61 Ind. 1 | Ind. | 1878
This was a proceeding by Daniel "Wilkinson, Daniel R. Bearss, George A. Crowell, Valentine Gabs, Edward W. Lynch, Lewis Malen, Aaron B. Scott, John M. Wilson and Louisa C. Spencer, against The City of Peru and Thomas M. Crume, its treasurer, to enjoin the collection of certain taxes.
The substantial part of the complaint was as.follows:
“ Plaintiffs allege, that The City of Peru is a municipal corporation, under the general laws of the State of Indiana for the incorporation of cities, and that Thomas M. Crume is the treasurer and collector of taxes for said city; and plaintiffs allege, that they are the owners of personal and real property, situate in the corporate limits of said city; that the same is assessed and placed upon the tax duplicate of said city of Peru for the year 1872, the aggregate value of which, according to the valuation and appraisement made and authorized by the mayor and common council, amounts to $50,052, as will more fully appear from a copy of so much of the tax duplicate of said city for said year 1872 as pertains to the assessments and taxes of said plaintiffs, including the amount charged on said duplicate in the firm name of Scott & Gabs, said firm being composed of said plaintiffs Aaron B. Scott and Valentine Gahs, and also including the property charged on said duplicate to Charles Spencer, the same being now partly owned and represented by Louisa C. Spencer, the said Charles being now deceased, which is filed herewith, marked exhibit ‘A,’ and made a part of this complaint.
“ And plaintiffs further allege, that, on the 24th day of May, 1872, in the council chamber of the common council of said city of Peru, the mayor and common council of said city being then [and] there in session, one Eli J. Jamison did, he being then [and] there a member of said common council, 'offer for consideration and adoption a resolution, a copy of which is filed herewith, marked exc
“ And plaintiffs further allege, that, on the 31st day of May, 1872, said common council made and entered into a contract between the Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railway Company and said city of Peru, a copy of which contract, and so much of the record of said common council as shows the acceptance and ratification of the same, are filed herewith, marked exhibit C,’ and made a part of this complaint, whereby said city agreed to and with said railway company, and obligated itself to the same, to procure the conveyance of certain real estate, particularly-described in said exhibit C/ at the cost and expense of said city, and which amounted to the sum of $7,600,-to said railway company, and to pay said railway company, in addition to the cost of said real estate, the sum of $10,000, within two months from the date of said agreement set out in said exhibit ‘ C.’
“And plaintiffs allege, that, on said 31st day of May, 1872, a petition, signed by a portion of the resident freeholders of said city of Peru, said to be a majority thereof, was presented to said common council, a copy of which is hereto attached, marked exhibit D,’ and made a part of this complaint, asking said common council to make a donation not to exceed the sum of $18,000, for the pretended purpose, amongst other things, of aiding said Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railway Company in con
“And plaintiffs further aver, that, upon the presentation of said petition, said common council adopted an ordinance donating to said Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railway Company the sum of $18,000, to be paid by issuing the bonds of said city, a copy of which ordinance is filed herewith, marked exhibit ‘ E,’ and made a part of this complaint.
“And plaintiffs further aver, that, upon the same day, to wit, [the] 31st day of May, 1872, the common council of said city adopted another ordinance, authorizing the issuing and delivery of the bonds of said city of Peru, in the
And plaintiffs further allege, that afterward, to wit, on the — day of-, 1872, said common council of the city of Peru, for the purpose of imposing and levying a tax upon the property of plaintiffs, together with the property of other tax-payers of said city, for the purpose of creating a sinking-fund for the payment of the debt, made and contracted by said common council, to enable them to make the donation to said railway company as aforesaid, made and adopted an ordinance, of which the following are sections, viz.:
" Section 8. That, for the purpose of creating a sinking-fund for the payment of the public debt of said city, incurred by donation to the Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railway Company, on the 31st day of May, 1872, there is hereby levied, and shall be assessed and collected, a tax of eighteen cents on each $100 valuation of the real and personal property liable to be taxed in said city, in addition to the above taxes for said year.
