State ex rel. City of Dexter v. Gordon

*312DISSENTING OPINION.

STATEMENT.

Relator, the city of Dexter, asks for a mandamus to compel State Auditor to register bonds for $25,000 issued by relator on the 2nd of October, 1912, to provide funds to construct a public sewer, and to register bonds for $28,000 issued on the same date by relator to procure funds to construct waterworks. Authority was given to issue such bonds by vote of its inhabitants on the 5th of August, 1912. At the time said vote was taken the State Board of Equalization had not fully completed the task of equalizing the assessments of real and personal property contained in the city of Dexter as for the year 1911, but did complete its work and adjourn on the 1st day of September, 1912, so that this assessment of property was in all respects finished one month before the issue of the two sets of bonds above mentioned. The assessment of the property in said city on September 1, 1912 (for the year 1911), amounting to $562,079 (for the year 1910), the next prior assessment to $557,786, the next prior assessment (for the year 1909), amounted to $486,466. The amount of the assessment (for 1910) was large enough to warrant the issuance of the aforesaid bonds, since the amount of the bonds and all other indebtedness of the relator city was less than ten per cent of the assessment. And the only question presented for our decision, is whether, under the Constitution, the bonds in question were lawfully issued on the 1st of October, 1912, at which date the assessment of the relator’s property as of the years 1911 and 1910 had been completed in all respects. It is conceded by both parties that the constitutional provisions have been complied with in all respects in procuring the assent of the voters in providing for the payment of the bonds and that they *313should be registered, provided the assessment of 1910 was the legal basis for their issuance.

OPINION.

I.

BOND, J.

(After stating the facts as above).— The constitutional provisions relating to the issuance of the bonds in question are, to-wit:

“Sec. 12. Municipal indebtedness, limit of — how increased — exceptions as to St. Louis and Kansas City — No. . . . city . . . shall be allowed to become indebted in any manner or for any purpose to an amount exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year, without the assent of two-thirds of the voters thereof voting at an election to be held for that purpose; nor in cases requiring such assent shall any indebtedness be allowed to be incurred 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 assessment next before the last assessment for state and county purposes, previous to the incurring of such indebtedness: . . . and provided further, that any . . . city . . . incurring any indebtedness requiring the assent of the voters as aforesaid, shall, before or at the time of doing so, 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. . . . [Art.-10, sec. 12.]

There is another constitutional amendment (article 10, section 12a) which permits cities of the class of relator to incur a further indebtedness not exceeding* five per cent to purchase, construct and own waterworks, etc., which does not otherwise differ from the foregoing and therefore is not inserted and for the *314same reason the statutory provision on the subject, Revised Statutes .1909, section 9544, is not copied.

Construction The purpose of the adoption of the above constitutional amendments .providing for the increase of indebtedness to buy waterworks and electric light plants, etc., was considered by this court where it was said, in sustaining a purchase of an old waterworks plant, that this might be rightfully done, although not falling within the letter of the Constitution. The court added in speaking of the language of the Constitution: “ ‘ 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 Avas 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.” [State ex rel. v. Allen, 183 Mo. 291.]

