Court Opinion

ID: 7823199
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 18:01:08.113265+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:47.647716
License: Public Domain

Steele Hays, Justice, dissenting. The chancellor correctly determined that these bonds were to be repaid entirely from funds derived from the convention center/hotel, however, he also held that no public purpose would be served by the facility and the majority has impliedly endorsed that position, which prompts these comments. In order to affirm the chancellor’s ruling with respect to the public purpose issue, our cases require a finding that the legislative branch acted arbitrarily and capriciously. Purvis v. Hubbell, Mayor, 273 Ark. 330, 620 S.W.2d 282 (1981); Miles v. Gordon, 234 Ark. 525, 353 S.W.2d 157 (1962); Kerr v. East Central Arkansas Housing Authority, 208 Ark. 625, 187 S.W.2d 189 (1945). In Murphy v. Epes, 283 Ark. 517, 678 S.W.2d 352 (1984) we said: [W]hether legislation fulfills a public purpose is a legislative decision and a court will reverse that decision only if the legislature acted arbitrarily, unreasonably or capriciously. The court should not substitute its own judgment for that of the legislature. Justice Dudley, concurring in Purvis v. City of Little Rock, 282 Ark. 102, 667 S.W.2d 936 (1984), said it aptly: The determination of whether a municipal undertaking fulfills a public purpose initially is an executive decision to be made at a local level. A court is hesitant to disagree with that local decision. Accordingly, we will reverse that decision only if the local government acted arbitrarily, unreasonably or capriciously. Here, the City of Ft. Smith spent three years and $70,000 considering methods of revitalizing its downtown. It had the benefit of studies from several competent sources. Seen as the major need was the lack of a headquarters hotel with overall convention facilities to be operated in conjunction with the Municipal Auditorium. There was a great deal of testimony from knowledgeable witnesses attesting to the usefulness of such a facility, which did not exist in Ft. Smith, and stressing the importance of a convention center complex in competing for tourist business. In sum: the complex is expected to create 225 construction jobs with an estimated $5,000,000 annual payroll, 250 permanent jobs with an estimated $3,000,000 annual payroll. The hotel will have reception facilities for 1,600 people, banquet facilities for 1,200, a ballroom, eight meeting rooms, a first-line dining room seating 110, atrium dining for 150, a lounge and club. The complex, expected to generate $287,000 annually in new sales tax and $432,000 in turnback funds, is described as “labor intense,” employing a high percentage of young and minority employees. The Municipal Auditorium, which has lost money consistently since 1970 ($97,000 in 1984) and the hotel, separated by “a few feet”, are expected to compliment each other. Unfortunately, the trial court made no real attempt to determine whether the benefits to be derived by Ft. Smith, which are considerable, outweigh those to be gained by the developers, assuming the venture succeeds. Granted, the operators would benefit over ten years by some three million dollars in interest expense if these bonds were upheld, but the City of Ft. Smith can expect to derive many times that amount in direct benefits alone, without attempting to evaluate the indirect benefits. The Ft. Smith complex is handled precisely as were the facilities in both Purvis cases, the city owns the facility and merely leases it to the developer on an extended basis. The lease period here is for an initial term of twenty-nine years, with options for seven additional terms of ten years each. In Purvis I the lease was for fifty-three years with options for a total of one hundred and three years. The legislature has given authority to cities to lease publicly owned property to private operators in a variety of instances (see Act 175 of 1961), and Act 142 of 1975 expressly includes not only the power to lease tourist facilities but the power to sell those facilities as well. Thus, even if it could be correctly said that this facility was privately owned and privately operated that would not, ipso facto, settle the issue of public purpose. Wayland v. Snapp, 232 Ark. 57, 334 S.W.2d 633 (1960); Lambert v. Wharf Improvement Dist. No. 1 of Helena, 174 Ark. 478, 295 S.W. 730 (1927). It hardly need be mentioned that tourism is of first importance to Arkansas. It is crucial to our economy, producing 1.7 billion dollars in 1984, a thirty percent increase over six years ago. The legislature has declared categorically that tourism is an industry and this court has placed its imprimatur on that policy. Purvis v. City of Little Rock, supra, p. 109. Yet here we find a convention complex in the strict sense, capable of housing 600 conventioneers and providing the expected accommodations, the only one of its kind in Ft. Smith, being rejected, not by the legislative branch, but by the judicial branch. I submit we are substituting our judgment for theirs, which we have repeatedly said is off-limits for the judicial branch. My views on the election issue are stated in a concurring opinion in Hot Springs v. Creviston, also decided today.