STATE ex rel. STERN BROTHERS & CO., Respondent, v. William H. STILLEY, Clifford E. Ossenford, Willis Pettigrew, Russell W. Elliott, Orville O. Gold, Constituting the Board of Directors of Public Water Supply District No. 2 of Jackson County, Missouri, Appellants.
No. 47825.
Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 2.
July 11, 1960.
Motion for Rehearing or to Modify Opinion and Judgment or to Transfer to Court en Banc Denied Sept. 12, 1960.
337 S.W.2d 934
The motion is overruled.
Richard A. Erickson, Charles V. Garnett, Kansas City, for appellants.
Ilus W. Davis, Hubert L. Rowlands, Carl D. Swanson, Dietrich, Tyler, Davis, Burrell & Dicus, Kansas City, for respondent.
STORCKMAN, Judge.
The object of this action for a writ of mandamus is to compel the directors of a county water supply district to deposit with the paying agent sufficient funds to pay the principal and interest due on general obligation bonds of the Water District held by the relator. On final hearing before the court without a jury the issues were found in favor of the relator and a peremptory writ of mandamus was issued. The directors’ motion for new trial was overruled and they have appealed. The directors, who were the respondents below and are the appellants here, will sometimes be referred to as the directors and the relator as the bondholder.
In general, the directors contend that the Water District has been relieved of a proportionate share of its liability for the pay-
The appellants are the directors of Public Water Supply District No. 2 of Jackson County, Missouri, which was organized by a decree of the Circuit Court of Jackson County under
By successive extensions of its city limits in 1957 and 1958, Kansas City annexed a portion of the territory of the Water District. Thereafter, an application was filed in the Circuit Court of Jackson County for a decree approving a contract for the sale by the Water District of its property in the annexed area to Kansas City and for the detachment of such annexed area. By the terms of the contract, the Water District sold to Kansas City practically all of its property and equipment in the annexed area for the sum of $215,000 and the assumption by the City of certain liabilities of the District. On March 24, 1958, the circuit court entered its decree in the detachment case approving the contract and providing for the conveyance of the water distribution facilities to Kansas City. Based on the ratio that the assessed valuation of the real and tangible personal property within the annexed area bore to the assessed valuation of all the real and personal property within the entire area of the District, the court found that the portion of the bonded indebtedness of the District to be assessed and paid by the City pursuant to the contract was 34.674 per cent. The court further found the amount of credit the City was entitled to receive on the purchase price by reason of its assumption of 34.674 per cent of the bonded indebtednesss of the District was $38,590.35, and that the balance of the purchase price in the sum of $176,409.65 should be deposited in court and paid to the Water District upon delivery of deed of conveyance of the property sold to the City. With reference to the payment of the share of bonded indebtedness assumed by the City, Paragraph 5 of the decree provides:
“By reason of its contract as aforesaid, and the approval thereof by this Court as by law provided, the City is obligated to pay and has solemnly and firmly agreed to pay, in such installments as may bе necessary to provide for the full and complete liquidation thereof, its portion, that is, 34.674 per cent, of the existing general obligation bonds of the District with interest thereon, as the same become due and payable, and the City shall make such installment payments from time to time as the same become due; provided, however, that the obligation of the City may, at its option, be satisfied by depositing with the Union
National Bank in Kansas City the full amount of the principal and interest for which the City is liable on account of said general obligation bonds to be held by said bank and applied to the retirement of said bonds, both principal and interest, as they mature; or, consent in writing may be obtained by the City from the holders of all of said bonds to such other form of payment as the City may desire to make.”
On September 25, 1958, the City filed a motion to modify the decree by deleting Paragraph 5 and substituting a new paragraph providing in substance that the City was obligated to pay 25.5565 per cent of the principal and interest of all bonds outstanding and unpaid instead of 34.674 per cent. The City‘s motion to modify was heard and overruled on October 16, 1958. The reason for the City‘s position is not fully explained and is not essential to the issues here involved, but apparently the City has continued to insist that its obligation is the percentage of 25.5565 instead of 34.674 and has made its deposits accordingly. Because of this controversy, the funds deposited with the paying agent are inadequate and payment of the matured bonds and interest coupons has been refused.
In their return to the alternative writ of mandamus, the directors alleged that the writ ordering them to pay over to the Union National Bank, as paying agent for the District, sufficient funds to meet the principal and interest payments due was in violation of the provisions of
The appellant directors’ basic contention is: “The Legal Effect of the Dеcree Detaching the Annexed Area from the Water District, Exempting That Detached Area from Further Taxation by the Water District, and Obligating the City to Pay Its Proportionate Share of the Bond Liability, Was to Relieve the Water District from, and Transfer to the City, Liability for the Payment of 34.674% of the Principal and Interest of the Bonds in Suit.” Supplementary to this are the directors’ contentions that the legislature had the power to enact the statutory provisions on which the directors rely and they are not unconstitutional; and that such statutory provisions are as muсh a part of the bond contract as if written into the bonds. Our conclusion that the statutes do not have the legal effect of relieving the Water District of its primary obligation to pay the whole amount of the principal and interest on the bonds renders unnecessary a decision of the subsidiary contentions. In support of their primary contention, the appellants cite
The primary purpose of
There is no statutory authority for the release of the Water District and, without such authority, the contract of sale and the court‘s approval cannot accomplish that result. “It is not within the power of the original debtor to release himself from liability by contracting for the assumption of the debt by another. There can therefore be no doubt that in order to effect a novation by the substitution of a new debtor, the assent of the creditor to thе substitution is essential.” 39 Am.Jur., Novation, § 19, p. 264. See also Snyder v. Kirtley, 35 Mo. 423, 426, Manufacturers Bank & Trust Co. v. Buder, Mo.App., 191 S.W.2d 290, 293[1], and Shapiro v. Childs Co., 222 Mo.App. 1126, 17 S.W.2d 677, 680[2].
