Smith v. Robertson

41 S.E.2d 631, 210 S.C. 99, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 28, 1947
Docket15919
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 41 S.E.2d 631 (Smith v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Robertson, 41 S.E.2d 631, 210 S.C. 99, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 9 (S.C. 1947).

Opinion

E. D. Ride, AAJ.:

Pursuant to permission duly granted, this action was instituted in the original jurisdiction of this Court by the petitioner above named against the respondents above named to secure a permanent injunction against the issuance of certain bonds of Charleston County, the petition alleging that the act authorizing and directing the issuance of these bonds is unconstitutional, upon the various grounds therein set forth. The cause was heard by us upon the verified pleadings, including certain exhibits, and the arguments of counsel for the respective parties.

The factual allegations of the petition are admitted in the return, and the additional fkcts set forth in the return, as distinguished from mere opinions and legal conclusions, are not controverted by the petitioner. The petitioner is a resident, a citizen, freeholder and taxpayer of the County of Charleston and the State of South Carolina, and the respondents are the- County Board of Commissioners of Charleston County and The Medical College of the State of South Carolina. The latter is a corporate entity created by the General Assembly for the maintenance of a State owned Medical College, the management and control thereof being vested in a board of trustees, all of which will more fully appear by reference to Sections 5794 to 5799, both inclusive, Code 1942. The same will hereinafter sometimes be referred to as the Medical College.

The General Assembly of the State of South Carolina at the regular 1946 session duly adopted an act, approved by the Governor on March 25, 1946, and effective on that date, the same being designated as No. 603, Acts 1946, *104 page 1734; and might properly be called the appropriation act. For this act refers to a number of State institutions, including the Medical College, making appropriations for each one of them, the appropriation for the Medical College being in the sum of $1,500,000.00; the funds appropriated for this particular institution being “for hospital and clinical facilities” for use by it on a matching basis with funds to be furnished by the Federal Government. And the act provides with regard to all of these institutions, in substance, that none of the funds appropriated shall be spent for the acquisition or purchase of any land site on which buildings are to be erected, but that the respective buildings shall be erected on land now owned by the respective institutions, and if suitable land sites are not now owned (quoting) “the respective counties wherein such institution or institutions are located sha.ll furnish, at their own expense, such necessary land upon which said buildings are erected”.

Shortly thereafter, and at the same session of the General Assembly, an act was duly adopted which was approved by the Governor on April 3, 1946, and effective on that date, designated as No. 889, Acts 1946, page 2612; and this act will hereinafter be frequently called the bond act. And this is the act the constitutionality of which is attacked in the action at bar, the full title thereof being as follows:

“An Act to Give and Grant to Counties and Certain State Institutions the Right to Acquire Lands, by Purchase or Condemnation, for the Construction of New Hospital Buildings of Such State Institutions and for the Erection of Hospitals and/or Medical Centers in Such Counties; to Authorize and/or direct the Counties Authorized or Required to Furnish Such Lands ito Issue County Bonds in Amounts Sufficient to Pay the Acquisition Costs Thereof; and to Provide for the Levy of Taxes in Such Counties to Pay Principal and Interest of Any Bonds Issued Hereunder.”

This act, among other things, authorizes and directs the .County Board of Commissioners of every county which is *105 required to furnish land in connection with the construction of new buildings for any State institution, to issue negotiable coupon bonds of the county in'an amount sufficient to pay the total cost to such county of the land, together with the costs and expenses of its acquisition; such bonds to be general obligations of the County, the proper officers being directed to levy and collect annually a tax upon all taxable property in the county sufficient for the payment of the same.

Pursuant to this act the Board of Trustees of the Medical College, acting through the Dean thereof, notified the County Board of Commissioners of Charleston County in writing of their plans to construct a teaching hospital, to be used in conjunction with the activities of the Medical College, and requested the County Board to make available to it, as a site for the same, a tract of land in the City of Charleston encompassed by Rucas Street on the west, Doughty Street on the north, Ashley Avenue on the east, and Mill Street on the south. In accordance with this request the County Board held a meeting on January 13, 1947, and duly adopted a resolution, a full copy of which is attached to the petition herein as an exhibit thereto. This resolution provides for the issuance by Charleston County of $350,000-.00 general obligation bonds as described in the bond act, the proceeds of which are to be used to acquire the site for the teaching hospital, and the bonds, both principal and interest, are to be payable from a direct ad valorem tax upon all taxable property in the County of Charleston. The resolution, however, specifically-stipulates that the bonds in question shall neither be advertised for sale nor issued until the Chairman of the County Board shall receive from the Board of Trustees of the Medical College “a certificate, certifying that there is available to said Board the sum of not less than Four Million ($4,000,000.00) Dollars, and that said sum has been irrevocably allocated to the construction and equipment of a Teaching Hospital to be located on the site contemplated by this Resolution”.

*106 The resolution also recites that the estimated cost of acquiring the site is $350,000.00 and that the Board has determined that this site is a suitable one, and has found as a fact that the construction by the Medical College of this hospital in the County of Charleston (quoting) “would be of especial and peculiár benefit to the residents of Charleston County in the enjoyment of the improved hospital facilities thus provided, and that the' location of such hospital in said County, will be of special benefit to the property owners therein to an extent greater than the amount to be expended by said County in providing the land to make the construction of the hospital possible”.

The bond act, the constitutionality of which is questioned in this action, contains, as hereinbefore indicated, the following limitation with reference to the amount of the bonds, to wit, that they shall not exceed “an amount sufficient to pay the total cost to the county of said land together with the costs and expenses of the acquisition thereof, whether by purchase or condemnation”.

The petition raises in proper form several objections to the constitutionality of the bond act, expressly alleging that it is in violation'of certain provisions of the State and Fed7 eral Constitutions. These objections are five in number, but in view of petitioner’s brief we think they may be treated as making four questions to be considered and answered by us.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.E.2d 631, 210 S.C. 99, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-robertson-sc-1947.