25 Haw. 335 | Haw. | 1920
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
This is a hill in equity for an injunction by Jas. L. Holt as a citizen and taxpayer of the City and County of Honolulu in his own behalf and in behalf of other taxpayers of said City and County against D. L. Conic-ling, treasurer of the City and County of Honolulu. The bill after setting forth the parties and the capacity in which they sue and are sued alleges that the defendant as such treasurer is paying to the treasurer of the Territory of Hawaii an enormous amount of money out of the funds owned and controlled by the City and County of Honolulu on January 1 and July 1 of each year for and on account of the Honolulu water and sewer systems contrary to law and the Organic Act in such cases made and provided; that the City and County of Honolulu has no title whatever in said Honolulu water and sewer systems; that the legislature of the Territory of Hawaii in passing such laws and providing that the City and County of Honolulu should pay to the Territory the bonds amounting to $1,494,611.33 for and on account of said Honolulu water and sewer systems went beyond its powers given under the Organic Act of
The matter came before the circuit judge on demurrer of the defendant to plaintiff’s bill. The grounds of demurrer are in part as follows: “1. That said plaintiff in his said bill has not made or stated such a case as entitles him, in a court of equity, to any relief against this defendant as to matters contained and set forth in said bill or any of said matters. * * 3. That said bill fails to disclose any right Avhatever in said plaintiff to bring this said suit. 4. That it does not appear from said bill that this plaintiff Avill suffer any irreparable damage or any damage or damages Avha.tsoever in the prem
Preliminary to a discussion of the questions presented it will be necessary to review the legislative acts by which the control of the water and sewer systems was transferred from the Territory to the City and County of Honolulu.
'By Act 138 S. L. 1913 it was provided (Sec. 1) that not later than July 1, 1914, the water and sewer works and all moneys in the Honolulu water and sewer works funds shall be transferred from the Territory to the City and County of Honolulu or its successor; (Sec. 2) that after such transfer the operation, maintenance, extension and improvement of such works, the collection and expenditure of all moneys on account thereof and the exercise arid performance of all powers and duties in relation thereto shall be by such officer as shall be desig
Act 182 S. L. 1915 amended section 1861 R. L. 1915 and provides in substance that the revenues derived from said works shall he paid into the*, treasury of the
So much of section 55 of the Organic Act of the Territory as is pertinent to this case” folloAvs: “Nor shall any debt be authorized to be contracted by or on behalf of the Territory, or any political or municipal corporation or subdivision thereof, except to pay the interest upon the existing indebtedness, to suppress insurrection, or to proAdde for the common defense, except that in addition to any indebtedness created for such pur
This construction we think is peculiarly applicable here where the Organic Act instead of being a mere inhibition against the municipality incurring an indebtedness beyond a specified amount has by its very terms placed a limitation upon the power of the legislature to authorize the incurring of such an indebtedness by any subdivision of the Territory in excess of a cértain per centum of the value of the taxable property in such subdivision. If we are correct in our construction of this clause in our Organic Act and the act of.the legislature in question created or authorized the municipality to incur a. debt in excess of the amount authorized the fact that the debt was imposed upon the municipality by statute instead of being voluntarily contracted or incurred by it does not prevent it from coming within the limitation of the Organic Act.
This brings us then to a consideration of the question whether the legislation in question authorized the City and County- of Honolulu to incur an indebtedness or imposed an indebtedness upon it. If it did the amount of the debt alleged- in the complaint is sufficient to bring it within the restrictive clause of the Organic Act.
This is the question upon which the decision of the circuit judge sustaining the demurrer turned. After reviewing the history of the bonded debt of the Territory incurred for the creation and extension of the water and sewer systems of Honolulu and the history of the ownership and control of said systems as far as he was authorized to take judicial notice thereof, he held that
Our conclusion on the foregoing question makes it unnecessary to discuss any other grounds of the demurrer, but Hie insistence with which the appellant has urged his contention that the city and county attorney should not be permitted to appear for the treasurer and the public nature of the question render it our duty, we thiuk, to express our views thereon although we do not feel called upon to enter into a general discussion of the question. We think that the appellant’s contention that this suit is in effect a suit by the City and County of Honolulu against the Territory of Hawaii and that the city and county attorney in representing the defendant is in effect taking a case against the City and County of Honolulu is not sound. The plaintiff styles himself a taxpayer of the City and County of Honolulu and the defendant the treasurer thereof. The city and county attorney is elected by the people and his duties are prescribed by statute. He is therefore not subject to the orders of the hoard of supervisors except so far as the law has made it his duty to serve it. The hoard of supervisors has undertaken to instruct the city and county attorney not to appear for the treasurer in this case. Section 1736 R. L. 1915 malees it the duty of the city and county attorney to give when requested and without fee his opinion to the city and county officers on matters relating to the duties of their respective offices. The law does not specifically make it the duty of the city and county attorney to represent such officers in suits against them in their official capacity but certainly there is nothing inconsistent with his duties to the City and County, which he represents, in so appearing for one of the officers where matters upon which he has given advice are involved. The objection to his appear
The order appealed from is affirmed.