Public Hospital District No. 1 v. State

601 P.2d 958, 24 Wash. App. 363, 1979 Wash. App. LEXIS 2751
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 1, 1979
DocketNo. 6635-1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 601 P.2d 958 (Public Hospital District No. 1 v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Hospital District No. 1 v. State, 601 P.2d 958, 24 Wash. App. 363, 1979 Wash. App. LEXIS 2751 (Wash. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Andersen, J.

Facts of Case

The State Auditor having claimed reimbursement for what he considered were overpayments of compensation made to the commissioners of Public Hospital District No. 1 of King County, the district sought and obtained a declaratory judgment from the Superior Court holding that the questioned payments were proper. The auditor appeals. We affirm.

An agreed statements of facts was filed by the parties. RCW 4.52.010. The agreed facts are as follows.

1.
R.C.W. 70.44.050 provided in part, until amended by Chapter 42, Laws of 1975, as follows:
"A District may provide by Resolution for the payment of compensation to each of its Commissioners at a rate not exceeding Twenty Five Dollars ($25.00) for each day or major part thereof devoted to the business of the District, and days upon which he attends meetings [365]*365of the Commission of his own District, or meeting attended by one or more Commissioners of two or more Districts called to consider business common to them, except that the total compensation paid to such Commissioner during any one year shall not exceed $600.00. ..."
2.
By Chapter 42, Laws of 1975, R.C.W. 70.44.050 was amended, effective June 12, 1975, to provide in part:
"A District may provide by Resolution for the payment of compensation to each of its Commissioners at a rate not exceeding Twenty Five Dollars ($25.00) for each day or major part thereof devoted to the business of the District, and days upon which he attends meetings of the Commission of his own District, or meetings attended by one or more Commissioners of two or more Districts called to consider business common to them, except that the total compensation paid to such Commissioner during any one year shall not exceed $1,200.00. ..."
3.
Article XXX, Section 1, of the State Constitution, Amendment 54, approved November 15, 1968 and entitled "Authorizing Compensation Increase During Term" provides in part:
"The compensation of all elective and appointive State, County, and Municipal officers who do not fix their own compensation, including Judges of Courts of record and the Justice Courts, may be increased during their term of office to the end that such officers and Judges shall each severally receive compensation for their services in accordance with the law in effect at the time the services are being rendered ..."
4.
On the 15th day of May, 1975, the then Board of Commissioners of Public Hospital District No. 1 of King County (Harriet Gruhn, Charlotte Cooper, E. R. Coleman, C. P. Curran, and Leo Powers) adopted Resolution No. 192, to be effective June 12, 1975, providing that the Commissioners be entitled to $25.00 a day per day or major part thereof devoted to the business of the District, and days upon which Commissioners attended meetings of their own District, etc., to a maximum of [366]*366$1,200.00 per year all as provided in Chapter 42, Laws of 1975.
5.
Subsequent to June 12, 1975, and for the year 1976, compensation was paid to the District's Commissioners in accordance with the $1,200.00 figure fixed by the Legislature in its 1975 Session.
6.
The Auditor of the State of Washington in its financial-fiscal Examination of the District's affairs for the year ending December 31, 1976, dated March 4, 1977, concluded that the compensation of Hospital District Commissioners was not fixed by the Legislature, but rather, by the Commissioners themselves; that the Commissioners were thus not entitled to increases in the maximum compensation during their respective terms of office; and requested that the Commissioners reimburse the District for "over payments" . . .
7.
Commissioner Gruhn, an appointee, faced Dr. John Shields in the general election of 1975 for an unexpired four-year term. Dr. Shields won that election and took office as a Commissioner of the District in January, 1976.
8.
The District responded to the Auditor's 1975 Examination Report to the effect that the Commissioners' compensation was fixed by the Legislature, and that by the terms of Article XXX, Section 1, of the Washington State Constitution (Amendment 54), an increase in the maximum compensation of Commissioners during their term was permitted; and that the District would thus not seek reimbursement from the Commissioners specified in the Auditor's 1975 Examination Report.
9.
Counsel for the State of Washington in turn responded in writing reiterating the State's position that the District's Board of Commissioners had, contrary to law, increased their compensation during their respective current terms of office, and that if the District within thirty (30) days did not reconsider its action a suit would be filed against the Commissioners named in the aforementioned Examination Report to recover what the State considered unconstitutional increases in their compensation.
[367]*36710.
Thereafter, Counsel for plaintiff and defendants agreed to a Resolution of the issue of the Commissioners' compensation through institution of a Declaratory Judgment Action by the District.

(Italics ours.)

One issue is determinative.

Issue

For constitutional purposes, are public hospital district commissioners officers who fix their own compensation, in which case there could be no increase in that compensation during the terms of the incumbent commissioners? See Const, art. 30, § 1; art. 2, § 25 and art. 11, § 8.

Decision

Conclusion. The legislature, by its enactment of Laws of 1975, chapter 42, section 1, amending RCW 70.44.050, fixed the upper limit of compensation for commissioners of public hospital districts. In that respect, therefore, the commissioners did not "fix their own compensation" within the contemplation of Washington constitution article 30, section 1 and there was no constitutional bar to midterm adjustments of their maximum allowable yearly compensation as established by the legislature.

The 1975 amendment to RCW 70.44.050 (Laws of 1975, ch. 42, § 1, p. 71) did not change the $25 maximum daily compensation rate for hospital district commissioners. The record before us does not establish that during the terms of the commissioners in question, the commissioners increased their daily compensation rate. Presumably they had previously drawn the full $25 per day authorized by statute for performing district business, since no issue has been raised in that connection.

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Bluebook (online)
601 P.2d 958, 24 Wash. App. 363, 1979 Wash. App. LEXIS 2751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-hospital-district-no-1-v-state-washctapp-1979.