101 Kan. 225 | Kan. | 1917
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an original proceeding brought in the name of the state to require the commissioners of Lawrence to issue bonds for the extension of waterworks owned by the city. The refusal of the defendants is based upon a doubt respecting the validity of the statute which purports to authorize such action.
The act in question was enacted in 1913. It undertake's to confer power to issue bonds for the purpose indicated .upon “cities of the second and third class, whose total indebtedness shall not exceed 15 per cent of its total assessed valuation now owning and operating, or hereafter acquiring a system of waterworks.” (Laws 1913, ch. 121, § 1; Gen. Stat. 1915, § 855.) The city of Lawrence did not own a system of waterworks when this law-took effect, but it has since acquired one. It is a city of the second class, and its indebtedness is within the prescribed limit. It is therefore covered by the terms of the act. But the contention is made that the words “or hereafter acquiring,” in the portion of the statute above quoted,
“An Act authorizing cities of the second and third class whose total indebtedness shall not exceed 15% of its total assessed valuation now owning and operating a system of waterworks to issue bonds for the purpose of enlarging, 'repairing, extending and improving such system.” (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 855.)
The word “now” as used in a statute ordinarily refers to the date of its taking effect. (Clark v. Lord, 20 Kan. 390, 396.) Construed strictly and literally, the title therefore applies only to cities which at the time the act was published owned a system of waterworks, and not to those which might thereafter acquire one. The word “now,” however, is sometimes used, not with reference to the moment of speaking, but to “a time contemporaneous with something done.” (21 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 676; 29 Cyc. 1140.) “The intent with which this -word is used must be gathered from its peculiar significance '.in ¡each case.” (Note to last text cited.) It may mean “ the time spoken of or referred to” as well as “at the time of speaking.” One of the examples of this given in the Oxford lE.ffigiish Dictionary is: “What season more important than the hiour of death ? Everything now conspires to fill the soul with gloom.” The expression is somewhat rhetorical, corresponding to the “historical present” of the grammarians, but it could leave no one in doubt that the speaker referred to the time of death and not to the time of utterance. That this use of the term is not confined to poetical discourse is illustrated by this sentence from a scientific paper in a recent review: “Curiously enough, in the early stages of this firm condition the ice is perhaps more dangerous to venture upon than when it has the ‘rubbery’ structure; for it is now brittle, and yet not of sufficient thickness to support a considerable weight at one point.” (The Natural History of Ice, Harper’s Magazine, March, 1917, p. 559.)
It is entirely clear that the draftsman of the statute under consideration, when in the title he referred to the issuance of bonds for the extension of waterworks by cities which “now” owned them, had in mind cities which owned them at the time of the proposed extension, and not those which happened to own them at the time- the act took effect. His idea manifestly was that a city which owned waterworks should, for that rea
Upon these grounds we hold that the statute is valid and that it is the duty of the defendants to issue the bonds in question.
Judgment is therefore rendered for the plaintiff.