Court Opinion

ID: 6342745
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-20 18:01:46.206232+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:19:16.573824
License: Public Domain

TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

                       OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
                                 State of California

                                     ROB BONTA
                                    Attorney General
                                _____________________

                                             :
                 OPINION                     :                No. 14-202
                                             :
                     of                      :               May 19, 2022
                                             :
              ROB BONTA                      :
             Attorney General                :
                                             :
         SUSAN DUNCAN LEE                    :
         Deputy Attorney General             :

    THE HONORABLE DAWYN R. HARRISON, ACTING LOS ANGELES
COUNTY COUNSEL, has requested an opinion on questions related to school bonds.

                 QUESTIONS PRESENTED AND CONCLUSIONS

       1. Must “premium” from the sale of school general obligation bonds be deposited
in a school or community college district’s interest and sinking fund, also known as a
debt service fund?

       Yes, all premium from the sale of school general obligation bonds must be
deposited in the district’s interest and sinking fund.

        2. May premium be used to pay bond-related expenses such as bond issuance
costs listed in Education Code section 15145(a), an underwriter’s discount, or interest on
previously issued securities?

       No, bond premium may not be diverted to another purpose, such as to pay bond
issuance costs, an underwriter’s discount, or interest on previously issued securities.

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                                     BACKGROUND

        This opinion request asks us to address questions relating to the issuance of bonds
by school districts and community college districts. The most common means of
financing new school construction in California is for a school district to issue general
obligation bonds. 1 Sale of the bonds supplies the school district with immediate funds to
apply to construction projects, and then the district repays the bonds over time, with
interest, by levying an ad valorem tax based on the appraised value of real property in the
district. 2

      The specific questions presented here involve bond “premium,” which is the
amount a purchaser pays for a bond in excess of the face (or “par”) value of the bond. 3
Typically, the initial purchaser of school district bonds is an underwriter—usually an
investment bank dealing in municipal securities 4—that resells the bonds to investors.

        Sometimes bonds sell at a premium—that is, a price above par value—because the
interest rate exceeds the interest rate that would attract willing purchasers of an otherwise
identical bond offered at a price of par. In other words, bonds that offer a higher interest
rate are more valuable than equivalent bonds that offer a lower interest rate. To receive
this higher interest rate, the purchaser pays a premium when making the investment. 5

1
 92 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 1, 2 (2009), citing San Lorenzo Valley Community Advocates for
Responsible Educ. v. San Lorenzo Valley Unified Sch. Dist. (2006); 139 Cal.App.4th
1356, 1395; 99 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 18, 19 (2016).
2
  92 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra, at p. 2. An ad valorem tax is calculated as a percentage of
the value of the taxable property. See Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
3
  As defined in the online glossary of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board,
“premium” is “the amount by which the price paid for a security exceeds the security’s
par value.” See Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, Glossary of Municipal
Securities Terms (3d ed. 2013, as updated Jan. 5, 2022) (“MSRB Glossary”),
https://www.msrb.org/Glossary (search for “premium”). See also id. (search for “original
issuance premium”) (original issuance premium is “The amount by which the public
offering price of a security at the time of its original issuance exceeded its par value. . . .
The amount of original issue premium received by the issuer in a primary offering, also
known as the ‘bond premium,’ is generally treated as proceeds of the issue”).
4
  See 99 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra, at pp. 20-21 (describing municipal finance firms
typically involved in school district bond sales).
5
    See Hanover Bank v. C.I.R. (1962) 369 U.S. 672, 677.

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The opinion request asks about this premium and, more specifically, how school districts
may lawfully use these extra proceeds of a bond sale.

       Two statutes—Education Code section 15146, and Government Code section
29303—largely control the proceeds of school bond sales. Both statutes direct that a
school district must deposit any premium it receives from bond sales into a fund
dedicated to debt service, generally known as an “interest and sinking fund.” 6 That fund
also receives the property-tax revenues that are assessed to pay off the bonds. 7 The more
premium is deposited into the interest and sinking fund, the less tax revenue is required to
service the bond debt. When properly deposited in the fund as required by section 15146
and section 29303, bond premium thus redounds to the benefit of local taxpayers. When
premium is diverted to other uses, however, those uses benefit at the expense of paying
down the bond debt.

        When school districts pay the costs of bond issuance, they ordinarily charge these
costs to the school district’s general fund or to its construction fund, reducing the amount
of money available for operating expenses or for construction. That reduction can be
substantial. 8 To avoid those outcomes, some districts have chosen to sell their bonds at a
higher (premium) price by inflating the interest rate, and then to contract with the
underwriter to charge the costs of issuance against the increased purchase price. In this
way, some of the bond value that would otherwise have been “premium received by the
district” is instead diverted to the underwriter and converted to pay costs of issuance. We
are asked whether this diversion of premium is lawful.

