Cohen v. City of Houston
Cohen v. City of Houston
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Harris county refusing to grant a temporary injunction upon the application of the plaintiffs, who are appellants here.
Plaintiffs sought a temporary injunction to restrain the city of Houston from holding an election to determine whether several is *810 sues of bonds aggregating in amount $5,-450,000 should be issued and from doing any other acts toward the issuance or sale of such bonds, or the collection of taxes on account of same, upon the following grounds:
(a) That the city of Houston did not have available taxable values in sufficient amount out of which it could make provision at the time of issuing of said bonds to levy a tax sufficient to pay the interest thereon, and to create a sinking fund of at least 2 per cent, per annum as required by law to redeem the same at maturity.
(b) That the city of Houston had outstanding bonds in the aggregate sum of $9,-855,000, and that at the time of issuing same provision had been lawfully made for a levy of a tax sufficient to pay the interest on said bonds each year, and to create a sinking fund of at least 2 per cent., as provided by law, for each year throughout the period of same; that of .the amount collected on account of the sinking fund of said outstanding bonds, only a minor portion thereof had been preserved, but that the larger portion of the amount collected as such sinking fund, to wit, $1,500,000, had been misapplied by the city of Houston to other purposes; that the city of Houston acted in the assessment, collection, and preservation of said sinking fund as a trustee, and in the execution of its trust it had no right to issue the $5,450,000 of new bonds unless and until the city had first replaced in the sinking fund the amount which it had misapplied.
(e) That it was not contemplated or intended by the city of Houston to make immediate public improvements of the magnitude as submitted to the people in said bond election, but it was the intention and purpose of the city and its officers to issue said bonds in installments through a period of five years, according as the said improvements might, in the opinion of the city officials, be needed, and the increased available taxable values in the city should warrant.
(d) That the present officials of the city of Houston had removed $200,000 in cash from the sinking fund and used same in the building of public improvements, and had placed in the sinking fund in lieu thereof the bonds of the city in the sum of $200,000, issued for public improvements, and which had never been sold in the market of the city of Houston, and which bonds mature at a date later than the bonds secured by the sinking fund which were removed; and that the city should be enjoined from the issuance of the new bonds until this $200,000 had been replaced in the sinking fund in money.
(e) That on the 15th day of October, 1913, the city of Houston • had undertaken to amend its charter, and to thereby extend its limits more than a mile in several directions, and including a resident population of some 5,000 people, without giving the persons in the territory thus made a part of the city by amendment a right to vote thereon; that the inclusion of said territory into the city was illegal and void, and there was no authority in the city to hold the election in said territory for the purpose of authorizing the issuance of bonds,' and that the city should be enjoined from issuing said bonds against said territory, or from collecting any city taxes off of property in said territory, or exercising any other right of government therein.
When the petition for injunction was presented to the court, the court indorsed thereon an order for notice to he issued to defendants to appear at the time and place stated in the order, to show cause why the injunction should not be granted as .prayed. The defendants on the date set for the hearing filed its answer, presenting its defenses, first presenting a demurrer to so much of the petition as sought to enjoin the holding of the election, which was sustained. After-wards, and before the hearing was had on the merits, the election was held and the proposition to issue the bonds was carried.
On November 2, 1914, a hearing on the merits was had upon the petition and answer, and affidavits and copies of documents, and thereafter the court entered judgment sustaining all of defendants’ contentions as to the right to issue the bonds, and denying plaintiffs any of the relief prayed, except that the defendants were commanded and enjoined:
“(1) That they do not hereafter invest the sinking fund of any bond issue of the city of Houston, in bonds maturing later than the bonds secured by such sinking fund.
“(2) That they proceed at once to prepare and keep proper books with separate and distinct accounts thereon, showing at all times the condition of the sinking fund of each specific bond issue, and showing all amounts paid out of the sinking fund of each specific bond issue, and all amounts added thereto from time to time.
“(3) That defendants and each of them be commanded and enjoined that hereafter the levy of the sinking fund taxes made in the annual levy of each year shall be made in such manner as to show specifically the portion 'or amount of the levy that is made for each outstanding bond issue for the city of Houston.”
