Phinney v. Montgomery

257 N.W. 208, 218 Iowa 1240
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 1934
DocketNo. 42555.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 257 N.W. 208 (Phinney v. Montgomery) 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
Phinney v. Montgomery, 257 N.W. 208, 218 Iowa 1240 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.-

This is an action in mandamus commenced by the trustees of the County Hospital of Mahaska county, to compel the board of supervisors of that county to direct the county auditor to issue warrants to pay two accounts for expenses incurred by the hospital trustees. The first, for $121 for graduating pins purchased from a jewelry store by the hospital trustees for the graduating nurses of the Hospital Training School in 1933; the second, for $12 for two annual subscriptions of the Oskaloosa Daily Herald, for the use of hospital patients. The correctness of the amounts, or reasonableness of the claims, is not disputed, and it is conceded that both claims were duly certified by the trustees of the hospital as correct, and filed with the county auditor.

The petition alleges, and the evidence shows, that the pins were furnished graduate nurses pursuant to an agreement between them and the trustees of the hospital, at the time they entered the training school; that under the agreement, the board of trustees agreed to give the graduating nurses $10 per month, board and room, a gold pin and á diploma on their graduation, as compensation for services performed while in the training school. The evidence shows that the pins were part of the compensation agreed upon for their services during their three years' attendance at the training school.

The issues presented in the lower court are stated in the petition substantially as follows: That for some time there had been a disagreement between plaintiffs and defendants as to their respective powers and duties in respect to the maintenance and operation of the hospital, and in the disbursement of the hospital funds. The trustees contend that after claims against the hospital have been certified to the supervisors as correct, by the hospital trustees, it becomes the duty of the board of supervisors to direct the county auditor to draw warrants for their payment; while the board of supervisors contends that they have a right to determine whether or not such claims should be paid and to withhold direction of the *1242 payment thereof; and that under section 5358 of the Code, the board of supervisors is required to pass upon and determine the legality of all claims certified by the hospital trustees.

That such were the issues presented in the lower court and recognized by both parties is shown by an agreed stipulation, in part as follows:

“It is further agreed and conceded that both the plaintiff board of trustees and the defendant board of supervisors desire in the judgment to be entered in this action for the court to determine their respective rights, duties and powers, so that controversies pertaining thereto in the future may be obviated and done away with.”

The lower court held that the provisions of section 5358 are not mandatory, but give the board of supervisors a discretionary power to pass upon such claims, and denied the application for a writ of mandamus. Hence this appeal.

I. The record shows that it was understood and agreed between the prospective nurses and the hospital, when said nurses entered the training school, that each of them was to receive as part of their compensation for services performed during their training, a nurse’s pin at their graduation,1 in addition to $10 per month, and board. The board of supervisors, for the preceding twelve years, had always directed the county auditor to issue warrants for similar expenses,'after they were certified as correct by the hospital trustees. A dispute finally arose between the hospital trustees and the board of supervisors as to their respective powers and duties in reference to expenses incurred in the maintenance and operation of the hospital, and the disbursements of the hospital funds.

Section 5358 of the Code provides as follows:

“The county treasurer shall receive and disburse all funds under the control of said board of trustees, the same to be paid out only upon warrants drawn by the county auditor by direction of the board of supervisors after the claim for which the same is drawn has been certified to be correct by the said board of trustees.”

Appellees contend that, because the hospital funds can be paid out only upon warrants drawn “by direction of the board of supervisors”, a discretion is necessarily lodged in the board of supervisors to pass upon all expenses incurred by the hospital. The only question to be decided, therefore, is whether or not it becomes the *1243 mandatory duty of the board of supervisors, under section 5358, to direct the county auditor to issue warrants in payment of expenses incurred in the management and operation of the hospital after claims therefor have been duly certified as being correct, by the hospital trustees; or whether the board of supervisors has a right to pass upon the correctness of the claims filed.

County public hospitals are established and maintained under the provisions of chapter 269 of the Code. It is conceded that the plaintiff appellants are the duly elected and' qualified trustees of the Mahaska county hospital, and that the hospital was established and is being operated under the provisions of chapter 269.

Sections 5359 and 5360 of this chapter place the control, management, and operation of the hospital in the hands of the hospital trustees. They authorize the trustees: “1. To purchase, * * * provide and equip * * hospital buildings. 2. To adopt plans and specifications * * * for all. * * * buildings and equipment, and advertise for bids, * * * before making any contract for the construction of * * * building or the purchase of * * * equipment. 3 .To have general supervision and care of'such grounds and buildings. 4. To employ a superintendent, a matron, and necessary assistants and employees, and fix their compensation. 5. To have control and supervision over the physicians, nurses, attendants, and patients in the hospital. * * * 9. To fix at its regular August meeting in each year, the amount necessary for the improvement and maintenance of the hospital during the ensuing year, and cause the President and Secretary to certify the same to the county auditor before September first of each year. 10. To file with the Board of Supervisors during the first week in January of each year, a report covering their proceedings with reference to such hospital, and a statement of all receipts and expenditures during the preceding calendar year.”

Section 5360 authorizes the trustees: “1. To adopt by-laws and rules for its own guidance and for the government of the hospital. 2. To establish and maintain in connection with said hospital a training school for nurses.”

The foregoing provisions are set out at length to show the intent of the legislature in respect to the control and management of the hospital. It seems clear, from the language of these statutes, that it was the intention of the legislature to place the entire control *1244 and management of the county hospital in the hands of the hospital trustees.

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Bluebook (online)
257 N.W. 208, 218 Iowa 1240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phinney-v-montgomery-iowa-1934.