140 Ky. 244 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Affirming.
This action was instituted in the Clark circuit court by the city of Winchester for the purpose of testing the validity of a series of sixty-five municipal bonds of the-face value of one thousand dollars each, issued for the purpose of establishing a sewerage system in the municipality.
The question arising for adjudication on the record is one of law, and it will only be necessary to state such facts in regard to the issuance'of the .bonds as will serve to enable us to properly bring out and adjudicate it.
Prior to November, 1909, the common council of the city of Winchester ordained that there should be submitted, at the general November election, to the qualified voters of the city of Winchester the question as to whether or not the city should be authorized to issue the series of bonds above mentioned for the purpose of constructing a general sewerage system for the municipality. At the general election in November, 1909, the question of the issuance of the bonds was duly submitted to the qualified voters of the municipality, and a canvass of the votes cast upon the proposition of their issue showed that of the total number of votes cast, one thousand one hundred and forty were in favor of the issuance of the bonds, and one hundred and sixty-eight votes were cast against it; it thus appearing that more than two-thirds of the votes cast upon the proposition were in favor of the issuance of the bonds. In the same ordinance authorizing the issuance of the bonds, it was provided that the sum of five thousand five hundred dollars should be annually collected by taxation for the purpose of paying the annual interest on the bonds and-establishing a sinking fund for their final payment at the expiration of twenty years when, by their terms, they would become due. Afterwards, the bonds were duly prepared and printed for issuance, and the city made several attempts to sell them, without success. Finally, however, a contract was made with the appellant, E. T. Lewis Company, which agreed to take the bonds at their face value in payment for the work of constructing the sewers, it having obtained the contract from the city to do this work.
It was further provided in the contract that, if there were more bonds than the contract price for building the
We do not, however, mean to intimate that even if there was a deficit the city’s liability to pay the bonds would be in any way lessened or extinguished. On the contrary, we are of opinion that if by miscalculation or from any other cause the sinking fund should prove insufficient to pay off the whole bonded indebtedness when it falls due, the obligation of the municipality to meet its indebtedness would still remain unimpaired and legally enforcible. Suppose, for instance, just before the bonds fall due, the whole sinking fund should be stolen or lost by the defalcation of officials, or destroyed
As said before, the record shows without contradiction that all the provisions of the Constitution, the statutes and the ordinances were fully complied with by the municipality; that the issuance of the bonds was authorized by vote of the people as provided by law, and we are unable to perceive any reason to hold the bonds in question invalid. It results, therefore, that the judgment of the circuit court was correct and should be affirmed, and is it so ordered.