Ames v. Board of Supervisors

12 N.W.2d 567, 234 Iowa 617, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 526
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 11, 1944
DocketNo. 46382.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 567 (Ames v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames v. Board of Supervisors, 12 N.W.2d 567, 234 Iowa 617, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 526 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The Boards of Supervisors of Polk and Story counties on June 25, 1920, established a drainage district known as Polk-Story No. 4, extending into the two counties across their border line. The commissioners and engineer reported that the, total acreage in the district was 1,078.88 acres and estimated the cost at $37,893, which later proved to be too low an estimate. Contracts for material and labor were let and the commissioners reported a Schedule of assessments for benefits for the lands in both counties totaling $44,668.40, of which the share for Polk county was $37,717.50. On May 22,1922, the Polk County Board of Supervisors passed a resolution which recited that the share of Polk county lands in the total assessment should be the above sum of $37,717.50, and that there had been paid into the treasury of the drainage district, or otherwise provided for, $14,282.54, leaving then unpaid and not provided for an assessment in the sum of $23,434.96, none of which was in litigation, and no one item of which was $20 or less in amount. Such resolution also provided for the issuance of $23,300 in drainage bonds against the assessment of $23,434.96, which bonds were to be paid over a period of ten years to retire the bonds, Nos. 1 to 24 inclusive. The bonds were issued and sold, and, so far as the records show, the proceeds applied on the cost of the improvement. The bonds were all paid except two. Nos. 22 and 23, for $1.000 each, with $210 of unpaid interest coupons and the interest on the bonds at six per cent from maturity on November 1, 1932.

The original assessments levied against the Polk county lands of $37,717.50 were all paid with interest. The two bonds not having been paid, the Board of Supervisors of Polk county, *619 on October 28, 1942, adopted a resolution in which they recited that two additional assessments had been adopted by the. joint meeting of the Boards of Supervisors of Polk and Story counties,, one for four and one-half per cent on December 17, 1925, and one for four per cent on April 30, 1930, which assessments Story county had assessed and collected, but that the same had never been spread or collected in Polk county. The resolution recited further that on June 15, 1931', the Polk county board had authorized the spreading of the assessments of four and one-half per cent and four per cent, respectively, but the same was never done by the auditor of Polk cbunty; that bonds Nos. 22 and 23, which became due on November 1,1932, were unpaid and also the interest thereon was delinquent; and directed that the assessments theretofore ordered be spread in order to pay said bonds and interest, making a total reassessment to be spread against the bené--fited property of eight and one-half per cent. The' resolution further extended the maturity date on the two outstanding' bonds to' November 1, 1943. After the resolution was adopted and iii# re-

The proposition relied upon by appellants for reversal, as stated by them, is that the assessments having been greater than the amount of the bonds issued, and the assessments having all been paid, no new assessments may be made to pay such bonds. There is no question but that assessments of this kind must be used solely for the purpose of payment of the improvement and cannot be diverted to other purposes. It is also true that the land within a district .cannot be assessed for any greater amount than is necessary to pay the cost of such improvement. Section 7505, Code of 1939, and previous Codes. The only reason for the levy of additional assessments is in case the cost, when finally determined, is greater than 1he original estimated expense or is for repairs. When such condition occurs, then 1he board of supervisors is required to levy and collect additional assessments against the benefited lands. Sections 7479 and 7509 Code of *620 1939, which sections are the same as appeared in previous Codes, both provide for such a contingency, the former section reading:

“If the first assessment made by the board for the original cost or for repairs of any improvement is insufficient, the board shall make an additional assessment and levy in the same ratio as the first for either purpose, payable at the next taxpaying period after such indebtedness is incurred subject, however, to the provisions of section 7484 [which provides for payment by installments].”

Section 7509 provides:

“If any levy of assessments is not sufficient to meet the interest and principal of outstanding bonds, additional assessments may be made on the same classification as the previous ones. Additional bond issues may be made when necessary to complete full payment for improvements, by the same proceedings as previous issues.”

Appellants argue that under sections 7505 to 7509 of the Code of 1939, which were, in effect, the same as the Supplement to the Code of 1913, and subsequent Codes, the issuance of bonds in excess of the amount of assessments made and levied is prohibited, and that section 7509 as now interpreted by the court means that if the assessments were not large enough when made to equal the amount of bonds issued, new .assessments may be made, but if the assessments were sufficient, were large enough, were greater than the amount of the bonds, and if paid by the landowners, the landowners may not be assessed again to pay these bonds, and that such is really the only question in the case.

Hartz v. Truckenmiller, 228 Iowa 819, 293 N. W. 568, cited by appellants, does not support that theory. There the original levy and a subsequent ten per cent levy, not disputed, were sufficient to pay the bonds and the cost of improvement, but a loss was incurred by failure to collect certain assessments. The proceeds of the tax, if collected, would have paid the cost. It does not hold that the basis of the reassessment is ihe amount of the bonds rather than the cost of the improvement. Western Bohemian Frat. Assn. v. Barrett, 223 Iowa 932, 934, 274 N. W. 55, 56, also cited by appellants, does not apply here. In that case *621 it is said: "That the assessments were sufficient is not even questionable.” In neither of these cases is there any showing that the issue of bonds was insufficient to pay the cost of the project. In Whitfield v. Grimes, 229 Iowa 309, 294 N. W. 346, appellants interpret our holding to have been that if the assessment was large enough in the beginning to cover the bonds, no new assessment may be made. Such was not our "holding. We have recently, in the second appeal in the Whitfield case, Whitfield v. Sears, 233 Iowa 887, 892, 10 N. W. 2d 564, 567, reviewed a situation in most respects similar to the one in the case at bar. Justice Smith, in his opinion, states:

"We know of no equitable principle that .would absolve defendants from levying additional assessments if required under Code sections 7509 and 7479. No cases are cited by defendants enunciating such principle. We have held that the statute reserves to the board of supervisors at all times the power to impose necessary additional assessments, that the burden of this contingency necessarily rests upon every landowner subject to assessment in'the district * *

The opinion in that case concludes that there was an initial discrepancy in the amount of the original assessment and the cost of the improvement and order was made for writ of mandamus.

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12 N.W.2d 567, 234 Iowa 617, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-board-of-supervisors-iowa-1944.