Wickey v. Muscatine County

46 N.W.2d 32, 242 Iowa 272, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 6, 1951
Docket47734
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 46 N.W.2d 32 (Wickey v. Muscatine County) 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
Wickey v. Muscatine County, 46 N.W.2d 32, 242 Iowa 272, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 416 (iowa 1951).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

The statute involved herein, in addition to the matters noted in the foreword of this opinion, provides that: the contract for the construction of the hospital shall be awarded after competitive bidding; it sháll be managed by a board of trustees, receiving their expenses, but no compensation; the board may employ, fix the compensation and remove at pleasure professional, technical and other employees, skilled or unskilled, as it may deem necessary for the operation and maintenance of the hospital, and it shall order and approve all disbursements of funds in its administration; it shall make all rules and regulations governing board meetings, and the operation of the hospital and shall fix all rates, fees and charges for the services furnished “so that .the revenues will be at all' times sufficient in the aggregate to provide for the payment of the interest on and principal' of all bonds that may be issued and outstanding under the provisions of this Act, and for the payment of all operating <md maintenance expenses of the hospital“for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, equipping, enlarging or improving such *275 hospital or any part thereof, any such county may, pursuant to resolution of the board of supervisors of such county, from time to time issue and dispose of its negotiable interest-bearing revenue bonds payable solely as to both principal and interest from the revenues to be derived' from the operation of such hospital”; the resolution may fix the maturity of the bonds not exceeding thirty years from their respective dates, and the rate of interest they may bear, not exceeding five per cent a year, payable semiannually; after the adoption of the resolution authorizing the hospital and the bond" issue, the county auditor shall publish notice thereof, giving the amount of the bond issue, in at least one newspaper of general circulation in the county, once each week for two consecutive weeks; if within twenty days following the first publication of the notice a petition — presumably of protest, though the statute does not state — is filed with the county auditor signed by qualified voters of the county to the number of twenty per cent or more of the total vote at the last preceding election for Governor, then the bonds so authorized shall not be issued unless and until the proposition to issue them shall have been submitted at an election throughout the county and approved by not less than sixty per cent of the votes east; if such petition is filed it shall be referred to the board of supervisors at its next meeting, and it may either repeal the bond resolution or order an election, called and conducted as provided by chapter 345 of the Code of Iowa; if there be no petition filed or if the proposition is approved at such election then the board of supervisors “may proceed with the acquisition, construction, equipment, operation and maintenance of the county hospital and issuance of bonds in connection therewith, all as in this Act permitted and provided; under no circumstances shall any bonds issued under the provisions of this act be or become an indebtedness of the county within the purview of any constitutional or statutory limitation or provision, and it shall be plainly stated on the face of each bond that it does not constitute such an indebtedness, but is payable solely from the revenues aforesaid”; the bonds shall be sold in the manner -and upon such terms as are prescribed in the authorizing resolution; the resolution may contain such covenants as the board of supervisors may determine to be desirable in connection with the use and application of *276 the bond proceeds, the operation of the hospital, and the custody and application of the .revenues; the sole remedy for any breach or default of - the terms of the bonds or in their issuance shall be by mandamus in a court of competent jurisdiction to compel performance and compliance therewith.

As section 3 of the Act (now section 347A.3 of the 1950 Code, I. C. A.) is the pertinent and important part of the legislation, in the instant case, we set it out in full, to wit:

“Tax for maintenance and operation. If in any year, after payment of the accruing interest on and principal due of any revenue bonds issued hereunder from the revenues derived from the operation of such hospital, there be a balance of such revenues insufficient to pay the expenses of operation and maintenance of the county hospital the board of hospital trustees shall certify that fact as soon as ascertained to the board of supervisors of such county, and thereupon it shall be the duty of such board of supervisors to make the amount of such deficiency for paying the expenses of operation and maintenance of the county hospital available from other county funds or, the board' ■ of supervisors of such county shall levy a tax not to exceed four mills in any one year on all the taxable property in said county in an amount sufficient for that purpose, it being conditioned that no general county funds or the proceeds of any taxes shall ever be used or applied to the payment of the interest on or principal of any bonds issued under the provisions of this chapter, but that such general county funds or proceeds of taxes may only be used and applied to pay such expenses of operation and maintenance of the county hospital as cannot be paid from available revenue derived from such operation.”

Code section 347A.4 (section 4 of the Act) states that chapter 347A of the Code shall be construed as an alternative and independent method for the “acquisition, construction, equipment, enlargement, improvement, operation and maintenance of a county hospital, and for the issuance and sale of revenue bonds in connection therewith, and shall not be construed as an amendment of or subject to the provisions of any other law.” The “other law” referred to is probably chapter 347, Code of 1950, entitled “County Public Hospitals.” The hospitals, therein *277 provided for, are established and maintained by general ad valorem taxes.

On September 8, 1947, the board of supervisors of the defendant passed and approved a resolution of seventeen sections, authorized by chapter 192 of the Fifty-second General Assembly, and recited therein that it was “deemed necessary and advisable that the county of Muscatine * * * acquire, construct, equip, operate and maintain a county public hospital for the health and general welfare of the citizens of said county.” It authorized the issuance of negotiable County Public Hospital Revenue Bonds, to the aggregate principal amount of $1,000,000 payable in specified annual amounts from 1951 to 1977 inclusive, with rate of interest to be determined. It set out a copy of the proposed bond, which recites that it and all other bonds issued are “payable solely and only from the revenues to be derived from said hospital, a sufficient portion of which revenues has been pledged and ordered set aside as a special fund .for that purpose and identified as the ‘County Hospital Bond and Interest Redemption Account.’ This bond and the series of which it forms a part do not constitute an indebtedness of said county within the meaning of any constitutional provisions or- limitations, and said county shall not be obligated to pay the same or any interest thereon except from the special fund aforesaid derived from the revenues of said hospital.”

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.W.2d 32, 242 Iowa 272, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickey-v-muscatine-county-iowa-1951.