Again, this court has said, speaking of the constitutional provisions referring to bond issues (Constitution, art. 10, sec. 12), that it approved and adopted the following language of Mr. Story as to the rule of construction, to-wit: “Every word employed in the Constitution is to be expounded in its plain, obvious and common sense meaning, unless the context furnishes some ground to control, qualify or enlarge it.” [1 Story Constitution (5 Ed.), sec. 451; State ex rel. v. Walker, 193 Mo. 1. c. 710.] With this view of the objects of the above constitutional amendments and the method of arriving at their meanings, let us turn to the language of the provision. An inspection of the terms of the first constitutional amendment shows that it was adopted to give the city power by the scheme there stated, to contract debts beyond what could be paid from its yearly income and revenue, upon two conditions: (1) that two-thirds of its voters at a special election should assent to the future creation of the *315proposed debt; (2) that before such indebtedness should be contracted or created the amount thereof added to all other existing indebtedness, to the city, should not exceed five (now ten) per cent of the taxable property therein, to be estimated on “the assessment next before the last assessment for state and county purposes, previous to the incurring of such indebtedness.” When these two steps are taken and provisions made for the debt and interest before or at ■the time of taking the second step, then the Constitution validates the indebtedness. The meaning of the language which defines these duties is too plain for comment, for it is as directly and simply stated as words can make it. There is not a word, a line, or a sentence, in the provision under review, which puts any other burden upon a city, seeking to achieve the laudable purpose of owning its own sewers and waterworks. Every one of these constitutional requirements was strictly complied with in the present case, for on October 1 and 2, .1912, when the bonds were actually issued, there was in existence a completed assessment for 1911, and the next prior assessment for 1910 was amply sufficient, at the constitutional .ratio of ten per cent, to justify the making of the contract expressed by the bonds.

MSeantment The only possible doubt which could arise is, as to whether the issuance of the bonds or the vote of authority to issue them, was the incurring °f ^ie indebtedness? This question as to how and when such indebtedness is incurred, has been set at rest by all the cases, which have dealt with it. It was directly adjudged by the Federal court and in a case having the same object (erection of an electric plant) sought to be accomplished by the city of Dexter, the relator herein. It was, claimed there that, under the assessment existing when the vote was taken, the proposed bond issue would exceed the constitutional limit, but it was shown further *316that, when the bonds were in fact issued, they did not exceed five per cent of the assessed value of the property as prescribed by the Iowa Constitution, for another assessment had been completed before the actual issuance of the bonds. The court held for that reason they were valid, using this language: “The vote of the electors did not create an existing indebtedness. It authorized the city to undertake the erection of an electric plant. The city authorities in carrying on this work, are subject to the constitutional limitation; but no debt was created until the bonds were issued and sold, and at that time the indebtedness was not increased over the limitation by the sale of the bonds.” (Italics mine.) [Thompson Houston Electric Co. v. City of Newton, 42 Fed. 1. c. 728.]

The same doctrine was announced in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. There the court used the following language: “The debt created by the bonds in this case was incurred, not at the time the board of commissioners determined that it was necessary, nor when the qualified voters of the county gave authority to incur it, nor at the date of the bonds (they having been antedated), but at the date, later than September 6, 1880, when the bonds-were in fact issued and sold.” [Dudley v. Board of Commissioners, 80 Fed. l. c. 677.] (Italics mine.) And again, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals (Caldwell, Sanborn and Thayer, Circuit Judges) said: “The assessed valuation in 1879 was properly rejected, because, although the vote for the bonds was cast in the fall of that year, they were not issued until July, 1881, long after the assessment of 1880 had been made; and it was the assessed valuation when the bonds were issued, and not when the Vote for them was cast, that measured the permissible debt.” [Board of Commissioners v. Sutliff, 97 Fed. 1. c. 281.] (Italics mine.) Finally it was said by the same tribunal and the same three circuit judges, speaking on *317the exact point involved in this proceeding, to-wit: “The defense that the bonds are void because their aggregate amount is in excess of the statutory limitation rests upon the proposition that the limitation is to be measured by the assessed valuation of the property of the county in the year in which the bonds were voted (1886), and not in the year in which they were issued (1888). The position is untenable, and the question it seeks to present is no longer open to discussion in this court. The assessed valuation by which the statutory limitation is to be measured is the last assessed valuation of the property of the county before the bonds are issued, not the last one before they are voted or directed to be issued.” [Corning v. Board of Commissioners, 102 Fed. 1. c. 58.] (Italics mine.)

