| O. HOW TO DISSOLVE A DISTRICT |
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| Section Summary |
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Applicable statutes set forth a
procedure for the dissolution of a public hospital district and
ensure that a district is not dissolved before all its debts are
paid off. A dissolution must be approved by a court, and if any
assets remain after all debts of the district have been repaid,
they are transferred to the school district or districts in which
the public hospital district is located.
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Court Approval |
| Procedural Steps |
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| Petition |
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To dissolve a district, a majority
of the board of commissioners must present a petition to the superior
court of the county in which the district is located.
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Petition |
| Hearing |
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Upon the filing of a petition for
dissolution, the superior court must enter an order setting a date
for a hearing on the matter. The hearing must be held not less than
thirty (30) days from the date of filing.
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Court Hearing |
The county clerk must give proper
notice of the hearing. The notice must be published in a newspaper
of general circulation in the county in which the district is located
and must run in the newspaper once a week for three (3) successive
weeks. The notice must also be posted in three (3) public places
in the county at least twenty-one (21) days before the hearing date.
At least one (1) of these notices must be posted in the district
itself. The notice should state the purpose of the hearing and the
date and place of the hearing.
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Proper Notice |
| Order Of Dissolution |
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After the court has held its hearing
on the dissolution, it will enter a court order dissolving or refusing
to dissolve the district. For a court to find that dissolution is
desirable, it must formally find that the best interests of all
persons concerned will be served by the proposed dissolution.
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Public Interest |
| If Solvent: Sale Of Assets
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If the court finds that the public
hospital district is financially solvent, it will order a sale of
all assets except cash. The county sheriff is responsible for carrying
out this sale. The sale proceeds, together with any cash on hand
must (after the payment of any costs and expenses) be paid to the
treasurer of the county and placed to the credit of the school district
or districts which are located within the public hospital district
boundaries.
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Asset Sale |
| Insolvency Issues, Generally
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If the court finds that the public
hospital district is financially insolvent , the court must determine
the extent and nature of the indebtedness of the district, including
an identification of the creditors and their claims. The court must
then set a date and place for a second hearing. This hearing must
be held not less than sixty (60) days nor more than one hundred
twenty (120) days from the first court hearing.
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Creditor
Identification |
The county clerk must give notice
of this second hearing by publication in a newspaper of general
circulation in the county in which the district is located. The
notice must be given at least twenty-one (21) days before the hearing.
Notice must also be given to all creditors and other interested
parties as the court may deem necessary or advisable. At least one
(1) notice must be posted in the district. The notice must announce
the filing of the petition, its purpose, the finding of the court
on the petition, and the purpose of the second hearing.
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Hearing Notice |
The purpose of this second hearing
is to determine “ways and means” of retiring the established
business indebtedness of the district and paying all costs and expenses
of any necessary insolvency proceeding. These “ways and means”
may include the levy of assessments against the property in the
district.
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Debt Retirement |
| Levy To Pay Deficit |
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At the second hearing, the court
has the authority to order the sale of any district property. If
the proceeds of this sale, together with any cash remaining on hand
to the credit of the district, are not sufficient to retire the
entire indebtedness together with all costs and expenses, then the
court has authority to order the district board of commissioners
to levy assessments in the manner provided by law against the property
in the district in the amounts sufficient to retire the indebtedness
and pay the costs and expenses.
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Levy to Pay
Deficit |
At the hearing, any property owner
within the district may appear and be heard for or against such
a levy.
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| Order Of Dissolution |
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After the indebtedness of the district
has been settled or paid, the court must then again decide the matter
of dissolution. The court must determine whether the best interests
of all persons concerned will be served by the proposed dissolution
and shall make a finding to this effect. The court will then enter
an order dissolving or refusing to dissolve the district.
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Order of
Dissolution |
Further Legal Background
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Oddly enough, there is no mention
of district dissolution in the public hospital district statute.
Instead, one must turn to chapter 53.48
RCW, “Dissolution of Port and Other Districts” for the
procedural steps.
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