" ' Section 9. That, for the purpose of paying the interest on the bonded debt mentioned in section eight of this ordinance, due from said city, there is hereby levied, and shall be assessed and collected, an additional tax of twenty-three cents on each $100 valuation of all real and personal property liable for such tax in said city for the fiscal year ending June 1st, 1873.’
“ 1st. Because said city of Peru, and the common council thereof, had no authoi’ity to make donations of the funds and moneys of said city, or to tax the property of the citizens thereof, to pay donations made for the purposes named in the resolution, set out in exhibit ‘B.’
“ 2d. The common council of said city had no authority of law to enter into and execute the contract set out in exhibit ‘ C,’ and had no authoi’ity to make donations, levy and collect taxes for the objects named and stipulated in said contract, nor for any one of said objects.
“ 3d. The petition set out in exhibit ‘ D,’ purporting to ask a donation in aid of the construction of a railroad, and the action of the common council of said city in pretending to grant the same, are a fraud upon the taxpayers of said city, in this: Petitioners ask, and the common council pretend to make, a donation to aid in the construction of the Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railroad, from the north end of the bridge, at the crossing of the Wabash river, to the said company’s depot in the city of Peru, when, in fact, as petitioners and said common council well knew, said railroad had been constructed between said points, and the same had been in operation for the last fifteen years, within the corporate limits of said city.
“4th. Said railway constructed no new line of railroad, in accordance with the prayer of said petition, but simply made a slight change in the location of their old road, for a distance of about five thousand feet only, furnishing no railroad facilities to said city or the tax-payers thereof, that were not furnished previous to the change.
“6th. Because the law did not then, nor does it now, authorize the common council of the city of Peru to create a debt, issue bonds of said city and tax the property of plaintiffs and others in payment thereof, for the benefit of private corporations, in the erection of machine, car and repair shops for said company’s road, and the purchase of real estate for the use and benefit of such private.corporations only, in the manner named and described in the resolution, contract and ordinances set out in the exhibits accompanying this complaint and made a part hereof.
“ 7th. And plaintiffs allege, that the donation by said city, made to said railway company, the debt created and the bonds issued in pursuance thereof, and the taxes assessed and levied for the purpose of paying either principal or interest thereon, were each and all of them acts done and performed by said city of Peru for the sole and exclusive purpose of inducing and procuring the Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railway Company to locate and establish the machine, car and repair shops of said company’s road at the city of Pern, and for no other purpose whatever; and that so much of the petition presented by a portion of the resident freeholders of said city, of the action of the common council thereon, and the acts of the said railway company in changing their line of road between the north end of the Wabash River bridge and the said railway company’s depot in the city of Peru, were acts and things done and performed by said petitioners, common council and railway company, as a mere pretext for the assessment and levy of the taxes complained of, and were a fraud upon the rights of the tax-payers of said city, and especially of these plaintiffs.
“ And plaintiffs allege, that said tax duplicate is now in the hands of the defendant Crume, as treasurer of
Wherefore the plaintiffs prayed, that said city of Peru and the said Crume, as the treasurer thereof, might be restrained from selling the property of the plaintiffs for the payment of such alleged illegal taxes, and from the collection of such taxes in any other manner whatsoever, and that said city might be enjoined and inhibited from either assessing, levying or collecting any other or further taxes for the payment, or on account, of the pretended donation in aid of the construction of a portion of the Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railway, as above stated, and for all other proper relief.
The defendants answered in seven paragraphs.
The first paragraph was in general denial. The others set up special matters in defence of the action.
The plaintiffs demurred severally to the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh paragraphs of the answer, for wairt of sufficiezrt facts to constitute defences.
The question of the szrfficiezrcy of the coznplaint beizig thus indirectly raised, the court held it to be insufficient, azrd the plaintiffs electing to stand by their complaint, judgment was rendez’ed against them upon demurrer. Batty v. Fout, 54 Ind. 482.
