Saltzman v. City of Council Bluffs

243 N.W. 161, 214 Iowa 1033
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1932
DocketNo. 41428.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 161 (Saltzman v. City of Council Bluffs) 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
Saltzman v. City of Council Bluffs, 243 N.W. 161, 214 Iowa 1033 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

De Graff, J.

The city of Council Bluffs owns its water plant, having acquired it in the year 1911. The plant' is managed and controlled by a board of' three trustees, appointed, as by law provided.. There has been levied and collected, for the operation of said water plant, the statutory five-mill tax each year, and in addition thereto, -the statutory two-mill tax for a sinking fund to retire outstanding bonds.and pay interest thereon. . In addition thereto, there has been collected a large sum of money for water rentals and the like; and from these sources, to wit, taxes and water rentals, after deducting The expense of operation and after paying the original bonds for the purchase *1034 price, there remains in the hands of the City Treasurer, to the credit of the water fund, the sum of $209,966.63.

In the year 1921, $300,000.00 worth of bonds were issued to derive money for betterments, extensions and improvements, and in the year 1931, $260,000.00 of those bonds were unpaid and outstanding, and are payable at the rate of $40,000.00 per year, with the right of the municipality to pay any or all of said bonds at any interest-paying date after February 1, 1931.

The City Council and the Board of Waterworks Trustees, acting in conjunction, were proceeding to use this fund for purchase of real estate and to pay the cost of constructing thereon a building, a part of which was to be used by the Board of Trustees, and the remainder of which building, and by far the greater portion thereof, to be used by the municipality in housing its prisoners in a jail, in housing its municipal judges, bailiffs, and other court attaches, its police department and the like.

There is no dispute in the record but that the statutory five-mill levy and the statutory two-mill levy have been made and collected each year since the acquisition of the waterworks, and that the amount of taxes so levied and received, together with all of the receipts from water rentals and the like, has been sufficient to operate the plant and pay all of its indebtedness, and would, if used therefor, pay, with the exception of a few thousand dollars, all of the outstanding $260,000.00 of bonds issued for betterments and improvements; but the record also shows that if the five-mill tax had not been levied and collected, the water fund would have been overdrawn $584,660.00.

Authority to expend the money in the water fund is claimed by defendants-appellants to rest in Chapter 161 of the Acts of the 44th General Assembly of the state. A construction of the act in question will, therefore, dispose of the issues presented for determination. We set forth the Act, including its title, in full. It is as follows:

“Chapter 161
“Utilities in Certain Cities
“An Act to amend the law as it appears in chapter three hundred twelve (312) of the Code of Iowa, 1927, relating to heating plants, water or gas works and electric plants; to provide for and authorize the use of surplus earned from the opera *1035 tion of municipal water plants in cities of more than forty thousand (40,000) and less than fifty thousand (50,000), having a board of trustees managing such plant; to authorize the use of said surplus earnings in said cities for the purpose of acquiring property and erecting a building or buildings thereon for its use and for the use of other city departments or agencies.
“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Iowa:
“Section 1. That chapter three hundred twelve (312) of the Code of Iowa, 1927, be and the same is hereby amended by adding thereto the following:
“Any city having a population of over forty thousand (40,000) and less than fifty thousand (50,000) and having a board of waterworks trustees, and having a surplus earned from the operation of a municipal waterworks plant, may, by action of and under the supervision of such board of waterworks trustees, purchase, acquire, or accept possession of the necessary property, and may erect thereon such building or buildings as may be necessary for the proper maintenance of the business of said waterworks department, and it may erect from such surplus such additional building space for use of such other city departments as it may deem advisable, and until such time as the board may desire or need such additional space for its own uses it may rent such space to other city departments for their uses. ’ ’

It is conceded that Council Bluffs has a population of over 40,000 and less than 50,000, and has a Board of Waterworks Trustees. Whether it has a surplus earned from the operation of its municipal waterworks is the important question with which this court is confronted. It is a matter of first impression in this state, although we have heretofore considered, to some extent, the powers and duties of City Councils and Boards of Waterworks Trustees with respect to providing funds to discharge obligations .in connection with the purchase and operation of municipal waterworks. See Jensen v. Zurmuehlen, 185 Iowa 593.

The statute under consideration does not seem to be susceptible of more than one construction. It allows surplus earned from the operation of a municipal water plant to be used in certain specified ways. It does not allow surplus accumulated from taxation to be so used.

*1036 In 19 C. J., pages 853-854, “earnings” are said to be “That which is earned; money earned; the price of services performed; reward; the reward of labor or the price of personal service performed; the reward for personal services, whether in money or chattels; the frnit or reward of labor; the fruits.of-the proper skill, experience' and industry; the gains of a person derived from his services or labor without the aid of capital; money or property gained or merited by labor, service, or the performance of something; that which is gained or merited by labor, services or performances.”

Taxes are generally defined as enforced contributions' to provide for the support of the government. United States v. La Franca, 282 U. S. 568, 75 Law. Ed. 551: They are not debts but are monetary burdens placed upon individuals or their property for the support of the government. City, of Boston v. Revere Building, 177 N. E. 577 (Mass.). To say that enforced contributions are earnings is contrary to every reasonable analysis of the word and to every definition that can properly be given to the term.

■ The record discloses, without dispute, that the water fund has been kept in such a way as that the money derived from taxation and the money derived from other-sources has been commingled in one fund known as the water fund. It is apparent, therefore, that it cannot be said, as a matter of fact, that the money now on hand in the water fund constitutes surplus earned from the operation of the municipal water plant.

Section 6151-bl, Code of 1927, passed by the 42nd General Assembly, permitted the transfer of what was called “surplus earnings” from any municipal waterworks and the like.

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243 N.W. 161, 214 Iowa 1033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saltzman-v-city-of-council-bluffs-iowa-1932.