213 S.W.2d 995 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1948
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *370 Affirming.
This case is a sequel of Sanitation District No. 1 v. Louisville Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer District,
We held the Metropolitan Sewer District Act had impliedly repealed Ky. Rev. Sts. 220.530, which was a part of the Act of 1940 under which the Sanitation District was organized, and that the City upon annexation of the territory would not have to pay the bonds. We also held that Metropolitan District could not be required to assume such obligations although there appears to be no obstacle to its voluntarily doing so. Immediately afterward, a bill was introduced in the Legislature (H. B. 464) re-enacting KRS
The City of Louisville instituted this suit challenging the constitutionality of the Act. The circuit court declared the Act unconstitutional and void "in its attempted application to the pending annexation proceedings by the City of Louisville to annex the territory comprised in Sanitation District No. 1 of Jefferson County because, (1) it attempts to delay and prohibit those proceedings and (2) it would impose the debts and liabilities of the district upon the City."
Section 1, paragraph (1) of the Act is as follows: "Where a city annexes an entire sanitation district organized under this Chapter, the city shall be liable from and after the date of such annexation for all of the debts and liabilities of such district, including, but not by way of limitation, all revenue bonds and all debts and liabilities secured by revenues of the district, and all other bonded and floating debt of the district, and such debts and liabilities shall be payable out of the general funds of the city, and such city shall be the owner of *372 all the property and rights of the district, and the users of sewers in the district shall be relieved from any further rentals and obligations, except that if the territory in the district becomes part of the territory in a metropolitan sewer district formed under Chapter 76 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes, such users shall pay the regular charges of such metropolitan sewer district, and the sanitation district shall thereupon be automatically dissolved."
Paragraphs (2) and (3) provide that if only a portion of the territory embraced in a sanitation district should be annexed, the city would acquire proportionate rights and assume proportionate obligations.
Section 2 of the Act declares that it shall prevail over any existing law in conflict with it, and section 3 is a severance provision to the effect that if any part of the Act is held to be unconstitutional or invalid, no other part shall be affected by such decision.
The Sanitation District is authorized to levy a tax to raise funds for the expense of organization and preliminary work up to the time the money shall be received from the sale of revenue bonds and to borrow money in anticipation of the collection of the tax. KRS
Sanitation District No. 1 has incurred preliminary expenses of more than $100,000 and has let contracts for the construction of a sewer system. The construction of a disposal plant is contemplated. The estimated total cost of the project is $2,000,000.
The City of Louisville enacted an ordinance on May 28, 1947, annexing territory which is practically coextensive with that embraced by Sanitation District No. 1. A remonstrance against annexation was filed and the case was pending in the Jefferson Circuit Court (KRS
The gist and explicit purpose of the Act of 1948 is to impose the payment of the cost of a community public improvement upon the general revenues of the City, if it should be annexed. While the probable intent was that all of it should not be paid in cash at the time of the annexation, the legal effect is the same, for there would be an assumption of the entire debt though actual payment might be made as the coupons and bonds severally mature.
It is stipulated in the record that Louisville does not now have general revenues over and above its necessary governmental expenses sufficient to enable it to assume in one year any part of the debts and liabilities of the Sanitary District in the event of annexation of all or any part of the territory. Nor is it presently contemplated that the City will at any time in the foreseeable future have general revenues sufficient to permit it to assume in any one year the amount of expenditures which would be required to construct and complete the sewerage system of the Sanitary District in accordance *374
with the contracts which it has made. The assumption of any such debts or obligations would result in the City becoming indebted in an amount exceeding the income and revenue provided for the year within which annexation might take place. This, of course, can not be legally done. As said in Sanitation District No. 1 v. Louisville and Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer District, supra,
The argument of the Sanitation District is, in brief, that the Act cannot be held constitutionally invalid or inapplicable because annexation is optional; that it is a "take it or leave it" proposition, for if the City is unable financially to pay the bill, it must not take in the territory or any part of it. All of that is true except for the inescapable fact that the City really has no choice if the conditions cannot be met in the foreseeable future.
Since the creation of municipalities and all matters in relation to annexation are political acts, whether they shall be done or not is within the power and discretion of the Legislature as the political department of the government; hence the assent or the will of the people particularly affected is not controlling, for they hold their property subject to the exercise of the legislative power. Cheaney v. Hooser, 9 B. Mon. 330,
Section 2 of our Bill of Rights is unique, only the Constitution of Wyoming having a like declaration. Article 1, Section 7, Constitution of Wyoming. Section 2, Kentucky Constitution, reads: "Absolute and arbitrary power over the lives, liberty and property of freemen exists nowhere in a republic, not even in the largest majority."
