203 S.W.2d 24 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1947
Affirming.
Appellant, James H. McKinney, individually and as a citizen, property owner and taxpayer of the second-class City of Owensboro (hereinafter referred to as the City), representing himself and all other citizens similarly situated, brought this declaratory judgment action against the City wherein he attacked the constitutionality of an Act of the 1946 General Assembly Chapter 126, p. 331, and carried into the 1946 Statutes as KRS Chapter 58, and the validity of $550,000 revenue bonds proposed to be issued by the City on a public project consisting of a municipal auditorium, field house and swimming pool. The chancellor upheld the Act and declared the bonds to be valid revenue bonds which are not an indebtedness of the City.
The Act authorizes the acquisition, construction, maintenance, extension and improvement of property for public projects, and the renting and leasing thereof by governmental units and agencies, and the issuance of tax free revenue bonds payable solely from the revenue received from the project and any funds or tax revenues available for general purposes of the agency and not required by law to be devoted to some other purpose. KRS
The yield of the bonds is limited to 6% and they shall not constitute an indebtedness of the county, city or political subdivision issuing them, which shall be plainly stated on the face of each bond, and the bonds shall not run longer than 25 years. KRS
On April 22, 1947, the Board of Commissioners of the City duly passed an elaborate ordinance which fully met and complied with the provisions of the Act and authorized the issuance of municipal auditorium, swimming pool and field house revenue bonds in the sum of $550,000, bearing a maximum interest rate of 2.70% per annum, the last of which mature in 1971. Filed with the petition in this action is a copy of this ordinance and incorporated in the ordinance is a form of bond to be issued. The bond recites that the principal and interest thereof are to be paid out of the revenues received from the project, which is to be supplemented by any excess revenues received from the City's electric plant over and above what may be necessary to meet the operating cost, maintenance, depreciation and sinking fund requirements to retire the bonds upon the electric plant. It is provided in KRS
It is further recited ill the ordinance and in the bonds that a minimum of $31,000 per year will be put into the sinking fund to meet the annual interest and the maturity of the bonds; and should there be a default in the payment of the principal or interest on any of the bonds, that the holders thereof may in a court of competent jurisdiction have a receiver appointed to administer the project and collect rates sufficient to operate it and pay the interest and principal of the bonds.
The chancellor sustained a general demurrer to the petition and when appellant refused to plead further, entered a judgment declaring the Act to be constitutional and the bonds to be valid revenue bonds but not an indebtedness of the City, and dismissed the petition. From this judgment McKinney appeals.
No reason is given ill briefs why the Act is unconstitutional, and a careful study by us of the Act has revealed none. This Act is quite similar to one of 1926 authorizing cities of the second, third and fourth class to acquire water works through the issuance of revenue bonds, Chapter 133, p. 647, now KRS
The only question we have here which was not disposed of in the Kirby and Klein opinions is whether or not an auditorium, swimming pool and field house is a "public project." That term is thus defined in KRS
" 'Public project' means any land, buildings or *258 structures, works or facilities suitable for and intended for use as public property for public purposes or suitable for and intended for use in the promotion of the public health, public welfare or the conservation of natural resources, including the planning of any such lands, buildings, structures, works or facilities, and shall also include existing lands, buildings, structures, works and facilities, as well as improvements or additions to any such lands, buildings, structures, works or facilities."
In Hannon v. City of Waterbury,
We agree with the learned chancellor who tried the case that the Act is constitutional and that the bonds are valid and do not constitute an indebtedness against the City, therefore his judgment is affirmed.