Iowa Service Co. v. City of Villisca

213 N.W. 401, 203 Iowa 610
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 401 (Iowa Service Co. v. City of Villisca) 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
Iowa Service Co. v. City of Villisca, 213 N.W. 401, 203 Iowa 610 (iowa 1927).

Opinion

Evans, C. J.

The plaintiff brings its action as a taxpayer. Its real interest in the litigation, however, is somewhat deeper. It owns and operates in the city of Villisca a distributing system for electric light and power. This system consists in the main of poles and wires. There is no power plant established in said *611 city. At an election called for the purpose, the electors o-f the city voted to incur an indebtedness for the establishment of a light and power plant for the municipality, and voted to ibsue bonds therefor in the sum of $75,000. The plaintiff has sought, without success, to sell to the city its distributing system, in order that it may be incorporated as a part of the new enterprise.

Pursuant to the vote of the electors, the city council caused bonds to be issued to the amount of $75,000, and placed' the same in the hands of the treasurer, as required by statute. The bonds were advertised for sale in the manner required by statutej but no bids were obtained thereon.' The obvious reason for this failure was that this suit had been instituted and was pending at the time of the offer for sale. Thereafter, "the city council entered into a contract with certain constructing contractors to construct for the municipality the .requisite light' and pdwer plant. This contract provided that the'bonds in question should be delivered to the contractor at par, in payment of the contract price.

The petition of plaintiff challenged (1) the legality-of the election at which the bonds were voted, and (2) the legality of the contract entered into with the contractors.

I. The first challenge was grounded upon the insufficiency of the petition signed by the electors for the call of the election.

Section 1306-e of the Code Supplement of 1913, as Amended by Chapter 303, Acts of the Thirty-seventh General Assembly, and Chapter 250, Acts of the Thirty-eighth General Assembly, provided the initial procedure then in force. • that a petition be' presented to the city council, signed by' a majority of the qualified electors, “stating the purposes' for which the money is to be used and that' the necessary .waterworks, electric‘light and-power plants, or'the necessary transmission lines therefor, gasworks, or heating plants,’-cannot be purchased, erected, built or furnished within the limit of one and one-quarter per centum of the valuation.”' ■

The petition actually filed before the eity council -did not state that a power plant could not be “purchased, erected, built, or furnished within the limits of the one and one-quarter” mill levy. It did state that such a plant could not be established *612 within such limit. The argument .is .that, the wordi ‘‘established” is not the legal equivalent of “purchased, erected, built, or furnished.” Other sections of the statute covering this subject do use the word “establish” interchangeably with the words above quoted. We think the point is without merit, and that the word “established” was the legal equivalent of the other words contained in the statute. Appellant" lays particular emphasis upon the absence of the word “purchased.” The idea suggested is that, if the voters or the city council knew that the plaintiff’s distributing system could-be purchased, it might have made a difference in the result of the vote. There was in fact no power plant in the city of Villisca. None, therefore, could be purchased there. To say, therefore, that the “purchase” should have been negatived by the petition is only to emphasize what is clearly vain. We think the election was valid,- and likewise the bonds issued pursuant thereto.

II. The second point made by .the appellant is.that the contract entered into by the city council for the erection' of the plant was illegal, in that the city council contracted thereby.to deliver the bonds to the contractors in payment the contract price. The contract purported ^11 terms to apply the bonds at par upon the contract price. Was this a violation of the statute which relates to the disposition of such bonds?

The bonds having been once offered for sale in accordance with the requirements of the statute, the treasurer had a right thereafter under the statute to sell the same • at ■ par, with •accrued interest, and not otherwise. Any other method of disposition became, under the statute, a misdemeanor, punishable as such. The contention for the appellant is that this contract amounted to a mere barter of the bonds, and that they were thereby merged into the conditions of the contract, and that no one could say whether the city realized par therefor or not. The contention for the appellee is that the disposition of these bonds in good faith for a full consideration was in every legal sense a sale thereof at par.

Chapters 319 and 320 of the Code of 1924 must be-read together on this subject. The relation between the two chapters is clearly indicated by Section 6264. When bonds have been issued by a resolution of the city council, it is provided by Sec *613 tion 6256 that they shall be delivered to the treasurer, who- shall register the same. It is provided by Section 6257 that the treasurer shall make monthly reports “of all- such bonds sold or exchanged by him since his last report.”

Section 6258 provides:

“The council may provide by resolution for the exchange of such bonds or any part thereof, • for legal indebtedness-of the city or town evidenced by bonds, warrants, or judgments which were outstanding when the resolution authorizing such bonds was passed; or said council may by resolution order said bonds sold as provided by law for the sale of public bonds. ” "

With these statutes before us, -we may proceed to consider the respective contentions of counsel. The contention of appellant is that by these provisions of the statute the treasurer was bound to sell these bonds for money or its equivalent, and that he had no power to dispose of them otherwise. The contention of the appellee-defendants is grounded upon the following broad proposition of their brief: >

“Any transaction whereby property is parted with for a valuable consideration, whether there be a money payment or not, provided the bargain is made and the value measured in money terms, and paid or agreed to be paid in something which the parties agree to treat as a specified amount of money, is' a sale.” -

What is a “sale” is a- question which has much flexibility, and may be answered variably, in accord with the particular circumstances surrounding the transaction under consideration. There is a certain broad sense in which-the term “sale’’ may be applied to any transaction, even though it involve an exchange of properties, where the specific money value of each- article -is mutually agreed upon. Such transactions are usually those had between persons who are sui juris, -and who have plenary authority to deal with each other, and who are Unhampered in such dealing by the limited scope of an -agency :or by a limited official power. It' is a trite illustration of this distinction that an agent who has power only to sell may accept no other consideration than -money or its equivalent. Such is the-‘primary and the literal meaning of the word “sell.

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

Related

Weiss v. Incorporated Town
295 N.W. 873 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1941)
Weiss v. Incorporated Town of Woodbine
289 N.W. 469 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1940)
Ronnow v. City of Las Vegas
65 P.2d 133 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1937)
Fitzgerald v. State
260 N.W. 681 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1935)
Wilson v. Superior Court
43 P.2d 286 (California Supreme Court, 1935)
Commonwealth Public Service Co. v. City of Deer Lodge
29 P.2d 667 (Montana Supreme Court, 1934)
Wyatt v. Town of Manning
250 N.W. 141 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)
Johnson v. Incorporated Town of Remsen
247 N.W. 552 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 401, 203 Iowa 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-service-co-v-city-of-villisca-iowa-1927.