139 A. 157 | Pa. | 1927
Submitted September 26, 1927. The legislative department of the City of Philadelphia, believing that the city had a councilmanic borrowing capacity in excess of $4,200,000, authorized the making of a councilmanic loan to that extent, for, inter alia, the obtaining of money "to be used toward the erection, construction, improvement and equipment of the City Hall Annex." The loan was made; its amount was paid to the city; the lender was given a temporary receipt, pending the preparation of the bonds; and the money is still on hand, awaiting distribution for the various purposes for which it was borrowed.
In due course, the city advertised for bids for the completion of the annex, and awarded the contract to plaintiff, as the lowest responsible bidder, and appropriated, out of the fund realized from the $4,200,000 loan, a sum sufficient to pay the contract price. A formal contract was executed by the city officials and the contractor, but the city controller refused to number or certify it, as he is required to do by article XII, section 4, of the Act of June 25, 1919, P. L. 581, 598, which provides that "Every contract involving an appropriation shall designate the item on which it is founded, and shall be numbered by the city controller in the order of its date, and charged as numbered against such item, *547 and so certified by him, before it shall take effect as a contract, and shall not be payable out of any other fund." Plaintiff thereupon began the present proceeding to compel the controller to number and certify the contract; he answered the petition; plaintiff demurred; the demurrer was sustained and a peremptory mandamus awarded. From this judgment the controller now appeals.
Appellant does not challenge the good faith of, or the method pursued by plaintiff, or the city officials, in the making of either the councilmanic loan or the building contract, but confines his objection to the alleged fact that, without the consent of the electors, which was not given, the city had no right to make the loan of $4,200,000. For present purposes, we may assume, without considering or deciding the point, that appellant is correct in his contention; but it is a wholly irrelevant matter in this proceeding. The Constitution limits the right of a city in borrowing money without the consent of the electors, but it gives to city controllers no power or duty in respect to that matter. To have any standing to attack the loan, appellant was bound, therefore, to point to some statute authorizing him, as controller, so to do. The only statutory provision to which he refers us is section 2 of article XVII of the Act of June 25, 1919, P. L. 581, 606.
Section 1 of that article requires the controller to annually furnish to the mayor, who, in turn, must forward to councils, a statement of the estimated receipts, "including money proposed to be borrowed," and the "estimated expenditures for such year of all departments, officers, boards, commissions, trusts, committees or other agencies, whose financial requirements are to be met out of the proceeds of taxes levied by the council or out of any other funds over which the council has control, designating which of such liabilities and expenditures shall be met from current receipts, and which shall be met from loan funds. . . . . . He shall also furnish to the *548 mayor [without any requirement that it shall be sent to council] a statement of the borrowing capacity of the city." Section 2 then provides that, after a public hearing, councils shall "in one ordinance . . . . . . adopt a financial program for the ensuing year, showing the estimated receipts from all sources, the liabilities of every kind, and the amount and character of expenditures to be made by such departments, officers, boards, commissions, trusts, committees, and other agencies during the ensuing year. In passing such ordinance the council shall be bound to accept the estimates of receipts and liabilities furnished to the mayor by the city controller, but shall have full discretion to determine the character and amount of expenditures to be made out of the estimated receipts of the city during the ensuing year." So far as appears, all that this statute requires was duly done; but, it will be observed, there is nothing in the section which imposes any further duty on the controller, after he has furnished "the estimates of receipts and liabilities," or which, indeed, limits the power of the city council to borrow other money than that referred to in the controller's estimates, and to use it for any legitimate municipal purpose, which, admittedly, constructing and equipping the City Hall Annex is. Appellant is, therefore, without statutory support in the position he assumes.
To further sustain his contention he points to certain decisions of this court, which hold that, on some subjects, his acts cannot be coerced by mandamus; but all of them, when attentively considered, are antagonistic to his view. Thus, in Com. ex rel. v. George,
In Com. ex rel. v. Phila.,
In Com. ex rel. v. Larkin,
The same conclusion is stated in Vare v. Walton,
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.