It must be assumed that the contract, presented by the parties and approved by the circuit court, is a fair one despite the directors’ argument, quite outside the record, that the City drove a hard bargain. Nevertheless, if it were a fact that the contract is an improvident one, that would be but an added reason why its enforcement should not be foisted upon the bondholders but should rest upon those who negotiated it. The Water District was under no compulsion to enter into the contract. It could have proceeded under
The basic rule of statutory construction is to first seek the legislative intention, and effectuate it if possible, and the law favors constructions which harmonize with reason, and which tend to avoid unjust, absurd, unreasonable or confiscatory results, or oppression. Owen v. Riffie, Mo., 323 S.W.2d 765, 769-770[2]. A holding relieving the Water District of its obligation would increase the difficulties of the bondholders manyfold and solve nothing. The problem of requiring the City to deposit its share in accordance with the contract and decree properly rests with the Water District. Even if the City were to prevail in its contention, the amount involved is only the difference between approximately one-fourth and one-third and nоt a total of one-third as the directors assert. But regardless of the result, it will be that for which the District contracted and the court approved.
Neither
The constitutional questions presented by the appellants may be considered together. First they say that the writ of mandamus in requiring them to pay out of public funds in their hands the amount the City has failed to pay is in violation of
The directors express concern as to where they will get the money to make the payment due.
The directors say the bondholders are not entitled to the writ of mandamus because the claim is contested and thе legal right involved is not clear. On the admitted facts, there is no valid basis to contest the claim and the bondholders’ legal rights are clear. The fact that the bondholders may have acquired some additional recourse against the City as a third-party beneficiary of its contract with the District does not detract from the bondholders’ remedies against the District. Nor does the decree of the circuit court in the detachment case imposing a liability on the City for a portion of the amount necessary to pay the bonds destroy the bondhоlders’ rights to proceed against the District on its original and still existing promise to pay.
Mandamus is a proper remedy to compel a water supply district to pay a bondholder who has an immediate right to be paid the principal and interest of his matured bonds, especially when the district has sufficient funds on hand. State ex rel. Sturdivant Bank v. Little River Drainage District, 334 Mo. 753, 68 S.W.2d 671, 672 [1]; State ex rel. Lane v. Craig, 69 Mo. 565; Flagg v. Mayor, etc., of City of Palmyra, 33 Mo. 440; 55 C.J.S. Mandamus § 144b, p. 252. On the facts, this is a proper case for the remedy of mandamus.
The final assignment with which we have to deal is that the court erred in ordering the directors to pay interest frоm maturity at the rate of six per cent on the amount of principal and interest due. Both parties rely upon
We have examined all of appellants’ assignments of error necessary to a decision of the case and find them to be without merit. The judgment is affirmed.
LEEDY, P. J., EAGER, J., and HUNTER, Special Judge, concur.
On Motion for Rehearing or to Modify Judgment or to Transfer to Court En Banc
PER CURIAM.
The appellants’ attack on the opinion is limited to our approval of the trial court‘s order that interest at the rate of 6 per cent be paid from maturity upon the principal of the bonds and the interest coupons. Further, the motion deals only with the “interest on the bonds in suit” and does not specifically mention the interest coupons.
The interest coupons, pleaded by the plaintiffs in extenso and admitted by the district‘s return to the alternative writ of mandamus, were payable to bearer and were еxpressed to be for the interest provided in the general obligation bonds.
With respect to the bonds themselves, the appellants now cite three cases, two involving promissory notes and the other a certificate of deposit in the nature of a promissory note, which hold that a provision for a certain rate of interest from date without more amounted to an agreement to pay interest at the rate specified after maturity as well as before. The bonds sued on were not introduced in evidence and there is no direct proof what their interest provisions were. The assertion in the district‘s motion for new trial that there was a provision for interest from date cannot be accepted because the allegations of a motion for new trial do not prove themselves. Furthermore, it is doubtful if such a provision without more would be controlling in this case which involves bonds with interest coupons attached.
The plaintiffs’ petition alleges that all taxable property of the district was pledged “for the prompt payment of said principal and interest at maturity.” This allegation was also admitted by the district‘s return. On the evidence before us, it appears that the bonds provided for the payment of interest to maturity only. Interest coupons were attached to each bond for all of the interest that the water district contemplated or agreed to pay. These coupons did not extend beyond the maturity date of the bonds.
Absent proof that a rate of interest after maturity was agreed upon, the rate provided by law applies.
