Whitfield v. Grimes

294 N.W. 346, 229 Iowa 309
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 22, 1940
DocketNo. 45121.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 294 N.W. 346 (Whitfield v. Grimes) 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
Whitfield v. Grimes, 294 N.W. 346, 229 Iowa 309 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

In August 1936, plaintiff, acting as attorney and trustee for bondholders, brought this suit for a writ of mandamus.

The following allegations appear in his amended and substituted petition: Prior to March 1,1924, Chariton River Drainage District No. 1 was -established. On or about March 1, 1924, the board of supervisors of Wayne county caused to be issued and *311 sold drainage bonds wbicb were numbered serially. In 1929 and 1930, the bondholders, represented by plaintiff, purchased bonds No. 64 to No. 74, inclusive, in the principal sum of $7,400 due November 1, 1934, without notice of any defect and before any default in the payment of interest. The original assessment was levied in February 1924. This assessment was insufficient to pay the cost of the project and on September 10, 1925, an additional assessment was made under the authority of section 7479. There was an error in computation in the first assessment and as a result of this error the ameunt of the assessment was about $6,000 less than the cost of the project and the amount of the bonds issued when the additional assessment was made in September 1925. The error in the first assessment and other miscalculations had not been discovered by the board and the aggregate amount of both assessments was less than the cost of the project and amount of all the bonds issued. At all times the aggregate amount of the bonds has exceeded the total amount of the assessments. There was no default in any installment of interest on said bonds until on or about November 1, 1933; upon such default, plaintiff promptly had an audit made of the books of the drainage district, discovered thereby the reasons for such default, made demand as alleged in plaintiff’s amended and substituted petition, and thereafter, and within three (3) years of such default, brought this action for a writ of mandamus, to compel the necessary levy and assessment. The bonds provide that:

“It is Hereby Certified and Recited: That all acts, conditions, and things required to be done in locating and establishing said Drainage District, in the making and levying of said assessment against the lands and highways benefited thereby, and precedent to and in the issuing of this bond were and have been legally had, done, and performed; and that the total amount of bonds issued on account of said Drainage District does not now exceed the assessment so levied therefor, unpaid at the time said bonds are issued, nor any legal limitations thereon.
“For the Performance of all the covenants, recitals, and stipulations herein contained, and for the collection and application of the said assessments and of the interest thereon, and such other and further assessments authorized or required to provide *312 for the prompt payment of this bond and interest hereon, the faith and resources of said County are hereby fully pledged. ’ ’

The petition further alleged there was a continuing duty of the board of supervisors to make additional assessments necessary for full payment of the bonds. The bonds were presented for payment and payment refused. The assessments remaining unpaid, tax sale certificates and real estate owned by the district are not sufficient to pay the bonds owing to plaintiff. It is the duty of defendants to levy a sufficient assessment to pay the bonded indebtedness. Plaintiff requested and demanded defendants to levy and collect a sufficient assessment, as by law authorized and required, to pay the said bonded indebtedness, but defendants refused to make such additional levy.

The lands in the drainage district have never been assessed in an amount necessary to pay the bonds or the cost of the project.

I. Ground 3 of the motion to dismiss reads:

‘ ‘ 3. That the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief demanded for the reason that under the law the duty of the defendants herein to levy an additional assessment as prayed for in the plaintiff’s amended and substituted petition and amendment thereto is not a mandatory duty but permissible only.”

This ground has reference to Code section 7509, which reads:

“7509 Deficiency levy — additional bonds. If any levy of assessments is not sufficient to meet the interest and principal of outstanding bonds, additional assessments may be made on the same classification as the previous ones. Additional bond issues may be made when necessary to complete full payment for improvements, by the same proceedings as previous issues. ’ ’ (Italics supplied.)

Appellant’s first assignment i§ that the court erred in holding that an additional levy under said section was permissive only and not mandatory. The question is whether the word “may” is permissive or mandatory. We hold the word “may” should be interpreted as “shall” and that the statute is mandatory.

*313 We are of the opinion that the policy and intention of the legislature is that (1) drainage bonds shall be payable solely from taxes assessed against the lands in the district and (2) that the board of supervisors shall make assessments sufficient to pay the cost of the project and all bonds issued. This policy is expressed in sections 7479, 7504, 7505, 7509 and other sections in chapter 353, 1935 Code, and also in chapter 358-F1 [chapter 358.2, Code, 1939].

Code section 7504 provides that a drainage bond shall be paid only from taxes levied and collected on the lands within the district.

Code section 7479 reads:

“7479 Levy for deficiency. If the first assessment made by the board for the original cost or for repairs of any improvement is insufficient, the board shall make an additional assessment and levy in the same ratio as the first for either purpose, payable at the next taxpaying period after such indebtedness is incurred subject, however, to the provisions of section 7484.”

Code section 7505 provides that:

“In no ease shall the aggregate amount of all bonds issued exceed the benefits assessed. Such bonds shall not be issued for a greater amount than the aggregate amount of assessments for the payment of which they are issued, * * *. ”

The above sections are, without question, mandatory.

Section 7505 states that drainage bonds shall not be issued for a greater amount than the aggregate amount of assessments. In order to insure compliance with this mandatory provision and the mandatory requirement in section 7504 that the bonds be paid solely from assessments on lands in the district, the legislature enacted section 7509 providing for a deficiency levy. Section 7509 states that if any levy of assessments is not sufficient to meet the interest and principal of outstanding bonds, additional assessments may (shall) be made on the same classification as the previous ones. Chapter 358-F1 [chapter 358.2, Code, 1939] provides proceedings for the levy of an additional assess *314 ment if the prior assessments are not sufficient to pay defaulted drainage bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
294 N.W. 346, 229 Iowa 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitfield-v-grimes-iowa-1940.