Judges: DUSTIN McDANIEL, Attorney General
Filed Date: 8/31/2007
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Lance Reynolds State Representative Post Office Box 477 Quitman, Arkansas 72131-0477
Dear Representative Reynolds:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion on whether A.C.A. §
*Page 2Approximately 30 years ago, the city of Heber Springs leased both real property and the structure thereon to a private corporation. A provision in that lease stated that the private corporation would have the option to purchase said real property the structure [sic] for a nominal amount after the bonds satisfied. Now the bonds are satisfied, the successor of the private corporation wants to exercise its option and buy the property as it is relocating out of the city.
Does Arkansas Code Ann. §
14-42-108 present any problem to the City of Heber Springs in conjunction with the sale of this property to private corporation [sic] considering there is nominal monetary consideration? (Additional consideration of course was the past economic benefit the city received by having the private corporation doing business in Heber Springs.)Does any other Code Section of applicable law prevent the City of Heber Springs from selling this property?
RESPONSE
As I stated in Op. Att'y Gen.
The statute you have cited provides in relevant part as follows:
(b)(1) It shall be unlawful for any city official or employee of any municipal corporation in this state to furnish or give to any person, concerns, or corporations any property belonging to the municipal corporation, or service from any public utility owned or operated by the municipal corporation, unless payment is made therefor to the municipal corporation at the usual and regular rates, and in the usual manner, except as provided in subsection (a) of this section.1
(c)(1) Any person violating the provisions of this section shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined in any sum not less than ten dollars ($10.00) nor more than two hundred fifty dollars ($250).(2) Conviction shall ipso facto remove the official or employee from the municipal office or position held by him and shall render him ineligible to thereafter hold any office or position under, or in connection with, the municipal corporation.
Your concern is apparently the prohibition in (b)(1) above, against the furnishing or giving of municipal property to corporations unless payment is made at the "usual rates" and in the "usual manner." As an initial matter, it may be debated whether the exercise of an option to purchase in connection with Act 9 bond property, even for a nominal consideration, amounts to the "furnishing" or "giving" of property to the corporation, or is factually "unusual" in amount or manner so as to transgress this provision. See, e.g., City of Fort Smith v. Daniels,supra (mentioning a nominal $100 consideration for purchase of the Act 9 bond property at issue in that case); Green v. City of MountPleasant,
It is not necessary to address that issue in my opinion, however, in light of the superseding nature of the provisions of Act 9. As noted in Op. Att'y. Gen.
This subchapter shall be liberally construed to accomplish its intent and purposes and shall be the sole authority required for the accomplishment of its purpose. To this end, it shall not be necessary to comply with general provisions of other laws dealing with public facilities, their acquisition, construction, leasing, encumbering, or disposition.
(Emphasis added).
As noted in Op. Att'y Gen.
Your question involves a municipality, not a county such as the one at issue in Dumas v. Jerry.
In my opinion, therefore, to the extent A.C.A. § 1224 supersedes that law with respect to Act 9 bond projects and property.
Additionally, as stated in Op. Att'y Gen.
Again, however, as noted above, I have not been provided with any of the applicable documents or surrounding facts in this regard. Although I have set out some discussion of the interplay of the applicable state statutes, to the extent the *Page 5 City needs legal advice on the particular transaction in question, it should look to its city attorney or other retained counsel.
Deputy Attorney General Elana C. Wills prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL Attorney General