63 Minn. 125 | Minn. | 1895
This action was brought to have a certain issue of the bonds of the city of Minneapolis of the par value of $200,000, known as “Reservoir Bonds,” adjudged void, and to restrain the treasurer of the city from paying out of the sinking fund of the city any money for the purchase of such bonds for the sinking fund, pursuant to an agreement to that effect between the city council and the board of sinking fund commissioners. The plaintiffs are taxpayers of the city, and from an order of the trial court denying their motion for a temporary injunction so restraining the treasurer this appeal was taken.
The bonds were issued under the provisions of Laws 1893, c. 204, § 2 (G. S. 1894, § 1095), which forbids any city in this state to issue bonds or to incur any debt or liability of any kind for any purpose except for the purchase, refunding, or payment of outstanding bonds, in excess of 5 per cent, of the assessed valuation of the taxable property of such city according to the last preceding assessment. The plaintiffs claim that this 5 per cent, debt limit has already been exceeded by the city, exclusive of these reservoir bonds; and, further, that the board of sinking fund commissioners have no authority to purchase from the city its bonds at the time they are offered for sale by it.
1. The first question is, had the city, if the amount of the reservoir bonds be added to its debt, exceeded its debt limit at the time of the proposed sale of the bonds and the commencement of this action? In deciding this question the claim of the plaintiffs that the sum of $206,567 — an alleged indebtedness of the city to the courthouse and city hall commission — should be added to the indebtedness of the city, must be rejected, for it does not affirmatively ap
2. The park board certificates to which we have referred were issued under the provisions of Sp. Laws 1889, c. 30, as amended, which provide for a board of park commissioners, and constitute such board a department of the government of the city of Minneapolis. This board is authorized to designate and acquire land in and adjacent to the city for public parks, and its here material powers are as follows:
“The said board of commissioners, and their successors, shall have power, and it is hereby authorized, to obtain title for and in the name of the city of Minneapolis, to any lands so designated by it for the purpose of this act, by gift, devise, purchase or lease. And said board may enter into any contract in the name of said city, for the purchase of any lands to be paid for in such time, or times, and in such manner as the board may agree to; and said board may accept title to lands and give back a mortgage or mortgages in the name of said city, with or without bonds to secure the unpaid purchase price, provided, that no personal or general liability on the part of said city shall be created by any such contract, or mortgage, or bond beyond the means at the time available therefor, except the liability to pay such amounts as may be realized from benefits assessed*131 on benefited property on account of the lands included in such contract or mortgage. And it is hereby made the duty of said board to pay on each such contract or mortgage, an amount equal to the sum or sums so realized from such assessments; and said board shall have power to accept and receive donations of money, property or lands, for the use of the said city for the purposes contemplated in this act.” Sp. Laws 1889, c. 30, § 2, as amended by Id. e. 103, § 1.
The certificates in question were given for the purchase price of land for park purposes, and their payment secured by a mortgage on the land purchased. Each certificate states that the city of Minneapolis is indebted to the payee in the sum therein named, and recites that the consideration therefor is the conveyance to the city by the payee of land for park purposes, and that the certificate is secured by a mortgage on the land sold, and that it is payable out of the funds arising from assessments made upon real estate specially benefited by the park established on the land, and concludes with these words: “It being expressly understood and agreed that there is no liability on the part of said city to pay the amount evidenced by this certificate and secured by the above-described mortgage out of any other fund than the fund above specified.” No certificates issued or contracts made by the park board can be given any legal effect contrary to or in excess of the powers conferred upon the board by the statute we have quoted, and they are, in fact, substantially in accordance with its provisions. The board has no power to make these certificates a lien generally upon all the parks of the city, and the record shows that no attempt has been made to secure their payment by the creation of such a lien.
