114 Kan. 741 | Kan. | 1923
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1921 the board of state school fund commissioners purchased from school district No. 78 of Linn county, at par, bonds of that district bearing 6 per cent interest, dated July 1 of that year, $1,000 maturing each year until 1935 and 1936 when $7,500 and $8,000 respectively became due. The district is now able to borrow money at a lower rate of interest. It has demanded of the school ' fund commission that it either accept payment of these bonds, the money to be obtained by the district through the sale of new bonds for which it has a purchaser at 4% per cent, or that it accept new bonds bearing that interest in exchange for those it now holds. The commission having refused the demand this proceeding is brought to require compliance with it. An alternative writ of mandamus having been issued the case is heard upon a motion to quash it.
1. The plaintiff relies upon a statute authorizing a school district (as well as other public bodies) “to compromise and refund its bonded indebtedness . . . upon such terms as can be agreed upon, and to issue new bonds ... in payment for any sums so compromised.” (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 642.) Obviously the phrase “upon such terms as can be agreed upon” means that the arrangement must be the result of an agreement between the district and the holder of the bonds. The plaintiff ppncedes that this is the case where the bonds are held by an “outside party,” but argues
The plaintiff suggests that inasmuch as the district was required to offer its bonds to the school district at par (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 10884), when as the alternative writ recites they were worth more, the element of bargain and sale did not enter into the transaction. The district in fixing the rate at 6 per cent, knowing that the commission had the right to take the bonds at par, elected to make an offer on that basis, which was accepted. In the plaintiff’s brief it is said: “Still less did the date of maturity of plaintiff’s bonds enter into the transaction. Such date had nothing whatever to do with the purchase price.” The time the bonds were to run- was one of the elements which the commission necessarily considered in deciding whether to buy the bonds. The school district having chosen to issue and sell the bonds under the existing statutes, which became a part of the contract, is bound by the obligation it assumed.
2. A portion of a statute affecting the relation between the school fund commission and municipal bodies which have sold their bonds to it reads:
“If at any time any board oí education, school district, township, county er qity of any class shall have accumulated in the treasury sinking fund sufficient*744 to pay in full any bond or bonds issued by such board of education, school district, township, county or city of any class before the maturity, the state permanent school fund, state normal school fund, or the university permanent school fund, or agricultural college endowment fund being the holders thereof, such board of education, school district, township, county or city of any class may pay the same to the state treasurer at the time any interest coupon is due, and take up such bond or bonds.” (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 9267.)
By this provision the legislature has given the school district the privilege of extinguishing by payment, regardless of the date of maturity, so much of its bonded indebtedness as can be met from accumulations in the treasury sinking fund, to provide which it is required to levy an annual tax. (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 9181.) To extinguish its debt however is a very different thing from merely transferring the obligation to another creditor. The district is not in a position to pay off the old debt except by incurring a new one, and although the several steps should be taken at the same time and the cash for the payment of the present bonds be made at once available from the sale of new ones, the transaction would still be an exchange of creditors and not a reduction of the principal of, the debt. We hold that the commission is not required either to reduce the interest contracted for or in effect to sell the bonds to a purchaser who is willing to do so. This view merely means that the contract is to be enforced as made. Any apparent hardship to the district which it involves is a consequence of the rate of interest having been fixed higher than the market required, or of the market having changed.
3. The- writ also recites that the commission paid for the bonds only their face value, while at the time payment was made interest had accrued to the amount of $2-85. This may entitle the district to receive that additional amount but does not affect the right of the commission to keep and enforce the bonds.
The motion to quash the alternative writ is sustained.