The provisions of the act of May 4th, 1869 (1 R. S. 1876, p. 299), “to enable cities to aid in the construction of railroads,” etc., authorize a city incorporated under the gezrez’al laws of this State, upon the petition of a majority of the resident freeholders of such city, to extend such aid in the constructioiz of a railroad, izz either of two ways: First, by subscribing to the stock of the company
The term “ donation,” as used in said act, means an absolute gift or grant, without any condition or consideration whatever. The Indiana N. & S. R. W. Co. v. The City of Attica, 56 Ind. 476.
After the presentation of such a petition to the common council of the city, and after said railroad shall be so far completed as to admit the running of trains over it between the points designated in the petition, such subscription or donation becomes obligatory on the common council of the city, and it is made the duty of the common council to do thereafter whatever is necessary to carry into effect the substantial meaning of the petition; “ and for any debt created in pursuance of the provisions of this section in carrying out the intentions of the petitioners aforesaid, the common council shall add to [the] duplicate of such years-thereafter, a levy sufficient to pay the annual interest on such debt or loan with an addition of not less than five cents on the one hundred dollars to create a sinking-fund for the liquidation of the. principal thereof, which fund with all the inci’ease thereof shall be applied to the payment of such debt and to no other purpose.” 1 R. S. 1876, p. 299.
The sufficiency of the complaint before us must be judged of by the facts averred in it, and not by the recitals contained in any of the exhibits which accompany it. Those exhibits, not being copies of any written instrument constituting the foundation of the action,.formed ' no part of the complaint within the meaning of section 78 of the civil code, and hence can not be resorted to, to supply any omissions in the averments of the complaint. Wharton v. Wilson, 60 Ind. 591; Pollard v. Bowen, 57 Ind. 282; Wilson v. Vance, 55 Ind. 584; Noble v. McGinnis, 55 Ind. 528.
Some of the matters, therefore, which are contained in the exhibits, were not properly before the court below,
Some of the averments of the complaint would have tended to make out a case for an injunction against the city of Peru, to prevent the issuing of the bonds voted, as alleged, by its common council, if such a remedy had been invoked before these bonds were issued, but we think the complaint in the present aspect of the case, does not go far enough to present a case for an injunction to restrain the collection of the taxes complained of.
Although it is not so distinctly averred in the complaint, enough is alleged to authorize us to infei-, that, on the 31st day of May, 1872, the common council of the city of Peru, on the petition of a majority of the freeholders residing in said city, adopted an ordinance donating the sum of eighteen thousand dollars to the Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Railway Company, to aid in the construction of a small portion of its line of road, and authorizing the issuing of bonds of the city for the payment of such donation. Also, that the bonds of said city, not exceeding tbe.said sum of eighteen thousand dollars, had been issued, and in some manner disposed of, in' payment of said donation.
As has been seen, the city of Peru was not only authorized, but required, to make such donation, on the presentation of a proper petition; and, in the absence of any distinct allegation to the contrary, we must assume, that the donation in this case was made on what at least purported to be a proper petition.
The ordinance making such donation created an apparent debt against the city of Peru, which had to be provided for by taxation; and the apparent debt thus created is now represented by bonds of said city, issued in pursuance of the provisions of said ordinance.
If, under these circumstances, these bonds are now in the hands of innocent holders, no valid defence can be made against them, and they may have thereby become, if they
Eor aught that appears in the complaint, these bonds constitute an outstanding debt against the city of Peru, which can be enforced by ordinary legal proceedings.
Until it is shown that the city has a valid legal defence against these bonds in the hands of the present holders, it would be manifestly improper to enjoin the collection of taxes assessed for their payment.
As the complaint fails to show that the city has any such defence to these bonds, we are driven to the conclusion that it was bad on demurrer, and that the court did not err in holding it insufficient.
The judgment is affirmed, at the costs of the appellants.