This proceeding was brought by the City of Miamr'under Sections 5106-5112, C. G. L. 3296-3302, R. G. S., for the validation of certain Water Revenue Certificates proposed to be issued by it under authority of Section 3 (7) of the Charter of Miami* as amended by Chapter 16561, Acts of 1931, Laws of Florida. The lower court entered a decree confirming and validating such cer
The Water Revenue Certificates involved were proposed to be issued under an emergency ordinance designated as No. 1100, adopted by the City Commission as such under date of October 2, 1933. The purpose of the issue was to realize moneys to pay for constructing certain additions, replacements and improvements to the city owned water supply system. This was to be done by making the proposed certificates payable solely from the net revenue of the combined present water supply system and the proposed improvements. It is conceded on the record by all parties that the city’s proposal is to issue the certificates without submitting the proposal therefor to the freeholders of Miami for approval under Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution of Florida as amended in 1930.
Sections 5106 C. G. L., 3296 R. G. S., et seq., supra, provide that any municipality, desiring to incur “any bonded debt, or to issue certificates of indebtedness” shall have the right, if it deems it expedient, to determine its authority to incur bonded debt, or to issue certificates of indebtedness, and the legality of all proceedings taken or had in connection therewith, by filing a petition against the State of Florida in the Circuit Court of the County, pursuant to which a full hearing is provided for at which the municipality’s authority for incurring such bonded debt, or for issuing such certificates of indebtedness, as a matter of law and fact, may be judicially investigated, and all propositions of controverted law and fact set at rest by a conclusive adjudication as to the validity of bonds, or certificates of indebtedness, prior to their issue by the affected municipality.
At the threshold of the present case the proposition is
Our conclusion on the proposition of jurisdiction is that the statutory proceedings for validation of bonded debts and certificates of indebtedness authorized by the sections to which reference has heretofore been made, are broad enough to include every form of proposed bonded debt, as well as every form of proposed certificate of indebtedness, negotiable or non-negotiable, limited or general, which a county, municipality, taxing district, or other political sub
The purpose of the statutory validation proceedings is to provide a forum and a course of' legal procedure to which any county, municipality, taxing district, or other political district or subdivision may resort for the purpose of determining whether or not "any proposed obligation in the form' of a bonded debt, or in the form of a certificate of indebtedness, may be validly issued by it in the form proposed in its ordinance, resolution or other action taken under the law as the initiatory step for issuance of an obligation of that character. And in every such proceeding it is the intent of the statute that such judicial investigation of 'the pleaded validation proposal shall be made, that the court may detei-mine therefrom whether or not that which is pleaded as petitioner’s proposal, is within the legal authority of the petitioner to do, so that if it be adjudged valid, the• validity thereof shall never again be subject to be called in question in any court of this State. See Section 5109 C. G. L., 3299 R. G. S. ■
Jurisdictional facts pleaded in good faith constitute the test of jurisdiction. Hutchinson v. Courtney, 86 Fla. 556, 98 Sou. Rep. 582. So'whether the proposed form of bonded debt, or the proposed' form of certificate of indebtedness, be actually of the character that may be validated in and by the particular validation proceedings taken under the law or not, the appropriate assertion in such .judicial proceedings, of the validity of what is involved in a validation petition filed under the statute, coupled with the affirmation of petitioner’s proposal- to issue bonds or certificates in the form set forth, and under the' circumstances narrated in the validation petition, is sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the Circuit Cdu.rt to investigate and determine,
Thus the statute has been held applicable to a proceeding instituted for the validation of time warrants. Hubert v. City of Vero Beach, 93 Fla. 323, 112 Sou. Rep. 52. And on a like principle, we hold that the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court conferred by the validation statute, has been properly invoked in a case like the present,'where it.is made to appear in the petitioner’s validation petition that what are claimed to be legally authorized certificates of indebtedness, although the certificates are of a peculiar, special or limited character, are the subject of the city’s prayer for validation and confirmation.