Erom the judgment of the court refusing to enjoin the issuance of the bonds, the plaintiffs have appealed.
On the trial the following facts were established by the evidence and admission of the parties:
(a) The city of Houston is incorporated under and by virtue of a special act of the Legislature of Texas adopted in 1905. The boundaries of the city, as established by the act, are described as “four miles square, to be run with the cardinal points of the compass, of which the center of the courthouse square of Harris county, in the city of Houston shall be" the center,” except where such boundaries would conflict with the boundaries of the incorporated town of Houston Heights. The city, within the boundaries thus established, contains a population of *811 near 100,000 persons and taxable values of $103,000,000.
On October 15, 1913, at an election beld among tbe qualified voters resident witbin tbe boundaries of tbe city, as established by tbe special act, tbe proposition was adopted to extend tbe boundaries of tbe city so as to include additional territory, having a population of some 5,000 persons and taxable values of about $6,000,000. At this election tbe qualified voters residing witbin the additional territory did not vote. Thereafter tbe city, seeking to avail itself of what is popularly known as tbe “Home Rule Amendment” to tbe Constitution of Texas, adopted November 6, 1912, and of tbe enabling act adopted by tbe Legislature, approved April 7, 1913, amended its charter, and by this amendment tbe boundaries of the city were so defined as to include said additional territory, and tbe city since has exercised tbe functions of government over the territory described in its charter as amended. At tbe time of tbe adoption of this amendment tbe city bad a bonded indebtedness of $9,855,000.
Tbe plaintiffs are 16 in number. Some of them reside and own taxable property in tbe added territory, others live witbin tbe original boundaries of the city, and own property situated in tbe added territory subject to taxation, and still others are nonresidents of Harris county, but own property in tbe added territory subject to taxation. None of them was shown to be an owner or bolder of any of tbe bonds of tbe city.
(b) Tbe city of Houston by ordinances duly passed on September 21, 1914, called an election to be beld on October 28, 1914, at which none but qualified voters and taxpayers residing within tbe boundaries of tbe city, as extended, should be allowed to vote, to pass upon tbe question of whether or not tbe city should be authorized to issue bonds for five separate purposes, viz.: (1) in tbe sum of $3,000,000, to be paid serially in one to forty years after issuance, tbe proceeds of said bonds, when sold, to be used for tbe purpose “of making permanent city improvements, to wit, wharves, docks, and slips, and other appliances and structures for facilitating or accommodating commerce or navigation on Buffalo Bayou Ship Channel”; (2) in tbe sum of $1,000,000, etc., tbe proceeds of same, when sold to be used for tbe purpose of making permanent city improvements, viz., drainage and sewerage in tbe city; (3) in tbe sum of $1,000,000, etc., tbe proceeds of same, when sold, to be used in making permanent city improvements, to wit, sanitary sewerage, disposal plants, with tbe necessary sanitary sewers and connections, and all other structures and appliances incident to a complete sanitary sewerage system in tbe city; (4) in tbe sum of $250,000, etc., tbe proceeds of same, when sold, to be used for tbe purpose of making permanent city improvements, viz., tbe perfecting of tbe public park system of tbe city, by providing tbe necessary enlargements and additions thereto, together with all public driveways, walks and other structures and appliances necessary to tbe public use and enjoyment thereof; and (5) in tbe sum of $200,000, etc., tbe proceeds of same, when sold, to be used for tbe purpose of making permanent city improvements, to wit, to build permanent public school buildings in said city. No question is made as to tbe regularity of the form of tbe ordinances calling the election, and there is therefore no necessity for copying them here. Tbe election was beld on tbe date for which it was called, and resulted in a large majority of tbe qualified voters who participated therein voting in favor of granting to tbe city tbe authority to issue tbe bonds in tbe several amounts, and to be used for tbe various purposes specified.
