McDonald v. Price

146 P. 550, 45 Utah 464, 1915 Utah LEXIS 63
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1915
DocketNo. 2694
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 146 P. 550 (McDonald v. Price) 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.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Price, 146 P. 550, 45 Utah 464, 1915 Utah LEXIS 63 (Utah 1915).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

The plaintiff brought this action as a taxpayer of Price, a municipal corporation, hereafter called corporation, against said corporation; against the mayor and eouneilmen thereof; against its treasurer; and against one Manson, who is the lessee under a certain lease entered into by said corporation as lessor, and which the plaintiff, for reasons hereafter stated, asked to have vacated and annulled. The plaintiff, in his complaint, in substance, alleged the corporate existence of said corporation, and that Gunderson was its mayor, and the other five defendants the eouneilmen; that Hunten was .its treasurer; and that J. H. Manson was the lessee under a certain pretended lease entered into by said corporation with him whereby said corporation, on the 31st day of March, 1914, pretended to “lease for a period of five years all of the lands, buildings, machinery, appliances, tools, and fixtures constituting the lighting and generating plant” owned by said corporation to said Manson. The facts respecting the making of said lease, and the terms and conditions thereof, are set forth in detail, and it is alleged that said lease is void and of no effect, for the reason that the mayor and councilmen, acting for said corporation, had failed and neglected to comply with the provisions of the laws of this state in entering into said lease; that said Manson is in possession and [466]*466control of said plant; that a demand upon said mayor and council to vacate said lease and to take possession of said lighting plant and operate it for the use and benefit of said corporation and its inhabitants had been made and refused. The defendants appeared and joined in a general demurrer to the complaint. The court overruled the demurrer, and, after the defendants had elected not to plead further, but to abide by their demurrer, the court entered judgment canceling said lease, and ordered the lessee to surrender the leased property to said corporation. The defendants appealed, and entered into' a supersedeas bond staying the execution of said judgment pending appeal.

Plaintiff’s counsel contend that the lease in question is invalid: (1) Because the mayor and city council had no authority under the law to sell the lighting plant; and (2) because they refused to comply with the provisions of chapter 69, Laws Utah 1913, p. 110, in which the particular method which must be pursued by the city authorities in leasing such property is specifically provided for.

1 The first contention is based upon the claim that the cities of this state do not possess the power to sell and dispose of their property which is: devoted to> and used for, corporate purposes. As to property such as streets, alleys, parks, public buildings, and the like, although the title is in the city, yet such property, it may be said, is held in trust for strictly corporate purposes, and, as a general rule, cannot be sold or disposed of so long as it is being used for the purposes for -which it was acquired. Lighting plants do, however, not come within that class. Waterworks and lighting plants which are used by the cities of this state for the purposes of distributing water, light, and power or either, to the inhabitants for profit, are held by what is usually termed a proprietary right and unless prohibited by some statute, may be sold, leased, or disposed of by the city at any time when, in the judgment of the authorities, it is for the best interests of the city to do so. While, under the Constitution of this state, cities may not sell or dispose of their water systems, yet they hold and operate them in a proprietary, and not in a governmental, ca[467]*467pacity. Tbe same rule applies to lighting plants. Brown v. Salt Lake City, 33 Utah 222; 93 Pac. 570; 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 619; 126 Am. St. Rep. 828; 14 Ann. Cas. 1004; Ogden v. Waterworks & Irr. Co., 28 Utah 25; 76 Pac. 1069. The first contention must therefore fail.

2, 3 The second proposition, as we have seen, is, however, based upon a special act. That act, in substance, provides: That whenever the authorities of any city or town shall deem it advisable to sell its lighting plant, then they shall cause an appraisement to be made of the property which is to be sold or leased as in the act provided; that said-authorities shall also submit the question .of whether said plant shall be sold or leased to the vote of the qualified' electors of such city or town at a general election or at a special election called for that purpose. The manner of holding and conducting the election is provided for in the act. It is further provided that, in case a majority of the qualified voters voting at said election shall vote in favor of selling or leasing the property, then the city or town authorities shall cause a notice to be published in some newspaper published and having general circulation in such city or town for at least twenty days, which notice shall contain a general description of the property to be sold or leased, and shall -specify the time when sealed bids for said property or for a lease thereon will be received, and the time when and the place where the bids will be opened. It is further provided that at the time .and place specified in the notice all bids received for the sale or lease >f the property, as the case may be, shall be opened and considered, and the authorities shall accept the bid of the highest .responsible bidder. In case of a sale the bid must be jqual to the appraised value of the property, and in such sase no offer shall be accepted which is not equal to the mount of the outstanding bonds which were sold for the ionstruetion of the plant. The other provisions apply only n case of a sale of the property, and hence are not relevant íere.

The defendants contend that this act is so vague and im-:ertain in its provisions respecting a lease that it is void for mcertainty. ¥e think otherwise. While the act is inartifi-[468]*468eially drawn, and, in many respects, might well be made clearer, yet it is not so vague and uncertain that its provisions cannot be ascertained and enforced. We think the legislative intent can readily be ascertained if the act is read with even ordinary care. It is true that, because the provisions which relate to the selling, as well as those relating to the leasing of the property, are c'ommingled, the act in some respects seems obscure and uncertain. If, however, only reasonable care is exercised in segregating the provisions which refer to a sale from those intended to apply in ease of a lease, there is no reason why the provisions of the act cannot be readily understood and followed in detail. It is contended that the provisions with regard to an appraisement of the property and calling for bids has, and can have, no practical application in case the property is intended to be leased, and not sold. We can see no' objection whatever to requiring an ap-praisement and advertising for bids whether the property is intended to be leased or sold. In either event it may prevent favoritism. In case of sale it also may prevent a, sale for Jess than the actual value of the property; while in case of lease it may prevent a lease for too low a rental, and certainly gives every applicant the same opportunity to- bid. The whole matter was, however, one that was within the discretion of the Legislature, and the courts have no right to interfere with that discretion if legally and sufficiently expressed.

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Bluebook (online)
146 P. 550, 45 Utah 464, 1915 Utah LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-price-utah-1915.