1. When asked to decide whether a contract has been impaired by
state legislation in violation of the Contract Clause of the
Constitution, this Court first ascertains whether the alleged
contract exists, even though, in so doing, it must determine
questions of state law which have not been decided by the state
court. P.
316 U. S.
157.
2. Provisions in a municipal charter for making "an additional
pro rata assessment" to supply the deficiency when any
special assessment shall "prove insufficient" to pay for the
improvement for which it was levied, and declaring that the special
assessment district bonds issued to pay for an improvement shall
"be payable out of the special assessment district fund when the
assessment is collected," together with provisions in the bonds
whereby the municipality promises to pay the principal and interest
"from the special assessment fund created for the purpose," and
pledges its full faith and credit for the payment of each bond
"from the special assessment fund created for the purpose when the
same shall have been collected," do not establish a contractual
right in the bondholders to require that the municipality, in order
to meet deficiencies in the collection of assessments, shall
reassess lots in the improvement district which have been sold for
nonpayment of the original assessments. P.
316 U. S.
158.
298 Mich. 314, 299 N.W. 90, affirmed.
Page 316 U. S. 154
Appeal from a judgment refusing a writ of mandamus to compel the
City of Birmingham to levy an additional special assessment on land
in a special improvement district.
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal challenges a decision of the Supreme Court of
Michigan, which upheld the constitutionality of Michigan statutes
[
Footnote 1] extinguishing
unmatured special assessments, tax liens, or other encumbrances on
land sold for tax delinquency, and which therefore refused a writ
of mandamus to compel the City of Birmingham to levy an additional
special assessment on land so sold to pay defaulted paving bonds
issued in 1928 by its predecessor, the Village of Birmingham. 298
Mich. 314, 299 N.W. 90. The appellant, Municipal Investors
Association, as holder of these bonds, claims to have a contract
right under the law of Michigan in 1928 to require such an
additional assessment, and asserts that the subsequent Michigan
statutes construed to prevent the levy impair the obligation of its
contract contrary to Article I, Section 10 of the United States
Constitution.
Determination of this Court's jurisdiction of the appeal was
postponed to the hearing of the case upon the merits. We think that
the constitutionality of the two 1937 statutes upheld by the
Michigan Supreme Court was sufficiently and seasonably drawn in
question in appellant's reply, and that the jurisdictional
requirements of § 237
Page 316 U. S. 155
of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 344, are satisfied.
Appellant challenged the Acts as violative of the Contract Clause.
But we find it unnecessary to consider the effect or validity of
these statutes, for we think the appellant has failed to establish
any contract right to an additional assessment after a sale to
enforce an assessment lien under the preexisting Michigan law, in
force when the bonds were issued.
The decision refusing mandamus for an additional assessment was
entered on the pleadings. These disclose that the Village of
Birmingham, in order to pay the cost of paving certain streets,
took proceedings in 1928 to assess 23.4% of the cost to the village
at large, and 76.6% to the property abutting the improvement,
Special Assessment District No. 146. The property assessment was
payable in five equal annual installments commencing with 1928. Of
one hundred and ten parcels in District No. 146, about one hundred
never paid their shares of the assessment, were offered for sale
for these and other unpaid taxes at the annual tax sale of 1938,
and were bid in by the Michigan. They were not redeemed, and were
later sold by the State. About ten parcels in the District paid
their shares of the paving assessment, and have never been sold for
taxes.
In anticipation of the collection of this special assessment,
the Village had issued in 1928 seventeen annually maturing serial 5
1/4% bonds. Of these, No. 1 to No. 7 appear to have been paid, No.
8 to No. 11 were refunded, and No. 12 to No. 17, which are held by
appellant, have all been in default, both as to interest and
principal, at least since October 1, 1933. A negligible amount is
on hand in the special assessment fund, and not over 20% of the
amount still owing will be realized from the District's share in
the proceeds of the tax sales. In order to replenish the fund, the
appellant seeks to compel the defendants,
Page 316 U. S. 156
by the laws in force when the bonds were issued, to levy upon
all the land in the District, including the lots previously sold
for taxes and the original assessment, an additional assessment
equal to the unpaid principal and interest.
The general act under which the Village was incorporated listed
among the permissible charter powers a provision "for assessing and
reassessing the cost, or any portion thereof, of any public
improvement to a special district;" Act No. 278, Public Acts of
1909, § 24(e), Mich.Comp.Laws 1929, § 1786(e). [
Footnote 2] Pursuant to this
authorization, section 15 of Chapter XXI of the village charter
provided:
"Should any special assessment prove insufficient to pay for the
improvement or work for which it was levied and the expenses
incident thereto, the Commission may make an additional
pro
rata assessment to supply the deficiency, and in case a larger
amount shall have been collected than was necessary, the excess
shall be refunded ratably to those by whom it was paid. [
Footnote 3]"
Section 22 of Chapter XX of the charter stated that special
assessment
Page 316 U. S. 157
bonds should "be payable out of the special assessment district
fund when the assessment is collected." In the bonds themselves,
the Village promised to pay the principal and interest,
"said principal and interest however, being payable from the
Special Assessment fund created for the purpose . . . The full
faith and credit of the Village of Birmingham are hereby pledged
for the punctual payment of the principal and interest of this bond
from the special assessment fund created for the purpose, when the
same shall have been collected."
The Michigan Supreme Court assumed, without deciding, that these
various provisions did include in the bondholders' contract a right
to additional assessments after a tax sale for the payment of
deficiencies attributable to nonpayment of valid prior assessments.