(c) The taxing power of tbe city of Houston is limited by its charter to a tax of $2 upon each $100 valuation of taxable property witbin its limits. At tbe time of the bolding of tbe election above mentioned it bad levied a tax of $1.15 on tbe $100 valuation for general purposes, and 70 cents on tbe $100 valuation for tbe purpose of paying tbe interest upon its outstanding bonded debt, amounting, as before stated, to $9,855,000, and for tbe purpose of accumulating a sinking fund to discharge such debt at maturity; and it is admitted that this tax of 70 cents on each $100 valuation of such property is sufficient for that purpose. This, then, left only a margin of 15 cents on each $100 valuation available to pay tbe interest upon, and to create a sinking fund for tbe redemption of, tbe proposed issues of bonds, at their maturity, which is admittedly not sufficient for that purpose. It is charged by tbe plaintiffs and admitted by tbe defendants that it iái not tbe purpose of tbe city to issue the entire bond issue of $5,450,000 at one time, but to issue tbe same in annual installments throughout a period of five years to follow, and to negotiate tbe same as the legislative discretion of tbe city council and tbe necessities of tbe city shall demand. Prior to tbe election above mentioned tbe mayor of Houston and tbe harbor board of said city, published in tbe Houston Post, a paper of wide circulation in said city, a statement with reference to tbe proposed bond issues, from which it appeared that it was the intention and purpose of tbe city to issue each of said sets of bonds in five annual installments, throughout tbe five years to follow, it being assumed that there would be a steady increase in property values sufficient to provide for tbe issuance of each of said installments, inasmuch as there bad been a similar increase in value in tbe five preceding years; and it was stated in said published statement that “we promise that tbe bonds will only be sold and tbe funds expended from year to year as further permanent municipal *812 harbor improvements are made necessary by the business developed.” It is evident that the city intended to issue the bonds in installments as 'money should be needed to prosecute the work contemplated, and as the available taxable values would warrant, and that the purpose of the city was to not issue any installment of any set of the proposed! bonds unless at the time of issuance the available taxable values and the margin of taxing power were sufficient, as the basis of the levy of a tax sufficient to pay the interest on the bonds and create a lawful sinking fund for their redemption at maturity. Por the first annual installment the city proposed and intended to issue bonds, for the various purposes for which they were voted, in the total amount of $1,950,000, divided as follows: Wharf, etc., $500,000, drainage, etc., $500,000, sanitary sewers, etc., $500,000, school buildings, etc., $200,000, park improvements, etc., $250,000. A tax of 15 cents on each $100 valuation on the taxable property within the city, the total of which is $109,-000,000 (or of $103,000,000, if the property values in the added territory be excluded) would produce a sum more than sufficient to pay the interest upon this installment, and accumulate a sinking fund sufficient to redeem the bonds at maturity.
(d) At the time of the election to determine whether the city should be authorized to issue the bonds in question the city, as before stated, had a bonded indebtedness of $9,855,000, none of which has matured. There had been collected by taxation and passed into the sinking fund to redeem these bonds approximately the sum of $1,928,608.-33. Of this sum there had been diverted and applied to other uses by the city administration prior to that of Ben Campbell’s, the present administration, approximately the sum of $1,209,927.16, so that instead of there being on hand the full sum collected on account of the sinking fund, there remains in said fund in money and 'securities approximately only the sum of $628,681.17. During the present administration and subsequently to the amendment by the city of its charter, whereby the boundaries of the city were extended, the city of Houston, acting under its charter which authorized it to issue bonds in sums not exceeding $100,000 for any one purpose, without being authorized to do so by a vote of the property taxpayers of the city, issued bonds in the sum of $100,000 for the purpose of constructing an annex to the City Hall, and $100,000 for the construction of sewer extensions, and further acting under its charter, which authorized it to invest the sinking fund in the purchase of its bonds, provided that such bonds do not mature at a date later than the maturing of the bonds whose sinking fund was thus used, purchased both bond issues for the use and benefit of the sinking fund, paying in cash therefor, out of the moneys in this fund, the par value of said bonds and accrued interest, and with the money thus obtained constructed the City Hall annex and sewer extension. These bonds matured at a date later than the bonds, to pay which the sinking fund had been and is being collected, mature.
The city owns several hundred thousand dollars of free assets, which can be converted into cash and with which the depleted surplus fund can be in part restored.
(e) Prior to June 30, 1911, the cash and securities in the sinking fund were held in lump, and there had not been a separate levy and collection of the sinking fund for each respective issue of bonds, but since said date a separate levy and collection for each issue has been made, and a separate account kept.
