement work by the city of Tacoma with its contractors provided that the contractors would accept the bonds issued for the work, and not look beyond the local assessment funds for payment, that the contractor cannot receive any benefit from the guaranty fund, nor can he pass to a third person that right which he does not possess.
But we think that appellant goes too far in saying that the contractor has bargained away his right to look to the guaranty fund for reimbursement. True, the ordinance authorizing the particular work does not mention the guaranty fund, but the law of the state gives that right to all holders of bonds when the city by ordinance comes within its provisions. The effect, then, is to import into every contract the law of the state that the bonds issued therefor will be in the form provided by statute as to character and manner of payment. The bonds, when issued, provided that they would be paid from the local assessment fund and the guaranty fund and comply with the law.
[2] Nor does this law impair the obligation of a contract in contravention of § 10, Article
[4] The main and serious question raised in this case is whether bonds issued under the provisions of the guaranty law become a debt of the city, for, if they are, they increase the debt of the city of Tacoma beyond the one and one half per cent statutory limit without a vote of the people, and the statute authorizing their issuance becomes unconstitutional.
It is admitted at the outset by appellant that, under our decisions, these local improvement bonds, if issued without the guaranty, are not debts of the city. Dean v. Walla Walla,
"Section 1. Every city and town may immediately create a fund for the purpose of guaranteeing to the extent of such fund and in the manner hereinafter provided, the payments of its local improvement bonds issued subsequent to the effective date of this act: . . . [Rem. 1923 Sup., § 9351-1.]
"Sec. 2. Such fund shall be designated `Local Improvement Guaranty Fund,' and shall at no time exceed a sum equal to five per cent of the outstanding bond obligations thereby guaranteed. [Rem. 1923 Sup., § 9351-2.]
"Sec. 3. After the creation of such guaranty fund the city or town shall levy, from time to time as other taxes are levied, such sums as may be needed to meet the financial requirements of the fund. Wherever there shall have been paid out of a guaranty fund any sum on account of principal or interest of a local improvement bond the city or town, as trustee for the fund, shall be subrogated to all the rights of the holder of the bond or interest coupon so paid, and the proceeds thereof shall become a part of the fund. There shall also be paid into each guaranty fund the interest received from bank deposits of the fund, and from all moneys collected from local assessments the bonds against which are guarantied (guaranteed) by the fund. Warrants drawing interest at a rate not to exceed six per cent shall be issued against a guaranty fund to meet any liability accruing against it, but at the time of making its annual budget and tax levy the city or town shall provide for the levying of sum sufficient, with the other resources of the fund, to pay warrants so issued during the preceding fiscal year. Provided, however, that such warrants shall at no time exceed five per cent of the outstanding bond obligations guaranteed by said fund. [Rem. 1923 Sup., § 9351-3.]
"Sec. 5. Neither the holder nor the owner of any bond issued under the provisions of this act shall have any claim therefor against the city or town by which the same is issued, except for payment from the special assessments made for the improvement for which said bond was issued, and except as against the local improvement *255 guaranty fund of such city or town. . . ." [Rem. 1923 Sup., § 9351-5.]
It will be noted that under § 2, the amount of the fund shall at no time exceed five per cent of the outstanding bond obligations, and that under § 3, the city shall levy, "as other taxes are levied," such sums as are needed to meet the requirements of the fund, or, in other words, that each year the city shall ascertain the amount due and unpaid of such bonds and shall levy a tax to pay them, but in no event to pay in any one year more than five per cent of all outstanding local improvement bonds. Specific provision is made by § 5 of the act that no holder of any bond shall have any claim whatsoever by reason of said bond against the city, except the right to payment from the special assessments collected and the guaranty fund. The question then naturally arises; — has the city unconditionally bound itself to pay all these unpaid bonds to the extent of at least five per cent of the total amount outstanding? It is apparent, of course, that the city has made no such promise. Its promise is to pay into the guaranty fund sufficient to make it equal to five per cent of the outstanding bonds, provided the local assessment funds prove insufficient. To state the matter more simply, the city agrees that if the property-holders, whose property has been assessed for the improvement, fail to pay in the regular assessments to cover the bonds when due, then the city will make payment for them to a certain extent by accepting the bonds from the holders and levying a tax for the money to pay the same. This will readily be seen to be only a contingent liability as far as the city is concerned, and in no sense a debt proper.