Turning now to the merits of the case as presented by the issues joined between the appellant, Diver, the intervening taxpayer, and the City, we find that the facts disclosed by the record are in substance that the City of Miami had long prior to the proposed issuance of the water revenue certificates here brought in controversy, constructed for itself by means of a city bond issue, a water supply system at a cost of $1,850,000.00, of which amount $1,-745,000.00 is still unpaid; that the city does not undertake to directly distribute water in the city, but has contracted through a franchise agreement with a private corporation for profit, Miami Water Company, to distribute water to consumers; that under such contract it has been provided that the Miami Water Company should collect for the city from consumers, and pay over to the city, as payment for the water supplied such surcharges as the city might fix; that it has been further provided that such surcharges shall be no more, however, than may be sufficient to pay operating expenses, interest, amortization and depreciation on
' There is respectable authority (perhaps the weight of authority is to this effect) which affirms the proposition that municipal obligations, which are not payable from taxes, but are provided to be payable solely from the revenues of an independent revenue producing asset or utility, do not constitute a debt of the municipality, within the prohibition of a constitutional or statutory debt limit. Alabama State Bridge Corp. v. Smith, 217 Ala. 311, 116 Sou. Rep. 695; In re: Opinion of the Justices, 226 Ala. 18, 145 Sou. Rep. 481; Mississippi Valley Power Co. v. Board of Improvement, 185 Ark. 76, 46 S. W. Rep. (2nd) 32; McCutcheon v. City of Siloam Springs, 185 Ark. 846, 49 S. W. Rep. (2nd) 1037; California Toll Bridge Authority v. Wentworth, 212 Cal. 298, 298 Pac. Rep. 485; Shelton v. City of Los Angeles, 206 Cal. 544, 275 Pac. Rep. 421; California Toll Bridge Authority v. Kelly (Cal. Sup.), 21 Pac. Rep. (2nd) 425; Shields v. City of Loveland, 74 Colo. 27, 218 Pac. Rep. 913; Fox v. City of Bicknell, 193 Ind. 537, 141 N. E. Rep. 222; Klein v. City of Louisville, 224 Ky. 624, 6 S. W. Rep. (2nd) 1104; Bloxton v. State Highway Commission, 225 Ky. 324, 8 S. W. Rep. (2nd) 392; Estes v. State Highway Commission, 235 Ky. 86, 29 S. W. Rep.
Other cases limit the doctrine to those obligations only which do not undertake to pledge any of the existing revenues of a plant or other revenue producing asset in esse, while some of the cases held that the foregoing distinction
A third, group of cases refuses to acknowledge any such distinction at all.* The last mentioned group holds that to permit a city to borrow any money under a contractual device for its repayment with interest, even though it is
Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution of Florida (as amended at the 1930 General Election) reads as follows :
“Section 6. The Legislature shall have power to provide for issuing State bonds only for the purpose of repelling invasion or suppressing insurrection, and the counties, districts or municipalities of the State of Florida shall have power to issue bonds only after the same shall have been 'approved by a majority of the votes cast in an election in which a majority of the freeholders who are qualified electors residing in such counties, districts, or municipalities shall participate, to be held in the manner to be prescribed by law; but the provisions of this Act shall not apply to the refunding of bonds issued exclusively for the purpose of refunding of the bonds or the interest thereon of such counties, districts or municipalities. (Amended, Senate Joint Resolution 26, Acts of 1929; adopted at General election of Representatives held November 4, 1930.)”
This section either in its original, or in its amended form, has been considered by this Court, and construed in the following cases: Advisory Opinion to Governor, 94 Fla. 967, 114 Sou. Rep. 850; Amos v. Mathews, 99 Fla. 1, 126 Sou. Rep. 308; Martin v. Dade Muck Land Co., 95 Fla. 530, 116 Sou. Rep. 449; State v. City of Miami, 100 Fla. 1388, 131 Sou. Rep. 143; Sullivan v. City of Tampa, 101 Fla. 298, 134 Sou. Rep. 211; Sholtz v. McCord, 112 Fla. 248, 150 Sou. Rep. 234; Herbert v. Thursby, 112 Fla. 826, 151 Sou. Rep. 385.