This is regarded by an eminent authority as a good definition of constitutional government, as distinguished from a pure democracy. Stimson, Federal and State Constitutions, page 192, section 182, note 2. It is the affirmance of fundamental principles recognized throughout the federal and state constitutions and sanctioned by the laws of all free people. Most of these principles are expressed in the various bills of right, but they are to be found also in the historical development of constitutional government from despotism. So it may be said that whatever is contrary to democratic ideals, customs and maxims is arbitrary. Likewise, whatever is essentially unjust and unequal or exceeds the reasonable and legitimate interests of the people is arbitrary. City of Cambellsburg (Campbellsville) v. Odewalt, Ky.,
By this Act the Legislature has recognized its own enactments authorizing the annexation of territory by cities of the first class, but has by the Act imposed such oppressive terms or conditions as to deny effectually *376 the right of the City of Louisville to avail itself of that authorization. It would require the City to do an illegal thing by exceeding its current revenues or assuming an unconstitutional debt.
There is no conceivable reason for the imposition of this burden in case of annexation of the territory of a sanitary district by a city of the first class, except to make annexation so oppressive as to make it prohibitive.
An illustrative and extreme case of arbitrary action in relation to annexation by a city is revealed in Jones v. City of Memphis,
The statutes provide that where a city of the first class annexes territory of a smaller city or town it shall be bound for its debts and liabilities, wholly or proportionally. KRS
Appropriate to our present consideration is the following comment of a distinguished authority, 2 Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, page 1035, note, as follows: "The general idea of our tax system is, that those shall vote the burdens who are to pay them; and it would be intolerable that a central authority should have power, not only to tax localities, for local purposes of a public character, which they did not approve, but also, if it so pleased, to compel them to assume and discharge private claims not equitably chargeable upon them."
Section 3 of the Constitution reads: "No grant of exclusive, separate public emoluments or privileges shall be made to any man or set of men, except in consideration of public services."
This is the correlative of that part of Section 13 which declares that private property of no man shall be taken or applied to a public use without consent and compensation. It is never competent for the Legislature to dispense public funds to any individual or group of individuals without benefit to the public interest or welfare. Thus, it was held in Barker v. Crum,
Moreover, the provision is at war with equality. Under similar conditions the users of other community systems would continue to pay for them by special assessments after annexation to the City of Louisville. The Metropolitan Sewer District has *378
authority to take over existing sewer and drainage systems and facilities serving another city or other incorporated area located in Jefferson County by agreement with its governing body. Where it does, the cost of construction and subsequent maintenance is payable out of sewer charges. KRS
It cannot be logically said that if it were otherwise the city would obtain title to the St. Matthews sewer system without cost and at the same time the community would be unequally or inequitably required to pay specifically for the cost of creating that property and get nothing in the exchange. Without this condition there would be an equalization of charges and benefits with other communities similarly situated, for St. Matthews would have the right to use the city trunk line sewers, which have already been paid for, or substantially so, and save the expense of a disposal plant. Further, the community would avoid the payment of a differential in use charges, as approved in Louisville and Jefferson *379
County Metropolitan Sewer District v. Joseph E. Seagram Sons,
The fact that the property of the annexed territory would be subject to general taxation of the city, which embraces a proportion to pay outstanding city sewer bonds, is not of legal consequence. McQuillen, Municipal Corporations, section 311; Pence v. City of Frankfort,
We are constrained to hold that the Act is unconstitutional. Section 3 declares that if any part should be declared unconstitutional, every other part should remain the law, since the legislative intent was to enact each part separately. However, the decision that the provision which imposes the burden upon the city to satisfy the District's revenue bonds out of general tax funds is void eviscerates the whole Act, and as all other provisions are dependent upon that, it necessarily follows that the entire Act must fail.
This holding does not affect the validity of the bonds issued or to be issued by the Sanitation District nor does it in any way impair the power of the holders of those bonds to enforce their statutory and contractual rights. The Sanitation District will continue to exist as such after annexation and its functions and duties will be in no manner altered. It is so stated in Sanitation District No. 1 v. Louisville and Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer District, supra,
The rights and remedies granted to the holders of such bonds by the statutory provisions heretofore enumerated *380 in this opinion are similar to rights heretofore approved by this court as proper in a long line of cases.
The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly affirmed.