298 Mich. 314, 319, 299 N.W. 90, 92. As a contract must exist
before it can be impaired, and as our conclusion against existence
of the contract right settles this case, we feel it proper to
consider only whether there was a contract between the bondholders
and the Village for an additional assessment on the district
property to meet deficiencies, instead of undertaking the
resolution of the constitutional issue presented by the challenged
statutes of Michigan. While this approach forces us to decide the
meaning of Michigan legislation without the assistance of the
courts of that State, it is necessary to do so because of the
obligation of this Court to determine for itself the basic
assumptions upon which interpretations of the Federal Constitution
rest. [
Footnote 4]
The complete charter of the Village is not before us. From the
authorized power granted by the Public Act of 1909 under which it
was organized, however, from the
Page 316 U. S. 158
language in section 15 of Chapter XXI of the charter providing
for "an additional
pro rata assessment," and from the
terms of the bond limiting its payment to "the special assessment
fund created for the purpose when the same shall have been
collected," we are satisfied there was no contract to reassess lots
once sold for the original assessment. If the stated powers of the
Village to levy an assessment on improvement district property
required that the lots assessed, after sale for default in their
installments, should be subject to an additional assessment to
cover such deficiencies, the burden might depress their value to a
point where little if anything could be realized for the
bondholders, and successful sale for nonpayment would be
frustrated. This would clearly be true where, as here, a very large
proportion of the assessments were defaulted. A prospective
investor in the bonds must look ultimately to the sale of each lot
for the payment of the amount assessed against that particular
parcel. [
Footnote 5]
Section 15 of the village charter authorizes an additional
assessment when the original assessment proves insufficient to pay
for the improvement. Assessment bonds may
Page 316 U. S. 159
be based on undertakings whereby benefited lands may be liable
even after they were sold to pay the assessment liens upon them to
recover for defaults in sales of other assessed properties.
See
Kadow v. Paul, 274 U. S. 175.
But, in the absence of controlling Michigan law, section 15 repels
such a construction. The language falls far short of subjecting
lots which have been sold to pay tax or assessment liens to an
additional assessment for the deficit. Such a construction would
defeat the remedy of tax sales as a means of realizing the
assessment lien. [
Footnote
6]
The opinion of the Supreme Court of Michigan does not deal
specifically with the status of the lots which have not been sold
to satisfy the assessments. In the absence of an assignment of
error upon that ground, we express no opinion thereon.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Acts Nos. 114, 155, Mich.Pub.Acts of 1937.
[
Footnote 2]
The same act stated that
"No village shall have power: . . . To issue any bonds without
creating a sinking fund for the payment of the same, except special
assessment bonds which are a charge upon a special district created
for the payment thereof, and serial bonds payable annually."
Act No. 278, Public Acts of 1909, § 26(k), Mich.Comp.Laws
1929, § 1788(k).
[
Footnote 3]
Section 18 of Chapter X of the charter of the City of
Birmingham, adopted in 1933, makes provision for an additional
assessment to meet insufficiencies in special assessments "for any
cause, mistake or inadvertence." Section 12 of Chapter XVIII makes
these provisions effective for the village debts where legally
applicable. Obviously, unless the village charter provision in
effect when the bonds were issued authorized additional assessments
to meet deficiencies, the city clause could not add that burden to
the lots. It would be applicable only if it were a means of
enforcing an existing right.
Cf. In re Farm Drainage Dist. No.
1, Waupaca County, 232 Wis. 455, 460, 461, 287 N.W. 806,
809.
[
Footnote 4]
Appleby v. New York, 271 U. S. 364,
271 U. S. 379;
Kersh Lake Drainage Dist. v. Johnson, 309 U.
S. 485,
309 U. S.
489-490;
Hale v. Iowa State Board, 302 U. S.
95,
302 U. S.
101.
[
Footnote 5]
A general lien upon lands in a district has been held to be
created by suitable statutory provisions.
American Securities
Co. v. Forward, 220 Cal. 566, 32 P.2d 343.
In drainage and irrigation districts, the cases differ as to
whether bonds with the district as obligor are the general
obligations of the district or payable only from the special
assessments against each parcel.
Separate obligations:
Interstate Trust Co. v. Montezuma
Valley Irr. District, 66 Colo. 219, 181 P. 123;
State v.
Board of County Commissioners, 89 Mont. 37, 95, 296 P. 1, 18;
Nelson v. Board of Comm'rs, 62 Utah 218, 218 P. 952.
General obligations:
American Falls Reservoir Dist. v.
Thrall, 39 Idaho 105, 124, 228 P. 236, 241;
Noble v.
Yancey, 116 Or. 356, 241 P. 335;
State ex rel. Clancy v.
Columbia Irr. Dist., 121 Wash. 79, 87, 208 P. 27, 30.
[
Footnote 6]
Courts of other states have considered similar questions.
Wilcox & Son v. Riverview Drainage Dist., 93 Colo.
115, 25 P.2d 172;
Reynard v. Caldwell, 55 Idaho 342, 42
P.2d 292;
Hartz v. Truckenmiller, 228 Iowa 819, 293 N.W.
568;
State ex rel. Johnson v. Dayton, 200 Wash. 91, 92
P.2d 909.
But cf. State ex rel. v. Holt County Court, 135
Mo. 533, 37 S.W. 521;
In re Farm Drainage Dist. No. 1, Waupaca
County, 232 Wis. 455, 287 N.W. 806 (district was
promisor).