Equally clear, explicit, and conclusive on this subject is the doctrine stated in the text, 1 Dillon on Municipal Corporations (5 Eel.), p. 403, sec. 207, to-wit: “Where a vote is required, the validity of bonds issued pursuant to such vote is to be determined by the last assessed valuation of the property before the bonds are issued, not the last assessment before they are voted or directed to be issued.”

Again the question was necessarily involved and decided likewise by this court speaking through Lamm, J. The case involved a construction of the exact terms involved in the present case, to-wit, the time of “incurring any indebtedness, ’ ’ for the Constitution speaking of school districts prescribed that, “Any . . . school district . . . incurring any indebtedness requiring the assent of the voters as aforesaid, shall before or at the time of doing so,” make provision by annual taxation to pay the interest and create a sinking fund for the payment of the principal. Said the court: “The Constitution required the school board to provide for the collection of an annual tax for a sinking fund and to pay the interest; it says this must *318be done at the time of incurring the indebtedness or before that time. Here it was done before the bonds were actually sold and delivered.” Just before deciding this point the learned judge, in stating what was not before him, said we are not called upon to decide what funds could be used “to pay interest on, and creating a sinking fund for, school bonds not sold and, therefore, in no sense an indebtedness of the districts.” [Black v. Early, 208 Mo. 1. c. 312.] (Italics his.) This language taken together necessarily implies by exclusion and inclusion that the indebtedness Avas incurred when the bonds were actually sold and delivered. This decision is correct, controlling and completely in harmony with the law. We have not been able to find in the whole range of the adjudged law a case to the contrary.

I take it, therefore, that as has been shown, the indebtedness for the bonds in question was not incurrable until the issuance and sale. Hence no doubt can exist, that it was the duty of the State Auditor to register them as prescribed by the statute (R. S. 1909, sec. 1275), for they were submitted to him after full compliance with the constitutional requirements applicable thereto.

II.

Previous Assessment. In speaking of the assessment by which deb'ts or bonds are limited, the provision, as has been shown, proportions the amount “by the assessment next before the last assessment for state and county purposes, previous to the incAirring of such indebtednessThis last phrase refers and can only refer “to the last assessment” for State and county purposes which occurs immediately before it. The slightest glance will disclose this fact. It constitutes the constitutional method of defining and pointing out and making certain the particular as*319sessment upon which the bonds are to be based, by describing it as one next before the last assessment which preceded the incurring of the indebtedness. I cannot conceive how the expression, “previous to the incurring of such indebtedness,” can describe or refer to any other language than that which immediately preceded it and from which it is only separated by a comma. Hence, I am unable to follow the suggestion in the learned principal opinion that this phrase “has reference to the time when the constituted authority of a subdivision is required to ascertain whether the proposed indebtedness exceeds the constitutional limit, and not to the time when such debt, if authorized, will become obligatory.” If this suggestion is feasible, which I cannot conceive, still it could not be practically applied, in my opinion, for I fail to discover any other language in any part of the constitutional amendment, than that to which the phrase is now connected, with which it could be joined in the way above suggested.

I think this phrase is an integral part and qualifier of the language which precedes it. It occurs in the same form and identical connection in the constitutions of sister States, and all the courts which have reviewed it have uniformly held it to particularize that “assessed valuation” which must immediately precede the incurrence of the indebtedness, the only difference between those States and our State being that in them the last “assessed valuation” before the debt is contracted, is also the basis of its validity; while under our Constitution, it is the next to last “assessed valuation” which is the limit of indebtedness. This correct view is also taken by the learned Attorney-G-eneral; for in his brief, page 17, he says: ‘ ‘ The sole question involved in this case, viz., whether the limitation of indebtedness applies as of the date of the election authorizing the issue or as of the date on which the bonds were actually issued. In other words, is the indebtedness incurred within the mean*320ing of these provisions at the time the bonds were voted or at the time they are issued?” As has been been shown the uniform answer of the courts in this State, the Federal tribunals, and elsewhere is that the indebtedness is not incurred, in.cases like the present, until bonds are both issued and sold.

