Appellant brought this action to enjoin appellees from entering into a certain contract for lighting the streets of said town. Appellees filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was sustained, and appellant refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered in favor of appellees.
The only error urged calls in question the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. So far as necessary to the determination of the questions presented, the complaint is as follows: “That the appellee is about to enter into a contract with the Erankton Natural G-as and Oil Company, by the terms of which the town agrees to pay three hundred dollars in one year for twenty-five street lights, and twelve dollars for each additional street light, and at the termination of each year thereafter, for five years, to pay said gas company the sum of three hundred dollars, and twelve dollars additional for each light over twenty-five, which contract, as intended to be made and entered into, is an absolute promise to pay said amounts at said times, and thereby creating an indebtedness against said town; that said town is now indebted in the sum of twenty-seven hundred and fifty dollars; that the board of trustees is proposing to create said indebtedness aforesaid, and that no petition has ever been signed by a majority of the resident owners of the taxable real estate of said town, to contract said debt ■ for lighting the streets, or any debt; that said town has need of money, and will not have money to meet the said indebtedness, when the same matures, above amounts necessary for fhe actual running expenses of said town, and will not receive, from the present levy, sufficient funds to pay said indebtedness so created, and cannot make the levy in time to pay the same as it matures. ”
It is earnestly insisted by appellant that appellees, by
This question was, after a careful consideration,, determined by this court, against the contention of appellant, in the case of Crowder v. Town of Sullivan, 128 Ind. 486(13 L. R. A. 641). Itwasheld in that case that where a municipal corporation contracts for a useful and necessary thing, such as water or light, and agrees to pay for it annually as furnished, the contract does not create an indebtedness for the aggregate sum of all the yearly installments, since the debt for each year does not come into existence until the compensation for each year has been earned.
In the case cited, this court said: “It may be true' that the contract creates an obligation, for a breach of which an action for damages will lie, but it does not create a right of action for the unearned compensation. The earning of each year’s compensation is essential to the existence of a debt. If municipal corporations cannot contract for a long period of time for such things as light or water, the result would be disastrous, for it is a matter of common knowledge that it requires a large outlay of money to provide machinery and appliances for supplying towns and cities with light and water, and no one will incur the necessary expense for such machinery and appliances, if only short periods are allowed to be provided for by contract. The courts cannot presume that the Legislature meant to so cripple the municipalities of the State as to prevent them from securing light upon reasonable terms, and in the ordinary mode in which such a thing as electric light or gas is obtained. But it is unnecessary to discuss this point
Appellees had full power to contract for gas, under the provisions of section 4301, R. S. 1894, Acts 1883, p. 85, for any period, not exceeding ten years.
The allegation in the complaint, ‘‘ that the contract, as intended to be made and entered into, is an absolute and unconditional promise to pay, etc., ” adds no strength to the complaint. Neither does the demurrer admit this statement to be true, as claimed by appellant. The court knows from the allegations concerning the terms of the proposed contract, that the three hundred dollars to be paid for gas, is to be paid at the end of each year, and that no debt is created within the meaning of section 4377, R. S. 1894, supra; until the compensation mentioned is earned. Appellant cannot, by an averment that the contract has a certain meaning, change the legal effect of the contract, as he has stated it in the complaint.
The allegation, ‘ ‘ that said town will not have money to meet said indebtedness, when the same matures, above the amounts necessary for the actual running expenses of said town, and will not receive from the present levy sufficient funds to pay said indebtedness, and cannot
The complaint in this case was filed February 19, 1894, and, under the existing law, it would seem that the board of trustees of the town could have made a levy of taxes in time to pay the installment under the proposed contract, depending, perhaps, the first year upon whether the same was collected by the marshal of the town, or the county treasurer.
The expense, however, of light, water, labor, and the like, is essential to the maintenance of corporate existence, and constitutes current expenses, payable out of the current revenues, which may be applied to such purposes, even though the effect is to postpone judgment, or other, creditors. Gardner v. City of Valparaiso, supra; Town of Fowler v. F. C. Austin Mfg. Co., 5 Ind. App. 489 ; Coy v. City Council, 17 Iowa 1; Coffin v. City Council, 26 Iowa 515 ; Laycock v. City of Baton Rouge, supra.
There is no error in the record.
Judgment affirmed.
Note. — On the question, what constitutes an indebtedness within the meaning of provisions restricting municipal debts, see an extensive note to Beard v. Hopkinsville (Ky.),23 L. R. A. 402.