The pleadings of the parties are quite voluminous, and for that reason we have not undertaken to set them out in this opinion, but we think it is sufficient to say that the facts adduced were properly admitted under the issues raised by them.
As has been hereinbefore shown, the special act of 1907, granting a charter to the city of Houston, defined the boundaries thereof as four miles square, of which the center of the courthouse square in Harris county, in the city of Houston, should be the center. At the time of the passage of the Special Act no power was lodged in any incorporated city in this state by general law by which it could, in any manner, extend its boundaries, except in the maimer prescribed by article 574 of chapter 10, title IS, Revised Statutes 1895 (article 781, Revised Statutes 1911) which, in part, reads as follows:
‘Whenever a majority of the inhabitants qualified to vote for members of the state Legislature of any territory adjoining the limits of any city, incorporated under or accepting- the provisions of this title, to the extent of one-half mile in width, shall vote in favor of becoming a part of said city, any three of them may make affidavit to the fact, to be filed before the mayor, who shall certify the same to the city council of said city. The said city council may by ordinance receive them as part of said city; from henceforth the territory so received shall be a part of said city.”
In 1912 an amendment of section 5, article 11, of the Constitution of Texas, commonly known as the “Home Rule Amendment,” was adopted, which reads as follows:
“Cities having more than 5,000 inhabitants may, by a majority vote of the qualified voters of said city, at an election held for that purpose, adopt or amend their charters, subject to such limitations as may be prescribed by the Legislature, and providing that no charter or any ordinance passed under’ said charter shall contain any provision inconsistent with the Constitution of the state, or of the general laws enacted by the Legislature of this state.”
*813 Appellants contend that this provision of the Constitution, expressly prohibiting the insertion in a city charter of any provision inconsistent with the general laws, was a direct prohibition against the city of Houston to provide in its charter, by amendment, for the extension of its boundaries in any manner or over a greater area than as provided by general law; and that as the manner of the extension of boundaries and the area over which such boundaries might be so extended were prescribed by general law, viz., article 781, Revised Statutes of 1911, the attempted extension by the city in any other manner than that prescribed in said article, was illegal and void.
We shall not pause to determine whether the article quoted applies to the manner of extending the boundaries of cities incorporated by special act of the Legislature. It will be noted that title 18, Revised Statutes of 1895, relating to cities and towns, provides the method by which they may be incorporated, and prescribes their powers and the duties of its officers. It will be observed that the article quoted provides the method by which territory adjoining the limits of a city “incorporated under or accepting the provisions of this title,” may become a' part of such city. It may be that a city incorporated by a special act and not under the general laws, which should, by an amendment to its charter, enlarge its boundaries, should not be controlled by the provisions of article 574, which prescribes the manner in which a city incorporated under the provisions of title 18 may acquire additional territory, and that such an amendment would not be inconsistent with any general law of the state that is applicable to such a city. But this is a question that is not necessary for us to now decide. But if we should assume that article 574 was the only general law which prescribed the method by which a city of either class might extend its boundaries, then we think that any city, whether incorporated by special charter or under the general law, would be bound thereby, and that any provision of a city charter or of an ordinance which undertook to provide a different means of extending the city limits than that therein provided, would be inconsistent therewith, illegal and void. But is the article in question the only general law upon the subject? In 1913, before the adoption by the city of Houston of the amendment to its charter whereby its boundaries were extended, the Legislature adopted an enabling act to put into effect the above-quoted amendment to the Constitution (Acts 1913, p. 307), wherein it is provided:
“That by the provisions of this act it is contemplated to bestow upon any city adopting the charter or amendment thereunder, the full power of local self-government, and among the other powers that may be exercised by any such city the following are enumerated for greater certainty; * * * the power to fix boundary limits of said city, to provide for the extension of said boundary limits and the annexation of additional territory lying adjacent to said city, according to such rules as may be provided by said charter.”
