Summary
In Covington v. McInnis et al., Trustees, 144 S.C. 391, 142 S.E. 650, it is said that this court has recognized the validity of bonds issued many years after the election.
Summary of this case from Fuller v. KnightOpinion
12423
April 10, 1928.
In the original jurisdiction, March, 1928. Petition dismissed, and injunction dissolved.
Original application by J.C. Covington to enjoin the issuance of school district bonds, opposed by John McInnis and others, composing the Board of Trustees of School District No. 9 of Marlboro County.
Mr. J.N. Nathans for petitioner.
Messrs. McColl Stevenson for respondents.
April 10, 1928. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an application in the original jurisdiction of the Court to permanently enjoin the issuance of bonds of Clio School District No. 9 of Marlboro County, in the State of South Carolina. The petitioner for himself and other taxpayers in the district seeks to have the proposed bonds declared illegal on two grounds specified in the agreed statement of facts, submitted as a controversy without action.
It appears that on the 19th day of April, 1920, an election was held in the school district on the issuance of $50,000.00 of bonds, the proceeds to be used for the purpose of erecting a building and maintaining the schools in said district, which election resulted in favor of the issuance of said bonds. Because of the 8 per cent. limitation of the Constitution, the trustees were advised that the district had no power to issue more than $32,000.00 of bonds, and bonds to that amount were issued and sold. Thereafter, in 1927, an amendment to Article 10, § 5, of the Constitution was adopted (see 35 St. at Large, p. 177), providing that Clio School District No. 9 was expressly authorized to vote bonds to an amount not exceeding 16 per cent. of the value of all taxable property in such territory as valued for taxation by the State, under such restrictions and limitations as the General Assembly may prescribe, and where the question of incurring such indebtedness is submitted to the qualified electors of said school district as provided in the Constitution upon the question of bonded indebtedness. It is under this language, quoted verbatim from the amendment, that the objections hereinafter discussed arise.
It is contended, first, by the petitioner that, as more than seven years has elapsed since the authority was given by the election to the trustees to issue the bonds and a part of said bonds having been issued and sold, after so long a lapse of time the trustees are now without authority to issue the remaining portion of said bonds or any part thereof.
This Court has recognized the validity of bonds issued many years after the election. The voters in the election declared their willingness to have the school district issue $50,000.00 of bonds. At the time of the election on account of the 8 per cent. limitation of the Constitution the full amount of these bonds could not be issued, but this disability having been removed and in the opinion of the trustees it is necessary for the school district to come into funds to be used for the purposes for which the election was held, there can be no valid objection to the bonds being issued for that purpose. This Court has recognized in the case of Robinson v. Askew et al., 129 S.C. 188; 123 S.E., 822, that bonds can be issued many years after the election authorizing it; in that case the issue being sold four years after the election. This has been recognized in other jurisdictions. Miller v. Carbon County School District No. 3, 5 Wyo., 217; 39 P., 879. Sutherland v. Board of Education, 209 Ky., 351; 272 S.W. 887. The only limitation which should affect the right to issue bonds under these circumstances is where the purposes for which the bonds were originally voted have ceased to be necessary, or where the conditions have so changed that it would be inequitable to allow the bonds to be issued, and, unless one of these conditions clearly appears to the satisfaction of the Court, the exercise of their discretion by the trustees should not be interfered with.
The second objection is that the constitutional amendment required a vote on bonds to be issued under its provisions and that an election held previous to the adoption of the amendment would not be a compliance therewith. This raises the question whether the provisions of the amendment were retroactive or prospective only. The decision of this question rests upon the matter of intention. If it was the intention of the Legislature that it should be retroactive, it will have that effect. The wording of the amendment throws no light on this question, and, therefore, the Court can consider the conditions under which the amendment was passed. As shown in the agreed statement of facts, there had been voted by the school district an issue of $50,000.00 of bonds for a definite purpose as submitted to the voters. This purpose was unable to be carried out on account of the 8 per cent. constitutional limitation. To enable the purpose for which the original bonds were voted to be carried out, the amendment to the Constitution was adopted, and to carry out this purpose it was clearly the intention that, if an election had been previously held, it should be regarded as the election required by the amendment. In this view it was clearly the intention of the amendment that it should be retroactive, and we so hold.
This principle was recognized in the case of Robinson v. Askew et al., 129 S.C. 188; 123 S.E., 822, where it was held that whether the constitutional amendment should be retroactive or not was a matter of intention of the amendment. In the view we have taken above it was clearly the intention, in order to meet the existing condition, that it should have a retroactive effect.
This disposes of all of the objections of the petitioner to the issuance of these bonds. The petition is dismissed, and the injunction dissolved.
MESSRS. JUSTICES COTHRAN, BLEASE, STABLER, and CARTER concur.