185 N.E. 841 | Ohio | 1933
The question presented is, When are general levies required in order to pay interest and principal on bonds issued in anticipation of collection of special assessments, the bonds not requiring payment solely from special assessment but providing that "the faith, credit and revenue of said Village are hereby irrevocably pledged for the prompt payment of the principal and interest thereof at maturity."
The relator claims that general taxes should be levied coincidently and continuously with the levy of the special assessments. The respondent claims that general levies should be made only after the exhaustion *462 of the special assessment liens, and then only to the extent of the deficiency.
First, does mandamus lie to compel the taxing officials to make the levies in question, if relator be entitled thereto?
The case of State, ex rel. Huntington National Bank, v.Putnam, Mayor,
All the bonds involved herein contain substantially this provision:
"And it is hereby certified and recited, that all acts, conditions and things necessary to be done precedent to and in the issuing of these bonds, in order to make them legal, valid and binding obligations of said Village, have been done, happened and performed in regular and due form as required by law; that the faith, credit and revenue of said Village arehereby irrevocably pledged for the prompt payment of theprincipal and interest thereof at maturity; that no limitation of indebtedness or taxation, either statutory or constitutional, has been exceeded in issuing these bonds; and that due provision has been made for levying and collecting annually by taxation an amount sufficient to pay the interest on these bonds as it falls due and to provide a fund for the redemption of said bonds at maturity."
The bonds were issued to meet obligations arising from public improvements, hence "conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare," as provided in Section 3812, General Code, and were properly payable from the proceeds of general taxation, the municipality having duly authorized such public improvements.
The issuing of bonds in anticipation of special assessments is authorized by Section 2293-24, General Code, where it provides that such bonds "shall be full *463 general obligations of the issuing subdivision, and for the payment of the principal and interest of same the full faith, credit and revenues of such subdivision shall be pledged."
We find no statutory provision distinguishing between bonds issued in anticipation of special assessments and those in anticipation of general taxes as to the obligation upon the issuing subdivision to pay at maturity. Section 2293-24 expresses the intention not to distinguish, but rather it precludes distinction.
Of course by Section 2293-26, General Code, if special assessments are available, the same shall be used for the payment of interest and principal due, but this does not excuse the issuing subdivision from providing "for the levying of a tax sufficient in amount to pay the interest on and retire at maturity all of the bonds covered by said resolution or ordinance."
Bonds of political subdivisions of Ohio are general obligations, and under the law funds must be provided by the issuing subdivision for the payment of interest and principal at maturity. Bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of such assessments are not an exception to this rule, although the issuing subdivision may reduce the amount to be levied in any year by the amount available from special assessments, as provided in Section 2293-26, General Code, as above noted.
In the case of State, ex rel. Bowman, v. Board of Commrs. ofAllen County,
That bonds of taxing subdivisions are general obligations for which the full faith, credit and revenue of the subdivision are pledged — and bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of special assessments are treated as standing upon the same basis — is recognized by early decisions of this court. In the case of State v. Commissioners of Fayette County,
See, also, State, ex rel. Moran Bros., v. Commissioners andAuditor of Clinton County,
Under Section
We find no statutory provision, either in the Uniform Bond Act, Sections 2293-1 to 2293-37, inclusive, General Code, or in the Uniform Tax Levy Law, Sections 5625-1 et seq., General Code, which justifies the conclusion that bonds issued in anticipation of special assessments are to be distinguished from other bonds with respect to the duty of the taxing subdivision to provide funds for their payment, when there are not sufficient collections available from special assessments to meet interest and principal due.
Coming now to the question whether taxes for debt charges are preferred to those for current expenses, we are of opinion that interest and principal due on bonds such as are involved in this case are entitled to preference, within the statutory and constitutional limitations. Such was the conclusion in the case of State, ex rel. Southard, Dir. of Health, v. City of VanWert, ante, 78,
Section
This section was considered by this court in the case *466
of Link v. Karb, Mayor,
This construction thus given this constitutional provision was made prior to the amendment and repeal of Section 5649-1, General Code, and indicates its mandatory character.
Attention may also be called to Sections 5625-21 and 5625-23, General Code, requiring the county auditor to lay before the budget commission the annual tax budgets submitted to him. The latter section contains this mandatory language: "If any debt charge is omitted from the budget, the budget commissionshall include it therein."
Thus, in setting up the budgetary procedure, the Legislature has carried into and retained in the General Code the statutory provisions reiterating the constitutional mandate of Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution, as construed by this court.
It may be noted that the same act which repealed Section 5649-1 enacted Sections 5625-21 and 5625-23, the present budgetary law, 112 Ohio Laws, 391.