      Before turning to our analysis, we note that to provide the certainty necessary for
agencies to manage their financial operations and attract bond buyers, Code of Civil
Procedure sections 860 through 870.5 limit the period for filing any action to challenge a

6
 Ed. Code, § 15146, subd. (g) (premium to be deposited in “interest and sinking fund”);
Gov. Code, § 29303 (premium to be deposited in “debt service fund”). A debt service
fund, like an interest and sinking fund, is a fund into which money is deposited for the
purpose of redeeming municipal bonds. (See MSRB Glossary, supra,
https://www.msrb.org/Glossary [search for “bond fund,” “debt service fund,” “sinking
fund”].)
7
    Ed. Code, §§ 15251, 15146.
8
 See generally Ed. Code, § 15145, subd. (a) (identifying items that may be categorized as
costs of issuance).

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school bond to just 60 days. 9 Accordingly, nothing in this opinion implicates a school
bond transaction for which the 60-day period has already run.

                                          ANALYSIS

       The request first asks whether premium received from the sale of school general
obligation bonds must be deposited in a school or community college district’s “interest
and sinking fund.” 10 To answer this question, we look to Education Code section 15146
and Government Code section 29303, which govern the proceeds of school bond sales.

         Education Code section 15146(g) states:

         The proceeds of the sale of the bonds, exclusive of any premium received, shall be
         deposited in the county treasury to the credit of the building fund of the school
         district, or community college district as designated by the California Community
         Colleges Budget and Accounting Manual. The proceeds deposited shall be drawn
         out as other school moneys are drawn out. The bond proceeds withdrawn shall not
         be applied to any purposes other than those for which the bonds were issued. At
         no time shall the proceeds be withdrawn by the school district or community
         college district for investment outside the county treasury. Any premium or
         accrued interest received from the sale of the bonds shall be deposited in the
         interest and sinking fund of the school district or community college district. 11

Government Code section 29303 states:

         Whenever any bonds issued by any county or by any school, drainage, or other
         district in any county, whose accounts are required by law to be kept by the county
         auditor and treasurer, are sold at a premium or with accrued interest, or both, the
         amounts received for the premiums and accrued interest shall be deposited in the

9
 See McGee v. Torrance Unified School Dist. (2020) 49 Cal.App.5th 814 (complaint
implicating invalidity of bond subject to 60-day limitation regardless of form of action);
Code Civ. Proc., §§ 860-870.5 (validation actions); Gov. Code, § 53511 (bonds subject to
validation process).
10
  There is no material difference for purposes of this Opinion between school districts
and community college districts.
11
     Ed. Code, § 15146, subd. (g) (italics added).

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         debt service fund of the county or district unless it is expressly provided by law
         that they be deposited in some other fund. 12

The plain text of these provisions requires that school bond premium be deposited in the
“interest and sinking fund” or the “debt service fund,” not used for issuance costs or other
uses.

       This legislative policy choice has deep roots. Education Code section 15146
originated as School Code section 4.975 in 1931, which stated that “[a]ny premium or
accrued interest received from the sale of the bonds shall be deposited in the interest and
sinking fund of the district.” 13 And Government Code section 29303 traces back nearly
word for word to the enactment of Political Code section 4087a in 1919. 14

       It is noteworthy that Political Code section 4087a’s mandate to deposit premium
into the interest and sinking fund superseded a 1913 statute providing that premium
would be deposited in the building fund. 15 The enactment of Political Code section
4087a in 1919 reflects a deliberate policy change by the Legislature to make bond
premium of schools and other districts unavailable for any use other than debt service,
absent express statutory authorization for another use.

       We note that other statutes make bond premium available for other uses in
addition to relief of debt service. 16 These other statutes are consistent with Government
Code section 29303, which requires premium to be deposited in a debt service fund
“unless it is expressly provided by law that they be deposited in some other fund.” These

12
     Gov. Code, § 29303.
13
     Stats. 1931, ch. 297, § 2, p. 720.
14
  “Whenever any bonds . . . are sold at a premium or with accrued interest, or both
premium and accrued interest, the amounts received for such premiums and accrued
interest shall be deposited in the interest and sinking fund of such county or district
unless it is subsequently expressly provided by law that they shall be deposited in some
other fund . . . .” Pol. Code, § 4087a (1919); see Stats. 1919, ch. 257, § 2, p. 406.
15
     Pol. Code, § 1886; Stats. 1913, ch. 151, § 1, p. 233.
16
  See Ed. Code, § 15150, subd. (d) (district may issue notes in anticipation of sale of
voter-approved bond issue; interest on notes may be repaid “from proceeds of the sale of
the bonds in anticipation of which the notes are issued, including any premium on the
sale of those bonds.”); see also Gov. Code, §§ 6588, subd. (x)(4), 16757, subd. (b); Mil.
& Vet. Code, § 998.552; Sts. & Hy. Code, §§ 149.12, 2704.18.