This act was in full force at the time the city of Houston adopted the amendment to its charter extending its boundary limits and annexing the additional territory. Being a general law it superseded article 574 (article 781, R. S. 1911) as applied to cities which, under the home rule amendment, had adopted or amended its own charters, and the amendment to the charter by which the city limits were extended was not only not inconsistent “with the Constitution of the state or of the general laws enacted by the Legislature,” but in harmony with the general law above referred to as the “Enabling Act.”
“The rule is well established that when the creation of a public corporation, municipal, or quasi municipal, is authorized by statute and a corporation has been organized under the color of such authority, its corporate existence cannot be inquired into by the courts in a collateral proceeding. The validity of the incorporation can only be determined in a suit brought for that purpose in the name of the state or by some individual under authority of the state, who has a special interest which is affected by the existence of the corporation.”
In Parker v. Harris County Drainage District, 148 S. W. 351, in which the legality of the incorporation of a drainage district was attacked by individuals, 'this court, speaking through Associate Justicé Reese, said:
“It is a firmly established doctrine that when the law provides for the creation of such districts by the action of any public body, as the commissioners’ court in the present drainage law, the validity of such action in the creation and organization of such districts cannot be questioned except by a direct proceeding in quo warranto, at the suit of the state, for mere irregularities in, or failure to comply with, the prescribed procedure.” .
In Carthage v. Burton, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 195, 111 S. W. 440, this court gave the following as the correct rule:
“•Even if a municipality has been illegally constituted, the state alone can take advantage of the fact in a * * * proceeding instituted for the purpose of testing the validity of- its charter. When the question arises collaterally the courts will not, permit- its corporate character to be questioned, if it appear to be acting under color of law and recognized by the state as such.”
See, also, Gibbons v. Ross, 167 S. W. 21.
It seems clear to us that if the extension of the boundaries of the city of Houston, in the manner and under the authority shown, has not resulted in creating a de jure corporation coextensive with the boundaries defined in the amended charter, it has certainly created a de facto one, which is exercising all the functions of city government throughout such limits, with the consent and acquiescence of the state, and under its authority, and the question being political'and not one of property, a court of equity will not interfere at the instance of a citizen; for the matter is one to be determined, if at all, by the state in a suit of quo warranto and not otherwise.
“Where the rights of the parties are doubtful, the court applied to for an injunction should look at the balance of convenience, and act upon the consideration of the comparative inconvenience which may arise from granting or withholding the injunction. In this connection,” says the author, “it is said in a recent case: ‘In a doubtful case where the granting the injunction would, on the assumption that the defendant ultimately will prevail, cause greater detriment to him than would, on the contrary assumption, be suffered by the complainant, through its refusal, the injunction should usually be denied. But where, in a doubtful ease, the denial of the injunction would, on the assumption that the complainant will prevail, result in greater detriment to him than would, on the contrary assumption, be sustained by the defendant through its allowance, the injunction usually should be granted. The balance of convenience or hardship ordinarily is a factor of controlling importance in cases of substantial doubt existing at the time of granting or refusing a preliminary injunction.”
This rule is quoted with approval by this court in Jeff Chaison Townsite Co. v. McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 611, 121 S. W. 720, and applied in Matagorda Canal Co. v. Markham Irr. Co., 154 S. W. 1176, and Houston Electric Co. v. Glen Park Co., 155 S. W. 965. Of course this rule should not be applied where the right to in-junctive relief is clear and the complainant has no adequate remedy except by restraining the act .complained of. It seems to us that the rule applies in full force under the facts of this case, for if it be a fact that the amendment to the charter extending the boundaries of.the city so.as to include complainants’ property and subject the same to the payment of city taxes, is unconstitutional and void as claimed by plaintiffs, or that such property is not for any reason subject to city taxation, the plaintiffs may successfully resist the payment thereof when payment is sought to be enforced (Parks v. West, 102 Tex. 11, 111 S. W. 726); whereas, *815 to grant the injunction, at this time, a great city would be throttled in its activities and denied the right to make great public improvements, determined by the city and by a majority of its property taxpaying citizens to be necessary.
We may add that the question of taking property without due process of law is not legitimately involved in any of the questions presented upon this appeal.
We shall not prolong this opinion by an extended discussion of the other points presented by appellants, but shall state our conclusions as briefly as we may.