Appellant Diver contends that under Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution as above quoted, the constitutional prohibition is broader than one which merely forbids or limits the incurring of municipal debts, in that the very lan
Without at this time undertaking to define the precise scope of our own constitutional prohibition against the issuance of municipal bonds without a vote of the freeholders, and eschewing any attempt to reconcile and approve for application in the State of Florida the varying and conflicting holdings of any one of the cases which have been cited to us from other jurisdictions, as being persausive in the formulation of some definite ruling here on the subject of municipal revenue obligations which are not payable from taxes, but are payable only from special revenues, we do not at this time undertake to declare just what should be considered as not constituting municipal “bonds” within the intendment of Section 6 of Article IX, supra. We regard the sole proposition of law to be decided on the present appeal as whether or not, acting under special legislative authority given it so to do, a city owning, in a proprietary or corporate capacity, a water supply system from which it derives annually unpledged net revenues, which it is admittedly duly empowered to expend, as and when received by it, for the purpose of repairing, enlarging, extending and improving the water system it owns, may, by means of water revenue anticipation certificates, binding solely and only in the nature of debentures on the special water revenues to be realized, and not constituting a direct^
In construing and enforcing Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution of this State, this Court has consistently recognized and followed, and will continue to adhere to, the rule of constitutional law which regards the substance, rather than the form of things. If any other rule were observed, the real purpose of the constitutional restriction might be effectually violated, or the intendments flowing therefrom lost sight of, in the fashion in which a given result contrary to the purposes of the Constitution might be attempted to be brought about.
So in deciding whether a given proposition is in violation of a constitutional limitation such as has just been réferred to, the result attempted to be brought about by what is proposed, is the prime consideration. And the controlling test with reference to it is to be found by regarding substance rather than form in looking at its practical operation and effect when considered in the light of the constitutional restriction against improvident borrowing which the organic
The 1930 amendment to Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution introduced into the fundamental law for the first time, a stated limitation on the issuance of bonds by counties, municipalities and districts. Therefore the subject- of issuing bonds was rigidly safeguarded as to improvidence on the part of the State itself, but wholly unregulated as to local taxing units.
But the amendment to the Constitution was adopted in the light of a long established State policy on the part of a large number of municipalities to acquire and operate, in a proprietary capacity, their own public utilities such as-water, light and gas plants, from which revenues accrued to them in the nature of returns from what is in its éssential character a purely corporate undertaking owned and managed by the municipality for the benefit of its inhabitants. That business enterprises in the nature of public utilities, although owned and operated by a municipal corporation, have many attributes of a private business enterprise, and are subject to most of the same rules of law, is expressly recognized in this State.* The practice of owning and operating public utilities as engaged in by municipalities, was well known to the Legislature and to the people of this State when amended Section 6 of Article IX was adopted. Consequently such amendment must be construed as having been passed by the Legislature, and ap
Such being the circumstances under which the Constitution was amended, it seems clear that the restrictions imposed on municipalities against the issuance of bonds without an approving vote, have no application to that form of municipal financing required to be done in order to keep municipal utilities in operation. So long, therefore, as such financing is limited to the borrowing of money solely on the security of anticipated utility revenues, when the object of the borrowing and the contemplated purpose or intended use of the borrowed funds, is confined strictly to a reinvestment of the same in the existing plant through which such funds have been earned, in order to make it more efficient, or economical in operation, or to enlarge its usefulness to the municipality, the borrowing is not prohibited by the Constitution.
We reach this conclusion by looking at the substance, rather than the form of such financing, for it amounts to nothing more than a conversion of the prospective earnings into a capital investment, whether the earnings are presently funded or not.
There is nothing in either the language or background of Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution of Florida, as now amended, to suggest the idea that when the Constitution was changed so as to prohibit the “issuance of bonds” by a city without a vote of its freeholders, that the change was intended to be so applied as to, in effect, transfer the fiscal management and control of proprietary earnings derived from a city’s self-supporting revenue-producing utilities, from the experienced judgment of those vested with the authority of corporate conduct, to the uncertain
The “Water Revenue Certificates of the City of Miami, Florida,” with interest coupons attached, which under the statute have been validated by decree of the Circuit Court here appealed from, do not in terms or legal effect constitute a binding, continuing, interest bearing contract obligation of the city to pay money in the future from funds derived from any form of taxation, or from any revenues derived from the sale, lease or operation of facilities or other property belonging to or held by the city for governmental purposes, or from the revenues derived generally from the operation of utilities, or other property belonging to, or held or operated by, the city in its corporate or proprietary authority as may be provided for by law.
