Prince v. City of Quincy

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the 7th of August, 1873, the city of Quincy, by ordinance, entered into a contract with Edward Prince, by which the latter agreed to construct, maintain and keep in operation within the corporate limits of the city, a general system of water works, to be extended and enlarged from time to time, as the growth of the city and wants of its inhabitants should require. For the use of the water by the city for the extinguishment of fires, and other purposes,, the city agreed to pay Prince $2600 per annum, in monthly installments, and also, in like manner, $200 per annum for each fire hydrant for the first hundred, $150 for the next additional fifty, and $100 for all in excess of one hundred and fifty. The rights of Prince under the ordinance were made exclusive, and the contract was to run for a period of thirty years, and at its expiration, if not renewed, the city was to purchase the works at their cash value. The city reserved the right to purchase the works at any time, though upon terms decidedly onerous to the city.

The works were constructed as contemplated by the ordinance, and the terms of the agreement were mutually observed by the respective parties for a number of years, when the city, assuming the agreement had been entered into on its part without legal authority, declined to further conform to its requirements, and so notified Prince. The latter not acquiescing in this view of the matter, brought the present action against the city to recover ■ damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the failure and refusal of the defendant to perform said agreement. The cause was tried upon an issue of law, at the October term, 1880, of the Adams circuit court, resulting in a judgment for the defendant, which was affirmed on appeal to the Appellate Court for the Third District.

The errors assigned upon the record question the ruling of the circuit court in sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication to the defendant’s amended additional plea, and the decision of the case here depends entirely upon the correctness of that ruling. The form of the action was assumpsit, the plaintiff counting specially upon the agreement above mentioned.

The additional amended plea, which was plead in bar of the count, alleged, in substance, that the city of Quincy, at the time of making the agreement sued on, was, and from thence to the time of the commencement of the suit had continued to be, otherwise indebted, in an amount exceeding the constitutional limit of five per cent on all the taxable property in the city. To this plea the plaintiff replied, that the said several sums of money sought to be recovered “pertained to the ordinary expenses of the defendant in the administration of the affairs and government of the city, and that at the time of the making of said contract the said several sums of money so provided to be paid monthly by said defendant to said plaintiff, together with other ordinary expenses of the government of the said defendant, were within the limits of the current revenues of said defendant. ”

If the plea presented a defence to the action, we are quite clear the replication afforded no sufficient answer to the plea, and upon that hypothesis the court properly sustained the demurrer to the replication. Whether the plea in question presented a defence to the action, depends upon the construction which must be given to section 12 of article 9 of the constitution, already alluded to. That section, or so much thereof as relates to the question in hand, declares that “no county, city, township, school district, or other municipal corporation, shall be allowed to become indebted, in any manner or for any pmpose, to an amount, including existing indebtedness, in the aggregate exceeding five per centum on the value of the taxable property therein, to be ascertained by the last assessment for State and county taxes previous to the incurring of such indebtedness. ” Now, if it be true, as is claimed, that this provision of the constitution has no application to liabilities arising under contracts like that set forth in the declaration, it is very evident the plea presented no defence to the action, and the demurrer should have been carried back and sustained to the plea.

While the provision of the constitution just cited declares, in emphatic terms, that a city or other municipality whose existing indebtedness already exceeds the constitutional limit, as was the case.here, shall not become further indebted “in any manner or for any purpose,” it is' seriously' contended by counsel for appellant that a municipality thus circumstanced may become indebted for supplies to meet its ordinary wants and necessities. To so construe the constitution would be to add a provision, in the nature of an exception, to the constitution, which the framers of that instrument did not see proper to insert. This, as is well settled by an unbroken current of authority, is not permissible where the language of the law is clear and unambiguous, as is the case here, except where to give effect to the language used, according to its literal terms, would lead to a gross absurdity or manifest wrong or inconsistency, which courts will not imputé to a legislative body. That no such consequences will flow from giving effect to this provision of the constitution according to the obvious meaning of the language in which it is conceived, will hardly be claimed by any one. The object and purpose of the framers of the constitution in adopting this provision have, on more than one occasion, received the deliberate and mature consideration of this court, and we do not feel called upon to repeat what we have already said on the subject, but will content ourselves with a reference to the cases containing the previously expressed views of this court in relation to it: City of Springfield v. Edwards, 84 Ill. 626; Law et al. v. The People, 87 id. 385.

It is claimed the construction given in the above cases to the provision of the constitution under consideration is modified by the case of East St. Louis v. East St. Lous Gas Light and Coke Co. 98 Ill. 430. But such is not the case. That was a suit for gas, and in ansAver to the claim that the city had already, under this provision of the constitution, exhausted its power to contract a further indebtedness, it is distinctly stated in the opinion in that case that it did not affirmatively appear that at the time the gas was furnished the city was indebted beyond the constitutional limit, and hence a recovery was permitted. Such is not the case here, as we have already seen.

The judgment "will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.