The principles announced in Rabe v. Board of Education ofCanton School District,
This decision, made prior to the amendment of Section 5649-1, General Code, when the same contained nothing about priorities, was followed by State, ex rel. Heald, v. Zangerle et al.,Budget Commrs.,
In view of the fact that the provisions of Section *468 5649-1 were carried into Sections 5625-21 and 5625-23, General Code, the syllabus above quoted is entirely applicable. In the opinion, the language of Donahue, J., at page 450, is pertinent: "It is not seriously contended that the amount certified is excessive. The only reason offered by the defendants for not certifying the full amount to the county auditor is that if this is done a sufficient sum cannot be provided, within the limitations fixed by law, to meet the current expenses of city government. That is unfortunate, but it does not authorize the budget commissioners to ignore the law."
Our attention is called to the adjudications of other jurisdictions, but we do not deem it necessary to discuss those cases, in view of the fact that so much depends upon the constitutional and statutory law of the states from which such cases come. We have found no case in any jurisdiction where any court of last resort has held that a tax need not be levied to pay general obligation bonds at maturity. There are cases, where special assessment bonds were not general obligations of the issuing subdivision, in which the courts have held that after exhaustion of special assessment liens a general tax may be levied, but such special assessment bonds, which are not general obligations, are not here under consideration.
Attention may be called to the case of United States v. Cityof Fort Scott,
See, also, Colby v. City of Medford,
The case of Board of Commissioners of Franklin County, Ohio, v. Gardiner Sav. Inst. (C.C.A.), 119 F., 36, although not a mandamus case, is applicable in principle. This case involved the authority of the commissioners of Franklin county to levy a general tax for the payment of the bonds issued for a certain road improvement. It was insisted on behalf of the bondholders that, notwithstanding a method of assessment upon the property abutting upon the road is set forth, which may provide a means of ultimate payment as between the county and the property owners, the bonds constitute a general indebtedness of the county, to be collected by general taxation. On the other hand, it was contended that as the bonds, on their face, stipulate that they shall be paid out of the assessments on the property, and, no authority being conferred in the act authorizing the improvement to incur a general liability of the county, the only obligation of the county is to use diligence to collect and to apply the assessments for the benefit of the bondholders. In the opinion, at page 46, it is said:
"The obligation to pay is unconditional, and there is no statement in the act or in the bond that the holder shall await payment until assessments can be collected. It is not unlikely that the bonds could not have been negotiated, had the act required, and the bonds stated that payment was to be made only from assessments. We do not think anything short of such clear expression of limitation of the right of the bondholder to the assessments on the property, without any general liability on the bonds by the county, will have the effect *470
to thus restrict the obligation of the contract. State v.Fayette County Board of Commrs.,
In the case of Shepard v. Barron,
In United States, ex rel. Masslich, v. Saunders, City Treas.et al. (C.C.A.), 124 F., 124, on page 131, attention is called to the following: "It issues the district bonds, charges itself and all the taxable property within it with liability to discharge its express promise to pay them, pays the cost of the improvement with the proceeds of their sale, and then seeks to recover a portion of the money to pay the bonds from the collection of the special taxes. In either case the faith and credit of the city are necessarily pledged in the first instance to pay the cost of the improvement, and in the latter case to pay the bonds issued to discharge the primary liability. In neither case can the remedy of the creditors, whether they are contractors to make the improvements or the holders of the district bonds, be limited to the special taxes upon the abutting property, in the absence of an express stipulation to that effect in the contracts or in the bonds, or in the law under which the contracts and bonds are made. UnitedStates v. Ft. Scott,
The following cases may also be cited: City of Superior *471
v. Marble Sav. Bank of Rutland, Vt. (C.C.A.), 148 F., 7;Alexander v. Bailey,
In the case of Klemm v. Davenport, Mayor, 100 Fla., pt. 1, 627,
"The law is well settled in this country that as between the bondholders and the municipality the bondholder may enforce the payment of his bonds as general obligations of the municipality by an ad valorem tax on all property therein while as between the municipality and the tax payer the law allows the municipality to place the ultimate burden on those specially benefited. * * *
"The obligation of a municipality under Chapter 9298, Acts of 1923, is direct and general to pay the bonds duly issued for street improvements considered as an entire project, and the tax levy has reference to such improvements as a municipal purpose considered as a whole, and not with reference to property specially assessed for benefits to its value or use."
The language of Terrell, C.J., in the opinion, is a comprehensive statement of a situation not unlike that urged in the present case.
Our conclusion is that bonds of a municipal corporation, issued in anticipation of the collection of special assessments for public improvements, reciting that the faith, credit and revenue of the corporation are pledged for their payment at maturity, are payable from general tax levies to be made by the proper officials, after crediting the amount due with funds available from the collection of special assessments, as provided by statute; and that, within constitutional and statutory limitations, the taxing authorities should make general levies upon the taxable property of such *472 political subdivision so pledging its faith, credit and revenues for payment of the interest and principal due at maturity of such bonds.
Demurrer to answer sustained.
WEYGANDT, C.J., ALLEN, STEPHENSON, JONES and MATTHIAS, JJ., concur.
KINKADE, J., not participating.