Pennington v. Town of Sumner

270 N.W. 629, 222 Iowa 1005
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1936
DocketNo. 43062.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 270 N.W. 629 (Pennington v. Town of Sumner) 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
Pennington v. Town of Sumner, 270 N.W. 629, 222 Iowa 1005 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Donegan, J.-

-An appeal in a case, which apparently involved the same parties as in this case, was before this court hitherto, and the opinion in that case may be found in 217 Iowa 1117, 253 N. W. 60. Following the decision in that case the town of Sumner called a new election, at which it again submitted to the electors the proposition of the establishment of a municipal light and power plant. A majority of the votes at such election were in favor of such proposition, and thereafter the town called for bids and entered into a contract with Fairbanks-Morse Construction Company for the erection of such plant.

This action in equity was brought by the plaintiffs as citizens, property owners, taxpayers and users of electric current in the town of Sumner, Iowa, against the said town, the mayor, clerk and councilmen thereof, and Fairbanks-Morse Construction Company, a corporation, as defendants, asking that the defendants be restrained from carrying out the contract thus entered into. Following the trial of the case the trial court entered a decree dismissing the petition at plaintiffs’ costs. From this decree the plaintiffs appeal.

The appellants have set out and argued five separate propositions upon which they rely for a reversal of the decree entered by the trial court. We shall consider these propositions in the order followed in appellants’ brief and argument.

I. The first proposition presented by the appellants is, —that the' ballot used at the election did not comply with the mandatory provisions of sections 761 to 763 of the 1931 Code of Iowa. Under the provisions of these statutes, and cases construing them, it has been held that the measure to be voted upon must be printed in full upon the ballot, and this was not done in the instant case. The cases so holding, however, were prior to the adoption of chapter 158 of the Acts of the Forty-fourth General Assembly (commonly known as the Simmer law), which appears in the Code of 1931 as section 6134-dl to section 6134-d7, inclusive. In the case of Hogan v. City of Corning, 217 Iowa *1008 504, 250 N. W. 134, it was claimed that the ballot did not conform to the requirements of sections 761 to 763 of the Code, because the measure to be voted on was not printed in full thereon, but this court held that the election and ballot therein involved 'came under the provisions of section 6134-dl to section 6134-d7 (the Simmer law), and that this law does not require the printing upon the ballot in full the measure to be voted upon. The holding in the Hogan case has been followed and approved in Greaves v. City of Villisca, 217 Iowa 590, 251 N. W. 766; Wyatt v. Town of Manning, 217 Iowa 929, 250 N. W. 141; Pennington v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co., 217 Iowa 1117, 253 N. W. 60.

It is contended, however, that, even though it be not required, under the Simmer law, that the public measure to be voted upon be set out in full upon the ballot, still the ballot employed in the instant case was insufficient, because the proposition set out thereon failed to advise the voter as to what kind of a light and power plant the town was asking its voters to grant it the authority to erect. The proposition printed upon the ballot was:

“Shall the Town of Sumner, Bremer County, Iowa, establish, erect and construct a municipal light and power plant at a cost of not to exceed the sum of $115,000.00 to be paid out of the earnings of said plant.”

It will be noted that the ballot thus referred only to “ a municipal light and power plant”, without describing the kind of power or energy such plant was to produce. It must be conceded that, in the cases above referred to, the proposition printed on the ballot did state the kind of energy that the plant would produce. Appellants contend that the Simmer law applies to gas and water plants or works, as well as to heat, light -and power plants, and that the ballot here involved was, therefore, insufficient, because it did not inform the voter as to what kind of energy was to be employed in producing the light and power in the plant which the town was seeking the authority to erect.

The ease of Hogan v. City of Corning, 217 Iowa 504, 250 N. W. 134, established very definitely that, where an election is held under the provisions of the Simmer law, the proposition to be stated upon the ballot does not have to set out in detail the contract which the municipality will enter into with the successful bidder. The holding in this case was followed and applied in *1009 the Wyatt ease and Greaves case, cited above, and the effect of these cases was to confine the requirements of the statement on the ballot to those set out in section 6134-d3 of the Code. In the case of Pennington v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co., 217 Iowa 1117, 253 N. W. 60, however, this court held that the statement of the proposition to be voted upon, which was contained on the ballot, should inform the voter whether the plant was to be established under the provisions of the general law, which would impose a liability upon the municipality, or whether it was to be established under the provisions of the Simmer law, without any obligation upon the part of the municipality to pay for it otherwise than out of earnings of the plant itself. It is not questioned that the proposition contained on the ballot in the instant case would apprise the voter that the plant was to be paid for out of its earnings, so that this question is not here involved. The Wyatt case and Greaves case hold that the ballot must comply with the provisions of section 6134-d3, which require the proposition to be submitted to an election and that, “such proposition when submitted to an election shall state the maximum amount which may be expended for the establishment, construction, or acquisition of such plant.” We think, therefore, that it may be said that the requirements of this statute are that the proposition stated on the ballot must show: (1) That it has reference to a plant to be paid for out of earnings; (2) the maximum amount to be expended; (3) the kind of plant for which the money is to be expended.

Does the fact that the proposition stated upon the ballot involved in the instant case merely states that it is to “establish, erect and construct a municipal light and power plant” fail to give the voter sufficient knowledge as to the nature of the plant for which the money is to be spent? Or, does the failure to describe the plant as “an electric municipal light and power plant” constitute a fatal defect?' The statute, section 6134-d3, provides that the proposition submitted to an election “shall state the maximum amount which may be expended for the establishment, construction, or acquisition of such plant.” There is nothing in the language of the statute which prescribes specifically how the plant which it is proposed to establish shall be described. It would seem, therefore, that, if the nature of the plant which it is proposed to establish is so stated on the ballot that the voters would not have been subjected to any confusion, *1010 but would readily have understood what kind of a plant the city was seeking authority to establish, such statement would be sufficient. The election here involved was held on the 3d day of May 1934.

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Bluebook (online)
270 N.W. 629, 222 Iowa 1005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennington-v-town-of-sumner-iowa-1936.