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other statutes also demonstrate that, when the Legislature intends to allow premium to be
used for other purposes, it specifies the permissible uses in statutes. The Legislature has
not specified other purposes here, however. To the contrary, Education Code section
15146(g) expressly provides that premium shall be deposited in the interest and sinking
fund, and does not authorize any other use.

       Some districts posit that if premium is diverted to the underwriter to pay costs of
issuance then it is never actually “received” by the district within the meaning of
Education Code section 15146 or Government Code section 29303. We do not agree.
This appears to us to be an attempt to conform to the letter of the law while evading its
purpose. The manifest purpose of Education Code section 15146 and Government Code
section 29303 is that a bond’s premium value should accrue to the benefit of taxpayers. 17
School districts may choose to set interest rates that generate premium value, but the
additional value must be used to benefit taxpayers, not the district. 18

      The second question submitted to us asks whether premium may be used to pay
bond-related expenses such as bond issuance costs listed in Education Code section

17
     See 15 McQuillin Mun. Corp. § 43.133 (3d ed.).
18
  E.g., Ed. Code, § 15143 (permissible interest rates); see Gov. Code, §§ 43628,
26299.071, 26298.40; Health & Saf. Code, § 13935; Pub. Util. Code, §§ 60160, 98341,
99019, 100609, subd. (a), 102508, 103507, 105207, 131118, 142273; Rev. & Tax Code,
§ 8523; Wat. Code App., ch. 570, § 292; ch. 1060, § 14 (Deering).

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15145(a), an underwriter’s discount, 19 or interest on previously issued securities. For all
of the reasons already given, we conclude that bond premium value may not be diverted
to any other purpose.

       We acknowledge a possible argument cutting the other way. In 1959, the
Legislature first enacted a statute allowing school districts to pay costs of issuance “from
the proceeds of sale of the bonds.” 20 If taken out of context, this language might be used
to support an argument that costs of issuance are payable from premium because the term
“proceeds” includes premium. We agree that bond premium is generally a component of
bond proceeds. 21 According to a longstanding rule of statutory construction, however,
the more specific mandate of section 15146(g) should take precedence over the more
general authorization of section 15145(a). 22

19
   As defined in the MSRB Glossary, the “underwriter’s discount” (i.e., underwriter’s fee)
is the “difference between the price paid by the underwriter to the issuer for the new issue
and the prices at which the securities are initially offered to the investing public.”
(MSRB Glossary, supra, https://www.msrb.org/Glossary.) This is also called the “gross
spread,” “gross underwriting spread,” or “production.” (Id. [search for “underwriter’s
discount”].) The underwriter’s discount is a bond-related expense paid indirectly by the
bond issuer to the underwriter for services relating to selling the bonds to investors and
managing elements of the transaction. These costs are deducted from the proceeds of the
bonds by the underwriters at closing and therefore issuers typically do not write a check
for these services. (See Government Finance Officers Association, Best Practices, Debt
Issuance Transaction Costs (Feb. 28, 2013) at https://www.gfoa.org/materials/debt-
issuance-transaction-costs.) The underwriting spread compensates the underwriter for
certain services rendered and is the source of underwriting profits. (Issue Briefs,
Understanding the Underwriting Spread, California Debt and Investment Advisory
Commission (March 1993); see also California Debt and Investment Advisory
Commission, California Debt Financing Guide, section 5.42 (March 2022),
https://www.treasurer.ca.gov/cdiac/debtpubs/financing-guide.pdf 8523.)
20
  See Ed. Code, § 15145, subd. (a); formerly Ed. Code, § 21809 (Stats. 1959, ch. 418,
§ 1, p. 2358).
21
  See 92 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra, at p. 13 & fn. 62, citing City of Oakland v. Williams
(1987) 107 Cal.App. 340, 341.
22
  See City of Oakland v. Williams, supra, 107 Cal.App. at p. 342; see also State Dept. of
Public Health v. Superior Court (2015) 60 Cal.4th 940, 960 (more specific provision
controls over more general); People v. Vanvleck (2016) 2 Cal.App.5th 355, 365 (same);
Department of Veterans Affairs v. Duerksen (1982) 138 Cal.App.3d 149, 157 (same).

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        In sum, we conclude that all of the premium from the sale of a general obligation
school bond must be deposited in the district’s interest and sinking fund, and any
agreement between a district and bond purchaser to circumvent that requirement by
diverting bond premium value to some other purpose—such as to pay bond issuance
costs, underwriters’ discounts, or interest on previously issued securities—is contrary to
the meaning and purpose of Education Code section 15146(g).

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