III.

cases cited in Majority opinion. The learned principal opinion, cites thq case of Prickett v. City of Marceline, 65 Fed. 469. In that case the bonds were issued in July 2, 1890, after a vote was taken in June, 1890. The 7 court held, after a review of the law relating to the work of county assessment and that of the State Board of Equalization, that the assessment for the year of 1890 could not be completed before February, 1891, and hence necessarily the assessment to which the bond issue was referable was that of 1888, since that was next to the assessment of 1889, which was the last completed assessment previous to the incurring of the indebtedness, by the issue of the bonds on July 2, 1890. But the court expressly decided that the indebtedness was created on the date of July 2, 1890, when the bonds were issued and from the time the interest was paid. These were the only two points in judgment and each was decided in perfect accord with the authorities heretofore cited. Judge Philips added his personal opinion in the following terms: “So there must be at the time the debt is created, and I think, when his vote is given, two antecedent completed assessments next prior thereto.” It is perfectly plain from this language that Judge Philips ruled correctly as to the law applicable to the points involved, and that he distinguished therefrom his own view by the middle phrase, to-wit: “And I think when his vote is given. ’ If this clause is elided,“ "then the foregoing statement of the law is accurate and correct, as it was intended to be, when made by the *321learned judge, who carefully expressed his personal -opinion in a form to distinguish it from the established rule, which he had applied in his judgment.'

The learned principal opinion states that this case was affirmed on appeal by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. This is an inadvertency if it is intended to imply that any part- of the reasoning of the opinion of Judge Philips was reviewed or affirmed. When the judgment was appealed it was found by the appellate court that no. exceptions whatever had been preserved, and that nothing was presented for review. The case was disposed of with a single remark, to-wit:

“PER CURIAM: — This case is affirmed on the authority of Searcy County v. Thompson, 66 Fed. 92.” [Prickett v. Marceline, 69 Fed. 462.] The casé cited, in the per curiam held that where no exceptions were saved there was nothing to review. It is therefore evident that the learned principal opinion is in error if it conveys the idea that the personal views of Judge Philips or any of his reasoning, have ever received the sanction of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. On the contrary, that court and the'three judges (Caldwell, Sanborn and Thayer) who summarily disposed of the appeal from his judgment, by repeated subsequent opinons, have established the rule to be exactly the reverse of the dicta of Judge Philips. The only case that gives any semblance of support to the principal opinion is Railroad v. Village of Wilber, 63 Neb. 1. c. 627. An analysis of that case shows that it does not in fact support the opinion. It involved the construction of a local statute which permitted the city to create debts not beyond a certain per cent of its taxable property, “according to the last preceding assessment of property.” These quoted terms were not modified or followed by the expression “previous to the incurring of such indebtedness” or similar *322words. It was, therefore, totally unlike the constitutional provision in this and other states. Hence, no question arose as to the relativity of the last assessment to the. time of the .creation of the debt. And the court was at liberty to hold that the last assessment before the holding of the election was intended. Clearly no such construction would have been possible if the local act had contained words which had described the property assessment, as the one last previous to the making of the debt. The ruling is therefore inapposite and affords no support for the view of the principal opinion.

Two other cases are cited in the principal opinion. [Culbertson v. Fulton, 127 Ill. 30; Wilkinson v. Van Orman, 70 Iowa, 230.] The Illinois case is directly contrary to the. theory for which it is invoked, as will appear from the following excerpt: “The Constitution provides that the value of the taxable property must be ascertained by ‘the last assessment for State and county taxes previous to the incurring of such indebtedness.’ Inasmuch as the indebtedness must be regarded as having been incurred at the date of contract, that is to say, August 15, 1887, we must ascertain the value of the taxable property, for the purposes of this case, from the assessment for State and county taxes for the year 1886, and not for the year 1887. This is so, for the reason that the equalized value of the assessable property in the city of Fulton for the year 1887 was not arrived at by the action of the State Board of Equalization until the first day of October, 1887. It is the assessment as fixed by the State board which must govern, and the State board did not fix such assessments until after August 15, the date of the incurring of the indebtedness.”