If A is indebted to B and C promises that, if A does not pay B, then he (C) will, no one would contend that *256 C had an outstanding debt. He has but a contingent liability that may or may not ripen into a debt. If A fails to pay, then, in that event, the contingent liability has ripened and the debt is absolute as to C. But until that time arrives C owes B nothing.
So in the present case, the city will have nothing to pay if the property-holders meet their obligations and pay their assessments. If they fail to do so, then the city will pay into the fund to the extent outlined in the statute.
The distinction between a debt and a contingent liability is nowhere more concisely stated than in Walla Walla v. Walla WallaWater Co.,
"There is a distinction between a debt and a contract for future indebtedness to be incurred, provided the contracting party perform the agreement out of which the debt may arise. There is also a distinction between the latter case and one where an absolute debt is created at once, as, by the issue of railway bonds or for the erection of a public improvement, — though such debt be payable in the future by installments. In the one case the indebtedness is not created until the consideration has been furnished; in the other the debt is created at once, the time of payment being only postponed."
Applying this rule to the present case it will be seen that the consideration will not be furnished until the bondholders deliver to the city the bonds against the property for which the special assessments were levied. Upon the delivery, then the city will pay the money into the guaranty fund.
In Quill v. Indianapolis,
"It is, however, essential to the idea of a debt that an obligation should have arisen out of a contract, express or implied, which entitled the holder thereof *257 unconditionally to receive from the promisor a sum of money, which the latter is under legal or moral duty to pay without regard to any future contingency."
In Corey v. Ft. Dodge,
In this connection should be borne in mind the fact that the guaranty provided for by the statute under § 1 of the act is only "to the extent of such fund." The creation of a special fund to which the bondholders are restricted in itself negatives the idea of a general indebtedness upon the part of the city, and if the bondholders who are restricted to a single fund, to wit: the local assessment fund, can have no general claim against the city, it is hard to understand how the restriction to two funds, to wit: the local assessment and guaranty fund, can give any greater right than that provided by the additional fund itself.
Nor will the amount, if any, which accrues each year by reason of the property-owners' failure to pay, become a debt of the city, as that term is used in construing the constitutional limitation, for provision is made therefor by tax levy. It is a well-recognized legal principle that those obligations which, as soon as they become such, are provided for by taxation for the current year, are not to be included in the debts that are taken into consideration in determining the one and one-half per cent constitutional limit.
A very able argument is presented by counsel for the city andamicus curiae to the effect that the payment of the unpaid bonds through the guaranty fund amounts to no more than a loan to that fund under the authority *258
of Griffin v. Tacoma,
It is unnecessary to decide this point, for, even under the view most favorable to appellant, the obligation of the city, as we have already pointed out, is no more than a contingent liability.
It was argued that this was not in effect a contingent liability, because it was morally certain that there would be some unpaid bonds that the guaranty fund would have to pay, and that the local assessments would not produce, even under foreclosure, a sufficient amount to repay the guaranty fund. This is based upon the common knowledge which we all possess of the history of local improvement assessments, in many of the cities of the state. It may be true, if we were to look wholly to the past, that the court might be justified in saying that there will be an ultimate loss to that fund. But it must be remembered that, with the passage of the guaranty act, there were imposed new limitations upon the power of cities to levy assessments. We have heretofore adverted to the fact that it prevented pyramiding assessments, an evil against which the property-owner was powerless to protect himself, and resulted in much of the property assessed failing to respond in foreclosure.
Whether the legislature has adopted the proper limitations to bring about a condition where no district will fail to produce sufficient amount, either by voluntary payment or foreclosure, to pay all the bonds without any loss whatever accruing to the guaranty fund, is a matter that time alone can show. That is a matter to be left to the wisdom of the legislature, and we can not and will not assume that the purposes it had in *259 mind will fail of attainment. Rather will we assume that the results anticipated will be realized until the contrary clearly appears.
The judgment is affirmed.
MAIN, MITCHELL, TOLMAN, PARKER, and FRENCH, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
I am satisfied that the act is unconstitutional for the reason that it increases the debt limit and therefore dissent.
BRIDGES, J., concurs with MACKINTOSH, C.J.