State ex rel. City of Columbia v. Allen

GANTT, J.

Relator in this cause is a city of the third class organized under the general laws. It has a population of about six thousand, and the assessed valuation of the taxable property therein according to the last previous assessment for state and county purposes, was $2,265,045. Its present indebtedness is $38,500, exclusive of the bond issue in controversy. For some years past water and light for both public and private consumers have been furnished by a private plant owned by the Columbia Water & Light Company.

The voters having declared their preference for municipal ownership, the city obtained an option for the purchase of the old plant at $67,500.

The plant is not adequate for the needs of the city, and hence the council did not desire to purchase it, unless funds were provided for the construction of a new reservoir and pumping station and the establishment of a new source of water supply.

In other words, the. city desired to buy the old plant and use it so far as possible in making a new system.

In order to carry out this plan an ordinance was regularly passed by the city council and approved by the mayor, calling a special election to be held on February 23,1904, for the purpose of submitting the following proposition to the qualified voters, viz.:

“For the city of Columbia to incur an indebtedness ■ of one hundred thousand dollars, and issue bonds as provided by law for the purpose of acquiring by pur*289chase and construction a waterworks and electric light plant to he owned exclusively by the city, to supply the city and all persons, firms and corporations therein with water and light, it being proposed to apply sixty-seven thousand five hundred and six dollars and ninety-two cents for the purchase of the waterworks and electric light plant of the Columbia Water & Light Company, and thirty-two thousand, four hundred and ninety-three dollars and eight cents for the construction of a waterworks and electric light plant to the end that the city may obtain and own a waterworks and electric light plant in all respects adequate for its needs. ’ ’

Fifteen days ’ notice was given and the election was held as provided by the ordinance.

On March 1,1904, the council, having canvassed the election returns as certified by the judges, by ordinance, declared the proposition to have been carried by the necessary two-thirds majority.

On April 21; a further ordinance was passed' and approved, directing the issuance of $100,000 in bonds of the city of the denomination of $1,000 each, bearing four and one-half per cent interest, and maturing at various periods from five to twenty years after date.

In the same ordinance, in accordance with the terms of the ordinance calling the election, provision was made for the levy and collection of an annual tax of thirty-five cents on the hundred dollars valuation for the purpose of paying the annual interest on these bonds and constituting a sinking fund for the payment of the principal at maturity.

This tax levy is amply sufficient for the purpose on the present assessed valuation. The bonds were issued in conformity with the ordinance, and presented to the State Auditor for registration, but were refused on account of certain objections made by the purchaser. The respondent has demurred to the petition for a writ *290of mandamus, setting forth, in substance three grounds of objections, viz:

1. That tbe Constitution and statutes confer nc power on the city to incur an indebtedness for the. purpose of both buying and building a waterworks and electric light plant.

2. That the construction authorized is the building of a new plant out and out, and not the reconstruction of and adding to an existing plant.

3. That the bonds are invalid because the council fixed the tax levy at thirty-five cents on the hundred dollars, since the assessed valuation might decrease to such an extent as to render it insufficient.

I. Section 12a, article 10 of the Constitution, adopted in November, 1902, expressly authorizes cities of less than thirty thousand and more than two thousand inhabitants, with the assent of two-thirds of the qualified voters, voting at such an election for' that purpose, to become indebted to a larger amount than specified in section 12, article 10, not exceeding an additional five per centum of . the value of the taxable property therein, for the purpose of purchasing or constructing waterworks,-electric or other light plants, to be owned exclusively by the city. The city of Columbia fulfills these conditions, and the proposed indebtedness does not exceed an additional five per centum on the value of the taxable property. It is, therefore, clear that it has the power to issue these bonds for the purpose specified in the amendment to the Constitution.

II. But it is insisted by respondent 'that section 12a of the Constitution proposed by the Legislature in 1901 and ordered to be submitted to the qualified voters of this State at the general election to be held in November, 1902, and adopted at said election, does not authorize a city of two thousand inhabitants and not more than thirty thousand inhabitants, with the assent of two-thirds of the voters thereof voting at an election for *291that purpose, to become indebted to an amount not exceeding an additional five per centum on tbe value of the taxable property therein over and above the amount specified in section 12 of article ten of the Constitution of this State, for the purpose of purchasing waterworks and for improving the same but such cities are restricted to one of the two alternatives, and they must submit to the voters either a proposition to incur indebtedness to build and construct a new system, or a proposition simply to buy an existing system.

