148 Mich. 686 | Mich. | 1907
(after stating the facts). The meritorious question is whether the use of this money in performance of the contract will be a diversion thereof which the common council could not by the vote given legally order. That the vote was not sufficient to create an obligation on the part of the city to be met by taxation, or to lay a tax, is clear. Unless it amounted to a mere distribution of funds already on hand to the purposes for which the funds were raised (Bishop v. Lambert, 114 Mich. 110; compare Tennant v. Crocker, 85 Mich. 328), .there was no proper action of the common council. The city had on hand no other money which was available for performance of the contract. Before determining this question, a contention made by counsel for the city will be noticed.
Defendants, in their answer, ask that the city may be required to carry out the contract. The court below took judicial notice of the fact that the city of Port Huron lies to the north of the city of St. Clair; that the territory referred to in the fifth.and sixth subdivisions of the contract above set out lies at and beyond the southern boundary of the city of St. Clair, and found that the grant in the contract of permission to erect poles, etc., is not merely the grant of a way to the city plant, but is the grant of a franchise through the city, to which extent the agreement is void as opposed to 1 Comp. Laws, § 3111, which provides that no such franchise shall be granted, except by a two-thirds vote of all the aldermen-elect. The suggestion of the court to counsel for defendants that the ruling would become noncontrolling if a disclaimer of franchise rights was made matter of record was not acted upon. In this court counsel for defendants have argued that the contract will not bear the construction that it confers a franchise, but the one only that it confers the right to bring to the place where it is to be delivered, namely, at the city plant, the current contracted to be delivered. We think the contract will bear the construction that a right of way through the city is
The contract in terms requires the city to furnish certain apparatus; the clear inference being that performance of the contract by the defendants must await such action on the part of the city. The agreement is that such action shall be taken “ as soon as possible.” While the effect of the contract is to incur no direct indebtedness on the part of the city to defendants beyond the monthly payments due for the electrical current furnished, indirectly it involves, as has been pointed out, the present expenditure of more than $10,000 fora public improvement. In saying this, we find that, although the standpipe is not absolutely necessary to the operation of the waterworks under the contract, it is an essential part of the system which the city proposed to install and of the system, the economy of operation of which influenced the action of the common council which resulted in the contract. If the contract is enforceable, the city is, in any event, committed to the making of the specified improvements.
It is the contention of counsel for defendants that the money was lawfully borrowed to pay for an extension of the waterworks (1 Comp. Laws, § 3250), and that, if used as the contract contemplates, the result will be an extension of the waterworks. It is said that the electors determined only — that it is contemplated by the law that they shall determine only — the specific amount to be borrowed, the terms of the loan, and the general purpose to which the money shall be appropriated, and that the details, the method of accomplishing the general purpose, must be left to the common council. The soundness of the last proposition, as stated, may be admitted. City of Centerville v. Guaranty Co., 118 Fed. 332; Johnson v.
It is not intended to intimate an opinion concerning the power of cities owning waterworks and electric lighting plants to purchase power for their operation in the cheapest market. What is decided is that the common council of the city of St. Clair has, in fact, attempted to devote money borrowed for a specific purpose to another and different purpose, and that it may not do this by a tie vote of aldermen under a charter which requires that all moneys loaned or appropriated for the purposes of any particular fund shall be paid in and credited to such fund, and shall be applied to the purposes for which such mon
The decree is affirmed, with costs.