The issues submitted to the-people in the election were of five different sets of bonds, aggregating $5,450,000 in amount. There was nothing in the questions submitted to the voters to indicate that the bonds would be issued in annual installments running for a period of five years; but such was the intention of the city authorities, and this intention was expressed by the publication thereof in a newspaper of wide circulation in the city of Houston, and must have been known to the people who, and at the time they, participated in the election; There is no question that the margin of taxing power of 15 cents of each $100 of taxable property in the city available to the city after making provision for the payment of the interest upon, and the creation of a sinking fund sufficient to redeem the existing bonds at maturity, is not sufficient as a 'basis for the issuance of the entire issue of the proposed bonds, and therefore under article 11, section 5 of the Constitution the full amount of the proposed bonds could not lawfully issue at one timé. But it is not questioned that there is a sufficient margin of taxable values and taxing power, as a basis for the issuance of the first installment of the bonds that the city proposed to issue. The question presented by this state of fact, then, is whether the city can lawfully issue the bonds in annual installments, running for a period of five years? We think the answer should be in the affirmative, provided that at the time of issuing each installment the city has available a margin of taxing power and property values sufficient to raise, by taxation, the sum of money necessary to pay the interest upon and to create a sinking fund of at least 2 per cent, for the redemption of such installment at maturity. In City of Austin v. Valle, 71 S. W. 414, the Austin Court of Civil Appeals, in an opinion written by Associate Justice Streetman, passed directly upon this question, and a writ of error was denied by the Supreme Court. We quote:
“We do not hold that the voters of a city could give their consent to the issue of an unlimited amount of bonds, and' that the council might at any time thereafter act on such consent and issue bonds up to the limit of the taxable values of the city. But we believe that when a large public enterprise is contemplated, which will require several years for its.completion, the people, by an election, may authorize their council to issue bonds for the purpose, and that the bonds need not be issued at one time, but as the demands of the work may require; and if the taxable values increase, so that the indebtedness actually outstanding against the city at no time exceeds the limit prescribed by law, that the bonds will be valid, although the bonds would have been excessive if all of them had been issued at the time the election was held. We-cannot see that such a course violates any provision of the Constitution or the charter. The consent of the voters has been obtained, it has been acted upon within a reasonable time, and, when the debt was created, the provision for its payment could be made, * * * as required-by the Constitution.” ■ -
*816 The court, after holding that neither the holding of the election, nor the passing of the ordinance* providing ijor the. issuance of bonds, nor the preparation, signing and sealing of the bonds created any obligation or debt within the meaning of the Constitution, and that the debt was not in fact created until the bonds had been sold and delivered to the purchaser, further says:
“It is earnestly insisted that because, at the time the election was held, the city could not lawfully have issued the full amount of the bonds voted on, for this reason it was impossible for the voters to give their consent to the issue of the bonds. If it was not lawful for them to give their consent, it was because of the prohibition in the Constitution; but, as we have seen, this prohibition relates only to the time when the debt is created, and this is not done until the bonds are delivered as obligations against the city. We are of the opinion that, although the taxable values may not be sufficient at the time the election, is held, yet if, at the time the bonds actually become debts against the city, the taxable values are sufficient to pay the interest and provide the sinking fund, the bonds will be valid.”
In Wells v. City of Sioux Falls, 16 S. D. 547, 94 N. W. 425, the Supreme Court of South Dakota says:
“The contention that the defendants are without power to issue these bonds to the amount of $50,000, because the proposition submitted to the voters provided for ‘issuing bonds to the extent of $210,000,’ is untenable, especially as it appears that they intended to issue the remaining portion as they may be required by the contemplated municipal improvement. The mere statement of the contention is sufficient to show its fallacy. It would be contrary to the dictates of reason to hold that the city authorities are bound to sell more bonds than are needed for the intended purpose, or that they are required to dispose of all of them at one and the same time.”
We have carefully read the lengthy and interesting brief of the able counsel for appellants, but we cannot agree to any of their contentions to the extent of holding that the injunction prayed was improperly denied. We have concluded that the judgment refusing to grant the injunction should be affirmed, and it has been so ordered.
Affirmed.
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