A kindred contention was made in the case of State ex rel. Town of Canton v. Allen, 178 Mo. 555, and it was held by this Court in Banc that it was competént to submit such a proposition in the alternative. We think that case disposes of this point. Here the proposition is one only, i. e., to buy the old waterworks and electric plant and improve them.

While it is true that municipal corporations have only such powers as are either expressly granted to them or such as are necessarily implied, and that grants of power are strictly construed, so as not to extend them beyond the purpose of the Legislature, yet, as said by this court in Bank v. How, 56 Mo. l. c. 59, "The construction must not be so strict or technical as to defeat the evident objects and purposes of their creation.”

We think the amendment to the Constitution was designed by the people to enable cities of the population named to provide themselves with water and light and to encourage municipal ownership of the water supply and lighting facilities. Their power to incur indebtedness for such purposes was found by experience insufficient under the restrictions of our Constitution' and it was within the observation of the Legislature that some cities having no plant at all or a very inferior one, the city might desire to issue its bonds and build an entirely new plant; if so, this amendment furnished them the means. On the other hand, there might be, as in this ease, a plant already established with its mains laid *292and connections established, and the city, to avoid tearing np its highways and to' avoid competition, might desire to bny the old or existing plant and yet within the limits of its power to raise money might desire to extend and improve that plant and when, as in this case, the proposition is plainly pnt before the voters to buy the old plant and make it available for all purposes, we think it falls clearly within the meaning and spirit of the amendment of section 12a of article 10' of the Constitution and it is not at all necessary to first purchase and then have a second election to improve it, but it can all be submitted at one time and if is one proposition after all.

The Legislature has so construed the amendment by the act of March 23, 1903 (Laws 1903, p. 96), wherein they provide that, “the city council of any city . . . shall have power to erect or to acquire, by purchase or otherwise, . . . waterworks,” etc. [Electric Company v. City of Newton, 42 Fed. 723; Endly v. Whitsett, 85 Mo. App. 79.]

III. The point is made that because, after the election, the city council provided for the execution of the bonds and also for the levy and collection of “ an annual tax of thirty-five cents on the hundred dollars valuation, or so much thereof as may be necessary, ’ ’ as provided by section 8 of the ordinance calling the election, the city has not provided for the payment of the interest and for a sinking fund as required by section 12 of article ten of the Constitution, and that the rate is uncertain. Section 12 requires the city incurring such indebtedness “before or at the time of doing so” to “provide for the collection of an annual tax sufficient to pay the interest on such indebtedness as it falls due, and also to constitute a sinking fund for the payment of the principal thereof, within twenty years from the time of contracting the same.” The city council, obeying this command of the Constitution, provided a levy of thirty-five cents to pay the interest and provide a *293sinking fund., but the counsel for the Auditor sa.y this may not prove sufficient, because the assessed valuation may so decrease that this would not prove adequate. We do not think that this is a reasonable objection. It is sufficient now, and there is no presumption or likelihood that the valuation will decrease.

The constitutional provision is a practical one, and when we consider the provision for a sinking fund and that the bonds are redeemable after five years from their date, the reasonable anticipation must be that a thirty-five cent levy will be more than adequate to meet the interest and requirements of the sinking fund, hence the wisdom of the provision,or so much thereof as may be necessary” to meet such interest. They start with a thirty-five cent levy because that is the estimate required to meet the demands of the Constitution, but it is obvious that, as the city from time to time exercises its option of retiring bonds by the use of the sinking-fund, the necessity for thirty-five cents will disappear and the city need only levy as much thereof as is necessary.

This must be so, because the same objection could be urged against any definite per cent as against this. It was not necessary for the voters to vote on the rate of the levy, but it was the duty of the council to fix a levy sufficient to meet the interest and sinking fund, and this it has done. Certainly no plausible objection can be urged against the council fixing the rate which reason and experience dictates will be ample, when the organic law requires it to make provision for the collection of an annual tax to pay the interest to constitute a sinking fund.

We think the demurrer should be and it is overruled, and a peremptory writ is directed to the State Auditor requiring him to register the bonds prayed for by relator.

All concur.