It is plain that this decision is directly on the point involved in the present proceedings. It expressly holds that the terms “previous to the incurring of such indebtedness” refers to the “date of the contract” *323whereby the indebtedness is created, and- that as the “last assessment” had not been completed for two months thereafter, the validity of the indebtedness depended on the last completed assessment (with us the next before the last). That is the sole position I take in the present case. Here on October 1 and 2, 1912, when the indebtedness was incurred, the last assessment, for the year 1911, had been completed on September 1,1912. This necessarily measured the validity of the present bonds by their constitutional ratio to the next prior assessment, or that of 1910; which it is admitted is large enough to justify the issuance of the bonds. This argument could not be more aptly or distinctly sustained than by the Illinois case.

The Iowa case also sustains my view. There the suit was to enjoin an issue of bonds because the assessment had not been equalized before the bonds “were proposed to be issued.” There was a demurrer. The court held it should be overruled, because, under the Constitution of Iowa the right to issue bonds must be ascertained by the last completed assessment. This ruling is in accord with the principle which, I hold, governs the present case. Its application to the facts in this record proves that the assessment of 1910 is one which is called into play, because the undisputed facts are that the assessment of 1911 had been completely equalized and was in existence one month prior to the issuance of the bonds in question.

The only- other case cited in the learned principal opinion is State ex rel. v. Cornwell, 40 S. C. 26. That case is also in accord with the consensus of opinions herein cited; it merely reiterates the rule -that it is only completed assessments at the time the debt is. created which can be looked to in measuring its amount. ■The court disposes adversely of the whole basis of the contention of the principal opinion by these words: “For it is admitted in the argument, and properly admitted, that the time when the debt purports to have *324been, contracted, is the time to which reference must be had in ascertaining whether the constitutional limit had been exceeded.” [Ibid, 1. c. 27.] (Italics mine.)

It seems to me too plain for further argument that neither reason nor authority will permit any other view to be taken of our constitutional provisions limiting the extent to which public corporations may become indebted (which are in substance mere replicas of those of sister states) than, that the “incurring of the indebtedness,” in the sense of the law, takes place at the date when the contract is executed (in case of bonds the date of their issuance and sale). That the validity of the indebtedness depends, with us, upon the fact that it and all other indebtedness, is within ten per cent of the taxable property of the corporation, as shown by the assessment next before the last assessment which is previous to the time of the making of the contract, or of the issuance and sale of the bonds if the indebtedness is incurred in that form. That the obvious, natural, and common sense rule of interpretation prescribed by Mr. Story and uniformly practiced by all the courts, as well as the language of the Constitution, will not permit any other interpretation.

IV.

TinBondsSSUe After Election, In the case at bar the bonds were issued within thirty days after the assessment of 1911 had been finished, whereby the preceding assessment of 1910 had become the measure of the indebtedness evidenced by them. Beyond doubt this was prompt and seasonable action-on the part of the city of Dexter, for, in many of the cases cited, the bonds authorized were not issued for more than a year after the assessment on which they were based had been’completed. The law is, that constitutional or other legal rights, where no time is mentioned, must be exercised in a reasonable time and manner. Hence, in this case unreasonable delay in the issue of the bonds, or changed circumstances, *325might entitled any taxpaying citizen to enjoin any further action on the part of the city. It is significant that no such attempt has been made. I know of no rule of law which would justify this court in deciding that these bonds should be denied regisi ration because they were not issued until thirty days after the right to do so had accrued. [State ex rel. v. Gordon, 217 Mo. 1. c. 122.]

I think the respondent should be commanded to register these bonds and the writ should go as prayed.

Graves and Faris, JJ., concur in this opinion.