Such certificates and coupons if duly issued will obligate
. The statute, the resolution of the City Commission and the Water Revenue Certificates contemplate a loan to the city in its proprietary capacity only, such loan to be used in improvements of the water supply system of the city’ This loan is to be repaid solely from the net revenues derived from the operation of the property owned by the city for corporate purposes, and not otherwise, it being expressly provided in Section 9 of the authorizing resolution that “no taxes shall ever be levied and no moneys shall ever be taken or diverted from any funds of the city for the payment of the principal and interest of Water Revenue Certificates issued hereunder, except as herein-above expressly provided.”*
It has been affirmatively made to appear in this case that the Water Revenue Certificates, as validated, do not directly, indirectly, or contingently, obligate the city to levy or to collect any form of taxation whatever therefor, or to
And as the Water Revenue Certificates are to be issued for a corporate purpose, and are specially made payable solely out of net revenues derived only from the operation of particular proprietary property, which, to meet immediate and imperative public needs, is to be repaired and improved by the use of the money received from the certificates, and no other obligation or liability, express or implied, direct or indirect or contingent or otherwise is assumed or can legally be assumed by or imposed upon the city by the certificates or by the statute or the resolutions or other proceedings upon which the certificates are predicated, the Water Revenue Certificates involved herein, do not directly or indirectly violate the terms or 'intendments, of Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution of Florida, as amended in 1930, which organic provisions impose limitations upon the power of counties, municipalities and districts in this State to issue bonds.
So the substance of what we decide in this case is that the contemplated certificates of indebtedness issued, or to be issued, by the City of Miami, which are payable out of
Validation decree affirmed.
Whitfield, Ellis and Brown and Buford, J. J., concur.
Terrell, J., concurs in conclusion.
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The Charter of Miami is embraced in Chapter 10847, Special Acts 1925, as amended by Chapters 11616, 11617, 11618, Special Acts 1925, Special Session, and Chapters 13096, 13097, 13098, Special Acts 1927, and Chapters 14229 and 14234, Special Acts 1929, and Chapters 14616 and 14617, Special Acts 1929; Chapters 15338, 15339, 15341, 15342, 15344, 15340, Special Acts 1931; Chapters 15686 and 15687, Acts of 1931, First Special Session; Chapter 15821, Acts of 1931, Second Special Session; Chapters 16558, 16559, 16560, 16561, 16554, 16555, 16556 and 16557, Spe. cial Acts 1933.
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Some of these cases have been overruled by later decisions of the same court.
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It will be noted that this is a decidedly different proposition from a proposal to borrow money for some general municipal purpose by resorting to a pledge of specific municipal assets, or some special municipal non-tax income, merely as a substitute for the pledging of the city’s taxing powers such as would ordinarily be done for customary municipal borrowing.
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For example, in City of Sebring v. Avant, 95 Fla. 960, 117 Sou. Rep. 383, the hazardous occupation statute was applied to cities engaged in the “business” of producing and selling electricity. The statutes of the State have also imposed excise taxes on such utilities without discrimination as to the -municipal character of same and these have been sustained by this Court as valid.
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In the present case the record shows that at the.time the constitutional amendment of 1930 was adopted, the City of Miami was then under the definite, enforceable obligation of a long term franchise contract which bound it to provide water to a distributor. That the city may be disabled from fulfilling its agreement unless it reconstructs its water lines now about to disintegrate through age and decay, is not challenged. To hold that the proposition of using the revenues from the water plant itself to keep the water plant going is a matter which must be submitted to the chance result of a vote of freeholders, whose self-interest in the reduction of taxes may cause them to vote a denial of authority to fund- the revenues for plant purposes, is to hold that the existing contract between the water company and the city could be indirectly impaired by this method, since submission to a vote would imply the right of voters to vote against the use of revenues for such purposes, and thereby handicap corporate managerial discretion to take steps necessary to perform the city’s water supply contract.
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The concluding words, “except as hereinabove expressly provided,” in Section 9 of the resolution were regarded by the court below, and are regarded by this Court, as eliminated as meaningless and inoperative, because contrary to the powers of the city in the premises, which assumed to act without in any respect pledging or obligating the city’s taxing powers, when it did not submit the revenue certificates provided for, to a vote of the freeholders.