The provisions of the statute relied upon by plaintiffs to support their proposition to the contrary (Sp. Laws 1889, c. 30, § 5), refer only to park bonds issued for the purpose of obtaining money with which to acquire land for park purposes. It is admitted that such bonds are a part of the indebtedness of the city. Neither are these certificates secured by a mortgage on any portion of the property of the city previously owned by it, nor by a pledge of its revenues, as claimed by the plaintiffs. If such was the case, then their contention that the certificates are a part of the indebtedness of the city would be correct, for the statute providing a debt limit for cities cannot be evaded by the
But such is not the case we are considering, for each certificate is a lien merely upon the particular land for the agreed purchase price of which it was given, not upon any property which the city previously owned. The deed, certificate, and mortgage are all one transaction, and after the mortgage is given the city has just as much interest in the land mortgaged as it had before. When the land is paid for, it will be the property of the city. If not, the certificate holder takes it on his' mortgage. The debt of the city is neither increased nor diminished by the transaction. No revenues of the city which must be raised or replaced by taxation are pledged for the payment of the certificates. The statute expressly provides that the park board cannot create any personal or general liability on the part of the city by any certificates they may issue, except to pay such amounts as may be realized from assessments on property benefited on account of the acquisition of the land purchased for park purposes. In no event, nor under any circumstances, is the city liable, except as a trustee, to pay over to the certificate holder the amount actually realized from the assessments. The debt limit is measured by the assessed valuation of the taxable property of the city. How, then, can it be said that these certificates, for the payment of which the city is not liable, and for which no tax can be levied, are an indebtedness of the city, within the meaning of the statute fixing the debt limit?
3. Is the amount of the bonds and cash in the sinking fund of the city to be deducted from the total amount of its outstanding bonds for the purpose of determining whether or not it has exceeded its debt limit? The view which we take of the purpose and nature of this sinking fund renders unnecessary a decision of the question raised and discussed by counsel as to the repeal, by Laws 1893, c. 204, § 2, of the provisions of the charter of the city authorizing such deduction to be made. If this statute does not prohibit such deduction, we are of the opinion that it must be made.
“Provided, that when bonds are issued for the purchase, refunding,, or payment of other bonds of such city the bonds to be so purchased or paid shall not be considered a part of the bonds on which any city may be-liable, for the purpose of determining whether the bonds so issued will increase the bonded indebtedness of any city above the limit prescribed’ in this act.” The purpose of this proviso is obvious upon its face. It was intended to set at rest any possible question which might be raised' by would-be purchasers of bonds issued for the purpose of purchasing,, paying or refunding previous bonds of the city, as to their validity,, which would impair their market value, and embarrass their negotiation. When this proviso is read in connection with the other provisions of the chapter of which it is a part, especially the first section thereof, which declares that the rights and powers previously granted to the cities of the state shall not be abridged or affected by the act, it is manifest that the proviso was not intended either to prohibit or to-authorize the taking into account the sinking fund of a city in determining its actual indebtedness.
We are, then, to inquire as to the essential character of this sinking fund, and determine therefrom, according to general principles of law and the suggestions of common sense, whether or not the amount thereof should be deducted from the total amount of the outstanding funds of the city in order to ascertain its actual indebtedness.
Sp. Laws 1881, c. 76, sube. 5, § 13, requires the city council to make-an annual levy of taxes sufficient to pay interest to become due during-the next fiscal year on all -bonds and debts of the city, and also to levy a further tax of one mill to pay the principal of the bonds when they become due, and forbids the application of the fund created by such tax to any other purpose.
Section 14 declares that, in order to provide for the certain payment of the bonds and debts of the city, the council are authorized to main
Section 22 declares, in effect, that no warrant or further appropriation on the part of the city council is required for the application of the money in the sinking fund to the payment of the bonds.
It is clear from these provisions that the money in the sinking fund which has already been raised by taxation is irrevocably appropriated to the payment of the outstanding bonds and debts of the city. If any part of the fund is invested in city bonds, they can never be disposed of, except to extinguish by payment prior maturing city bonds. When any bonds held by the sinking fund become due, they are at once a charge against the fund, and they are extinguished by crediting the amount thereof to the fund.
