Application of Erick Hospital District

1968 OK 112, 444 P.2d 216
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 23, 1968
Docket42953
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1968 OK 112 (Application of Erick Hospital District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Erick Hospital District, 1968 OK 112, 444 P.2d 216 (Okla. 1968).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice.

This original proceeding in this court involves the Oklahoma “Hospital District Act of 1967” (Senate Bill No. 183 of the First Session of the Thirty-first Oklahoma Legislature; Chapter 83, Oklahoma Session Laws 1967; 19 O.S.Supp.1967, §§ 1051 through 1077). It arises upon an application, authorized by Section 25 of the act (19 O.S.Supp. 1967, § 1075), by the Board of Directors of the Erick Hospital District (Beckham County, Oklahoma), for approval by this court of bonds in the aggregate principal amount of $350,000.00 which the Erick Hospital District, acting by and through its board of directors, proposes to issue under authority of the act to provide *218 funds for paying the cost and expense of acquiring a site or sites, landscaping and improving the same, and constructing, equipping and furnishing a hospital. A hearing was held on that application, but no protest was filed against the issuance of the bonds and no one appeared at the hearing to contest the validity of the bonds as authorized by the act.

The act provides in Section 16 thereof (19 O.S.Supp.1967, § 1066), that:

“Such bonds and the interest thereon shall be paid by revenue derived from an annual assessment upon the real property of the hospital district, and all of the real property of the hospital district shall remain liable to be assessed for such payments as herein provided.” (Emphasis supplied.)

It is patent that the term “real property of the hospital district,” as used in that statute, means “real property in the hospital district”. Under other provisions of the act, such annual assessments are to be levied, each fiscal year, until all bonds issued by the hospital district, and the interest thereon, have been paid in full.

For that purpose, Section 17 of the act (19 O.S.Supp.1967, § 1067) provides that, on or before the first Monday in May of each year, the county assessor must assess “all the real property in the hospital district,” to the persons who own, claim, or have the possession or control thereof, “at not to exceed thirty-five percent (35%) of its fair cash value,” prepare an assessment book, showing such information, and deliver it to the board of directors of the district on or before the 15th day of May in each year.

Although, under Section 18 of the act (19 O.S.Supp.1967, § 1068), the board of directors of the hospital district, acting as a “board of equalization,” meets each year prior to the computation of the amounts of the respective assessments to be levied that fiscal year against the tracts of land listed in the assessment book, “to assist in the equalization of assessments” and to hear and determine any objections to the valuations and assessments, and is authorized to “recommend to the assessor and the County Board of Equalization valuations in such manner as may be just and equitable,” the act does not authorize the board of directors of the hospital district, or any one else, to revise the valuation of any real property on the basis of accessibility or inaccessibility to the hospital or on the basis of benefits to the real property from the hospital.

Section 20 of the act (19 O.S.Supp.1967, § 1070) provides that the board of directors of the hospital district shall then levy an annual assessment, sufficient to pay the interest on the outstanding bonds, as it falls due, and also to constitute a sinking fund for the payment of the principal of the bonds in the amounts set forth in the resolution providing for the issuance of the bonds, plus a reserve for delinquent assessments in the amount of ten per cent; that the assessments be certified to the county treasurer to be entered, in separate columns, on the tax list of the county, to be collected at the same time and in the same manner as all other taxes are collected; and that all taxes assessed as aforesaid shall be a lien against the special tracts of real estate on which they have been assessed until paid and said lien shall be coequal with the lien of ad valorem taxes and all other taxes.

Because of the prohibitions contained in Section 9 of Article X of the Constitution of the State of Oklahoma, before and after the amendment thereof in 1965, taxes on an ad valorem basis can be levied only for the purposes of the subdivisions of the state which are listed • therein —counties, cities, towns, and school districts, under the 1965 amendment of that section — and, since a special improvement district, such as provided for in the Hospital District Act of 1967, clearly is not a county, city, town, or school district, within the contemplation of Section 9 of Article X of the Oklahoma Constitution, the levying of any taxes, on an ad valorem basis, for the purposes of such a district is prohibited by that section of the Constitution. *219 See Thompson et al. v. Rearick (1912), 33 Okl. 283, 124 P. 951.

Tacitly conceding that principle, the applicant herein contends that, under the act, the annual assessments are levied against the real property benefited by the improvement, in proportion to the benefits to the property from the improvements, and are authorized by Section 7 of Article X of the Oklahoma Constitution, which provides that:

“The Legislature may authorize county and municipal corporations to levy and collect assessments for local improvements upon property benefited thereby, homesteads included, without regard to a cash valuation.”

and, therefore, are special “assessments” on the basis of benefits to the property from the improvement, as distinguished from “taxes”.

The applicant herein also contends that the Hospital District Act of 1967 was copied from, and is nearly verbatim, the sewer improvement district law as found in 19 O.S.1961, §§ 871 through 897, and that the procedure for issuing bonds to pay for the improvement, and for levying annual assessments to pay the bonds is identical; that in Armstrong et ux. v. Sewer Improvement District No. 1, Tulsa County et al. (1948), 201 Okl. 531, 199 P.2d 1012, 207 P.2d 917, this court held that the annual levies provided for in said sewer improvement district law were special “assessments” based upon benefits to the property assessed from the improvement, as distinguished from “taxes”; and that, based thereon, the court should uphold the constitutionality of the Hospital District Act of 1967.

Obviously, assessments provided for under authority of Section 7 of Article X of the Constitution, supra, must be based upon benefits to -the assessed property from the improvement involved. In Gilfillan et al. v. City of Bartlesville (1915), 46 Okl. 428, 148 P. 1012, 1013, (which involved an alleged conflict between a provision of the 1908 city paving district act and Section 7 of Article X, supra), this court said:

“* * * that the term ‘local improvements,’ as used in our Constitution, includes all, and must be limited to such improvements as are in fact or are determined in the proper exercise of legislative discretion to be special and peculiarly beneficial to the property affected and thus to its owners, as contradistin-guished from such as are only beneficial to property in general or to the general public, and which may be made a charge upon such property without violating the fourteenth amendment to the federal Constitution, will appear from an examination of [U. S. Supreme Court cases cited].

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Opinion No. (2002)
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 2002
Rollow v. City of Ada
1990 OK 59 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1990)
Opinion No. (1988)
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 1988
Oklahoma State Board of Equalization v. Craig
1988 OK 7 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)
Diversified Capital Corp. v. City of North Las Vegas
555 P.2d 1236 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1976)
Opinion No. 75-273 (1975) Ag
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 1975
Opinion No. 74-140 (1974) Ag
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 1974

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1968 OK 112, 444 P.2d 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-erick-hospital-district-okla-1968.