Gardner v. Davis County
This text of 523 P.2d 865 (Gardner v. Davis County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff K. W. Gardner, as a taxpayer, for himself and others similarly situated, sued to enjoin the Davis County Commission from declaring surplus and selling two parcels of real property which had been purchased as sites for public hospitals. From a refusal to grant the injunction, plaintiff appeals.
Pursuant to regular procedure and a resolution adopted by the County Commission, at a bond election held on June 4, 1968, the voters of Davis County by majority vote approved the following proposition:
Shall Davis County, Utah, incur a debt and issue General Obligation Bonds to the amount of $5,750,000.00 to mature serially in not more than 35 years from their date or dates and to bear interest at a rate, or rates, not in excess of 6 percent per annum, for the purpose of paying part of the cost of erecting hospital facilities in and for Davis County, including the acquisition of suitable sites therefor and all necessary furnishings and equipment therefor ?
The announced plan was that the money raised by the proposed bond issue would partially pay for the hospital facilities. It was confidently expected that federal funds from the Hill-Burton program would provide the necessary balance. The Commission had issued and sold the authorized bonds and had purchased two sites, one in the north end and one in the south end of the County, when an unanticipated reduction in funds available in the federal Hill-Burton program effectively prevented the carrying out of the plan for building the hospitals as projected.
After this impasse developed, the Commission considered alternative methods of financing, and of obtaining hospital facilities for Davis County. In 1972 it decided upon a different plan, and contracted with two private corporations for construction of hospital facilities, one in each end of the county. . Thereafter the Commission declared surplus the two sites it had purchased, and proposed to sell them through regular bidding procedures as provided by law. 1 The money was to be used for the purpose of paying accrued interest and retiring the issued bonds.
Prior to the date set for the sale the plaintiff brought this action to prevent it. After a plenary hearing thereon, the district court found that the action of the County Commission in the declaration of the lands as surplus and the proposed sale thereof was in accordance with law, and within its prerogatives.
The plaintiff raises no question, and there can be no doubt about the au *867 thority of the County Commission to take any reasonable and appropriate measures to preserve the health of the inhabitants of the County 2 nor that this includes the providing of hospital facilities. 3 The plaintiffs contention goes beyond those propositions : he argues that the announcement of the plan by the County Commission and the holding of the bond election constituted in effect an offer; and that the approval by the voters was in effect an acceptance of that offer, which imposed upon the Commission a binding mandate to go forward and build the public hospitals.
The powers and duties of counties and their boards of commissioners, are set forth in Title 17, U.C.A.1953. Section 17-4-1 provides that counties are, “bodies corporate and politic, and as such have the powers specified in this title and such other powers as are necessarily implied.”; Section 17-4-3 gives counties the power “to manage and dispose of its property as the interests of its inhabitants may require.” ; Section 17-5-48 allows the commission to sell surplus property; and Section 17-12-1 allows county commissions to contract for a bonded indebtedness and requires that revenues derived from bond sales “shall be applied to the purpose or purposes specified in the order of the board [county commission] and no other.”
On a number of occasions this court has spoken concerning the powers of political subdivisions of this state. A comparatively recent one is Cottonwood City Electors v. Salt Lake County, etc. 4 Therein the plaintiffs failed to persuade the court that the County Commission should be compelled to grant incorporation of a town. We pointed out the practical necessity of recognizing the authority and the discretion essential for the County Commission to fulfill its responsibility of governing the county in the best interest and the general welfare of its citizens. In order to accomplish that objective it has such powers as are specifically set forth, and those which are reasonably and necessarily implied; and coupled therewith, it must necessarily be allowed a reasonable latitude of judgment and discretion. 5
To be considered in connection with the Commission’s discretion, and having a significant bearing on the problem here involved, is the fact that the Municipal Bond Act does not dictate that the Commission shall issue the bonds. Section 11-14 — 13, U.C.A.1953, provides that if the bond election is successful the Commission “may proceed to issue the bonds voted at the election.” That wording clearly denotes a discretionary power and correlates with the idea of recognizing that a governing body should have some flexibility in planning for contingencies and adapting to changes in circumstances. The logical conclusion from all of the foregoing is that what the plaintiff claims was a “mandate” upon the Commission by the vote of the electorate actually amounted only to an authorization to issue bonds and to spend the funds realized therefrom for the purpose indicated.
Consistent with what has been said above, when it developed that sufficient federal funds were not available, it was the responsibility of the Commission to make the decision as to what should be done about the project, including its abandonment, if it thought that was the wise and necessary course. Fortunately, there came into being what, in the Commission’s judgment, was a desirable alternative: of having private ventures provide the hospital facilities. Inasmuch as the purpose for which the lands in question were purchased had failed, it was the prerogative of the *868 Commission to declare them surplus and dispose of them to the highest bidder as provided by law. 6
We comment briefly on what strikes us as a novel contention made by the plaintiff: that inasmuch as the Commission had issued and sold the bonds for the announced purpose of building a public hospital, under the doctrine known as “cy pres,” it should be obliged to carry out the plan in some manner. That French term in this context translates to mean “as near to” or “as near as may be.” It is a doctrine that is sometimes invoked where there has been a gift or bequest for a charitable purpose, which for some reason cannot be literally carried out, and something closely analogous is done which comports with and fulfills what appears to be the donor’s intention and purpose. 7
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
523 P.2d 865, 1974 Utah LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-davis-county-utah-1974.