It is true, as counsel for plaintiffs claim, that there is no express provision in the charter providing that city bonds in the sinking fund, when they mature, shall be so extinguished; but such bonds can only _ be sold to pay other bonds as they become due, and the provision of the charter authorizing such sale surely cannot mean that city bonds in the sinking fund already due are to be sold to pay other bonds also due, or that city bonds purchased for the fund are to remain uncanceled indefinitely after their maturity, and a tax equal to the interest thereon levied annually, and paid into the fund. The fair inference from the law relating to this sinking fund is that, when bonds become
It appears from the record in this case that all .of the bonds held by the sinking fund are the bonds of the city, hence the amount of the bonds and the money in the fund necessarily represent an equal amount of the outstanding and uncanceled bonds and indebtedness of the city, which has already been realized from taxation to pay the bonds; and to ascertain the further amount to be raised by taxation in order to extinguish the entire indebtedness of the city it necessarily follows that the amount of the sinking fund is to be deducted from the entire amount of the apparent indebtedness of the city. The balance is its actual debt. The debt limit of the statute has reference to an actual indebtedness for the payment of which a tax must be levied, not to an uncanceled apparent liability. Bank for Savings v. Grace, 102 N. Y. 313, 7 N. E. 164.
As we have suggested, this debt limit of the statute is measured by the rate per cent, of taxation necessary to pay the entire debt of the city. This is the test. Now, it is apparent from the admitted facts in this case, that a 5 per centum tax on the assessed valuation ■of the city would produce a sum which, if added to the amount of the sinking fund, would exceed the amount of all of its bonds and debts, ■including these reservoir bonds. It follows, then, that the amount of the sinking fund must be deducted from the total apparent debt of the city to ascertain whether its actual debt exceeds the debt limit.
4. Can the board of sinking fund commissioners purchase from the ■city its bonds at the time they are offered for sale? We answer this question in the negative.
We agree with the city attorney that there is no statute forbidding in express words such purchase, but we are of the opinion that such a purchase is so radically inconsistent with the essential character of the sinking fund, and so destructive of the purposes to be conserved by its maintenance, that it must be held that the prohibition is necessarily implied. The city can only issue and sell its bonds by the action of its council, and the board of sinking fund commissioners can only buy its bonds by the action and consent of the council. The intention of the statute is that the council and the board shall be a check upon each other in the purchase of bonds with money in the sinking fund. The unbiased judgment and independ
Laws 1893, c. 294, § 4, provides that the bonds to be issued under the act shall not bear interest at a greater rate than 5 per cent, per annum, and that they shall not be sold for less than par and accrued interest to the highest bidder, after publication of notice of the sale thereof. This implies that, if the credit of a municipality or the money market is such that its bonds will not bring in the open market par and accrued interest, they shall not be sold. Now, if a city having a sinking fund set apart for the payment of its outstanding bonds can be a bidder and purchaser of its own bonds at the original sale thereof, using the sinking fund for such purpose, it follows that, when the credit of the city or the money market is such that a 5 per cent, bond will not sell in the market for par and accrued interest, the city may sell its bonds to itself by the action of its council and its sinking fund board, in violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the law. Or, in other words, the city council, when it cannot sell bonds of the city in the manner required by law, may consent that the board may turn over to the city the money in the sinking fund, and receive in lieu thereof a new issue of city bonds that cannot be sold in the market, whereby the sinking fund is diverted, to the prejudice of bondholders and the impairment of the credit of the city. ,
One of the primary objects of the law in providing for and jealously guarding the sinking fund is to maintain the credit of the city, and enable it to borrow money, when necessary, on its bonds, at a low rate of interest, and thereby lessen the burden of the taxpayers. But if the city, by the consent ^ of its council and the action of its board of sinking fund commissioners, can help itself to the money in
Order reversed, and case remanded with direction to the district court to grant the plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary injunction.