73 W. Va. 723 | W. Va. | 1914
The County Court of Wood County having refused compliance with the prayer of a petition of citizens of the magisterial district of Clay in said county, to order an- election for the purpose and submit to the voters of said district a proposition to issue and sell bonds in the penalty of $80,000.00 for permanent road improvement, redeemable out of taxes to be levied upon and collected from the taxable property in said district, William Pfalzgraf, one of said petitioners, seeks here a peremptory writ of mandamus, commanding said county court to order such election and make such submission.
Deeming itself not bound to do a vain thing, the county court relies upon a statutory limitation as to indebted
Regarding sec. 8 of Art. X of the Constitution, limiting the indebtedness of counties, cities, school districts and municipal corporations to five per cent, of the taxable value of the property therein, as a grant of the right to incur indebtedness to that amount, the relator argues, as the basis of his application for this writ, uneonstitutionality of chapter 51 of the Acts of 1905, reducing the limitation to two and one half per cent. As the terms of the constitutional provision in questtion are negative and prohibitory, the supposed grant of power and authority, if any, must be an implied one. "Whether there is such a grant of power to counties, cities, school districts and municipal corporations, or recognition thereof as preexistent in them, so as to deny authority in the legislature to interfere with it, is a question very similar to the one raised in Dillon v. County Court, 60 W. Va. 339, under see. 7 of Art. Xoi the Constitution, imposing a limitation upon county courts, respecting the amount of taxes they may raise in any one year for current expenses. The principles and considerations upon which that question was resolved
Though not suggested in argument, two inquiries arise as to-possible avenues of escape from the consequences of this conclusion: (1) whether, the limit as to county indebtedness not having been reached and the record not disclosing an excess-thereof in the amount of the proposed issue, the bonds, if' issued, would be valid notwithstanding the valuation of the property of the district is insufficient to warrant the issuance thereof, since they must be executed and sold by the county court and .not by the district in its own name, agreeably to-principles declared in Neale v. County Court, 43 W. Va., 90; and (2) whether sec. 25a-of chap. 38, Acts of 1911, authorizing bond issues for road improvement, being subseqeunt and..
Both must be resolved in the negative. To permit county courts to issue bonds payable out of the levies of a given district to the extent of the authorized indebtedness of the county would violate the spirit of both limitations, which were obviously imposed to prevent unreasonable indebtedness upon any community or sub-division. It would allow indebtedness on a district containing one-tenth of the taxable wealth of a county to the extent of 50 per cent, of its assessed value under the constitutional limitation and 25 per cent, under the statutory one. Surely no such result could have been intended. Its injustice, oppression and absurdity would condemn such an interpretation. Hasson v. Chester, 67 W. Va., 278. The second terminates unfavorably to the relator also. The provision of the Act of 1911 involved has a special and limited purpose, and does not deal with the subject matter of chap. 51 of the Acts of 1905, limitation of public indebtedness. Therefore, its general terms must be so far restrained in their application as to confine them to the manifest legislative purpose and prevent them from encroaching or innovating upon well defined principles of public policy found in other departments of the law. Reeves v. Ross, 62 W. Va., 7.
Upon these principles and conclusions, the writ prayed for must be refused.
Writ Befused.