Municipal Building Authority v. Lowder

711 P.2d 273, 1985 Utah LEXIS 973
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1985
Docket19959
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 711 P.2d 273 (Municipal Building Authority v. Lowder) 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
Municipal Building Authority v. Lowder, 711 P.2d 273, 1985 Utah LEXIS 973 (Utah 1985).

Opinion

ZIMMERMAN, Justice:

Defendants, the auditor, treasurer and clerk of Iron County, appeal from a district court decision upholding the Utah Municipal Building Authority Act (“the Act”) against a variety of constitutional challenges and finding that the actions proposed by the Iron County Board of Commissioners and the Iron County Municipal Building Authority (“the Authority”) to finance construction of a new jail facility under that Act are lawful. The district court also rejected a challenge to the actions of the county under the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act. We affirm the district court in all but one respect: we find unlawful the proposal that the county transfer a fee interest in the present jail facility to the Authority without adequate consideration.

This case highlights an l^sue of growing national importance — the difficulty of providing adequate facilities to handle those for whom society demands confinement. All citizens want the laws rigorously enforced and many would like more severe punishments imposed, but few are willing to pay the inevitable costs. These logically inconsistent positions tax to the utmost the financial creativity of responsible public officials.

Testimony before the district court indicated that the fifty-year-old Iron County jail has not met even minimum state and federal standards of habitability for some time. The physical deterioration of the facility and its outdated design, combined with continual overcrowding, have made it unsanitary and unsafe for inmates and jailers alike. Inmates have often had to be released in order to make room for those convicted of more serious crimes. A judge testifying before the district court referred to the jail as “medieval.” At taxpayers’ expense, Iron County has been forced to defend numerous lawsuits arising out of these appalling conditions.

Lengthy studies have underscored the need to build an entirely new jail. To finance its construction, the Iron County Commissioners proposed issuing general obligation bonds. Article XIV, section 3 of the Utah Constitution requires that such bonds be approved by the voters because they would be a long-term debt of the county. In December of 1981, a bond election was held and the proposal was defeated, leaving the county in a difficult dilemma. As a practical matter, the new facility had to be built; yet the Iron County taxpayers were unwilling to pay for the facility through the traditional means of financing major capital improvements — general obligation bonds.

The Board of Commissioners devised a plan which would permit a jail to be built without prior voter approval. Article XIV, section 3 requires voter approval of long-term indebtedness only when the indebted entity is a county or a subdivision of a county. 1 See Lehi City v. Meiling, 87 Utah 237, 256-57, 48 P.2d 530, 539-40 (1935). *276 The commissioners, acting under the Utah Municipal Building Authority Act, U.C.A., 1953, §§ 11-29-1 to -18 (Supp.1985), created the Iron County Building Authority, a quasi-municipal governmental entity designed not to be a “subdivision” of the county and, therefore, to be free from the voter-approval requirement of article XIV, section 3. As required by the Act, the Authority’s board of trustees consists of all of the Iron County commissioners. The Authority is empowered to finance and construct a new jail facility and lease it to the county. Because the Authority, not the county, will borrow money for the construction, voter approval of its bond issue will not be necessary, yet a new jail will be made available to the county.

To implement the plan, the county and the Authority propose to enter into several related agreements. For a nominal consideration, the existing jail facility will be transferred to the Authority in fee; in effect, the present jail will be donated to the Authority. That property, now appraised at $124,000, will be traded by the Authority to a private developer for another site upon which the new jail facility will be constructed. Should there be some legal obstacle to this transfer in fee, the county proposes to lease a project site to the Authority. In either event, once the Authority has secured a site, it will issue revenue bonds with a term of twenty years to finance construction, pledging as security its interest in the project site and the facility to be constructed. As part of the same transaction, the county will lease the new jail facility from the Authority for twenty years, on a year-to-year basis. After the twenty years have passed and the bonds are paid in full, the Authority will transfer title to the new facility to the county. The agreements between the county and the Authority provide that in the event the Authority defaults on the bonds before they are paid off, the bond holders may foreclose upon the new jail facility and whatever interest the Authority has in the site, but they will have no recourse against the county or its taxpayers.

On May 10, 1982, the county commissioners authorized the payment of certain project start-up costs. The three defendants — the Iron County auditor, treasurer, and clerk — refused to perform various ministerial duties necessary to finalize the agreements between the county and the Authority and to disburse the authorized funds. They asserted that the Utah Municipal Building Authority Act and the actions the county and the Authority proposed to take pursuant to it were unconstitutional. The county and the Authority immediately filed this action, asking for declaratory relief and seeking a writ of mandamus to compel defendants to carry out their duties.

Before the district court, defendants raised several challenges to the Act and the proposed transaction under the Utah Constitution. These can be summarized as follows: that the financing plan evaded the debt limitations contained in article XIV, sections 3 and 4; that the transaction would result in a loan of the county’s credit to the Authority in violation of article VI, section 29; and that the Authority is a special commission prohibited by article VI, section 28. Defendants also raised statutory challenges to the transaction, contending that the transfer of the old jail for inadequate consideration violated sections 17-5-48 and 17-4-3 of the Code, U.C.A., 1953, §§ 17-5-48, 17-4-3 (Supp.1985), and that the county did not give proper public notice of its meetings pursuant to the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act. U.C.A., 1953, §§ 52-4-1 to -9 (1981 ed.).

After an evidentiary hearing, the district court declared the Act constitutional and held that the proposed transaction was permissible. The court authorized a writ of mandamus, although none issued. This appeal followed. Defendants raise, inter alia, the issues presented to the trial court. Because this Court has never before considered a transaction authorized by the Utah Municipal Building Authority Act, extended discussion of the issues is warranted.

*277 We first address defendants’ contention that the Act allows counties to evade the constitution’s debt limitations. Some background is necessary. Article XIV, section 3 of the Utah Constitution prohibits, inter alia, any county from incurring debt in excess of the current year’s tax revenues without prior approval of a majority of the property taxpayers. 2

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Bluebook (online)
711 P.2d 273, 1985 Utah LEXIS 973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/municipal-building-authority-v-lowder-utah-1985.