Heather Young, Del Holland, and Blake Hendrickson v. The Iowa City Community School District, Chris Lynch, LaTasha DeLoach, Brian Kirschling, and Paul Roesler ( 2019 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 18–1427
    Filed October 18, 2019
    HEATHER YOUNG, DEL HOLLAND, and BLAKE HENDRICKSON,
    Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
    vs.
    THE IOWA CITY COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT; CHRIS LYNCH,
    Individually and in His Capacity as President of the Board of Directors and
    Director; LaTASHA DeLOACH, Individually and in Her Capacity as
    Director of the Iowa City Community School District; BRIAN
    KIRSCHLING, Individually and in His Capacity as Director of the Iowa City
    Community School District; and PAUL ROESLER, Individually and in His
    Capacity as Director of the Iowa City Community School District,
    Appellees/Cross-Appellants.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Sean
    McPartland, Judge.
    Plaintiffs appeal, and defendants cross-appeal, from portions of a
    district court order granting a summary judgment in plaintiffs’ action for
    injunctive relief and damages arising from defendants’ decision not to
    submit to the county election commissioner plaintiffs’ ballot proposal
    regarding the demolition of a local elementary school.      AFFIRMED IN
    PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
    Gregg Geerdes, Iowa City, for appellants/cross-appellees.
    Andrew J. Bracken, Kristy M. Latta, and Emily A. Kolbe of Ahlers &
    Cooney, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees/cross-appellants.
    2
    APPEL, Justice.
    In this case, we consider a series of claims arising out of the refusal
    of the Iowa City Community School District (school district or Board) to
    authorize the placement of a ballot issue at an election to be held on
    September 12, 2017, after a petition bearing over 2000 signatures had
    been timely filed with the Board. The ballot measure would have asked
    the voters whether they approved the demolition of Hoover Elementary
    School and the use of the proceeds for school district purposes.
    After the Board refused to direct the county auditor to place the
    matter on the ballot in the upcoming election, the plaintiffs filed suit in
    district court.       The plaintiffs sought a writ of certiorari, a writ of
    mandamus, injunctive relief, and damages against the school district and
    individual board members who voted against placing the measure on the
    ballot.   The defendants answered and filed a counterclaim seeking
    declaratory relief.
    The district court entered an injunction directing the defendants to
    place the matter on the ballot. Because absentee ballots had already been
    issued, the district court directed that the matter be placed on the next
    general election ballot following September 12. The district court granted
    the defendants summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ claims for damages
    and any other relief.
    The plaintiffs appealed. The plaintiffs seek reversal of the district
    court order declining to award damages for alleged violations of the United
    States Constitution.
    The defendants cross-appealed.           In their cross-appeal, the
    defendants claim that the district court erred in determining that, under
    state law, the school district was required to place the ballot measure
    supported by the petitioners on the ballot.
    3
    For the reasons expressed below, we conclude that the district court
    erred in granting the plaintiffs injunctive relief.    We conclude that the
    defendants were entitled to summary judgment on all claims. As a result,
    we affirm in part, and reverse in part, the order of the district court. We
    remand the case to the district court for dismissal.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background.
    A. Factual Background. In 2013, the board of directors of the Iowa
    City Community School District adopted a “Facilities Master Plan” (FMP).
    The demolition of Hoover Elementary School and the construction of a
    structure to become part of Iowa City High School on the former Hoover
    Elementary site was part of the FMP.
    The school district sought voter approval of a $191 million bond
    issue to finance the execution of the FMP.        The election was set for
    September 12, 2017.       The school district intended to keep Hoover
    Elementary School open through the 2018–2019 school year after which
    it would be closed, the building demolished, and the site used for other
    purposes by Iowa City High School.
    On June 29, 2017, the plaintiffs filed a petition with the school
    district seeking to require the district to also place on the September 12
    ballot a narrow question. Specifically, the petition asked that the following
    question be placed on the September 12 ballot:
    Shall the Iowa City Community School District . . . demolish
    the building known as Hoover Elementary School . . . after the
    2018-2019 school year, with the proceeds of any resulting
    salvage to be applied as specified in Iowa Code section
    297.22(b)?
    Prior to receipt of the petition, the school district sought the advice
    of counsel regarding the legality of the proposed ballot measure. In a letter
    dated June 22, 2017, the Board’s counsel advised that the question the
    4
    petitioners sought to place on the ballot was not “authorized by law” under
    Iowa Code section 278.2(1) (2017). According to the June 22 opinion, the
    demolition of Hoover Elementary School was not a “sale, lease, or other
    disposition” of a schoolhouse subject to submission to the voters under
    Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b). The opinion emphasized that while in 2008
    the Iowa legislature amended the Code to define “dispose” or “disposition”
    to “include[] the exchange, transfer, demolition, or destruction of any real
    or other property of the corporation,” the legislature deleted that provision
    the next year.    According to the legal opinion, the legislative history
    “expresses a clear legislative intent to remove from the voters decision
    making authority over demolition of school district owned structures.”
    After receipt of the petition on June 29, the Board requested a
    supplemental and expanded opinion from counsel, which was provided in
    a letter dated July 6, 2017. The July 6 opinion repeated the legislative
    history cited in the original June 22 opinion but further cited definitions
    of dispose and disposition found in Merriam Webster Law Dictionary and
    Black’s Law Dictionary as having the common denominator of “the transfer
    of ownership and control of property to another person or entity.”
    Further, the July 6 legal opinion noted that under Iowa Code section
    278.1(1)(b), the voters must vote on the “application to be made of the
    proceeds.” As a result, according to the opinion, a disposition involves a
    transaction for monetary gain. The FMP, however, included an estimated
    cost of demolition at $500,000. The July 6 legal opinion additionally noted
    that the possibility of placing any demolition before the voters would
    “hamstring a district’s ability to properly manage and utilize its properties
    for the benefit of the school community.”
    Regarding proposed next steps for the Board, the July 6 legal
    opinion stated that it was “not wholly clear” how the Board should proceed
    5
    with the petition and recommended that the Board reject the petition as
    not “authorized by law,” notify the county commissioner of elections of the
    filing of the petition and the Board’s action, and direct that the measure
    not be on the ballot in September. In the alternative, the legal opinion
    stated that a member of the Board could file an objection to the petition
    under Iowa Code section 277.7.
    After receiving the advice of counsel, the Board voted against placing
    the plaintiffs’ narrow question on the September 12 ballot.
    B. Proceedings Before District Court.
    1. The   plaintiffs’   petition   and   the   defendants’   answer   and
    counterclaim. On July 17, 2017, the plaintiffs brought an action in district
    court seeking a writ of certiorari, a writ of mandamus, temporary and
    permanent injunctive relief, and declaratory relief.          The plaintiffs also
    prayed for damages, attorneys’ fees, interest, and court costs. The gist of
    the petition was that the defendants refused to submit a legally sufficient
    petition to the Johnson County Commissioner of Elections, thereby
    depriving the plaintiffs and voters of the opportunity to vote on the ballot
    measure. The defendants filed an answer generally denying the material
    allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition.
    The plaintiffs amended their petition on September 8 to include a
    claim for damages under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988. The defendants
    answered the amended petition and filed a counterclaim seeking
    declaratory relief. The defendants asserted in their counterclaim that the
    demolition of the school was not a disposition under Iowa Code sections
    297.22(1) or 278.1(1)(b). Further, the defendants suggested that a vote
    rejecting the demolition of a school building at the direction of the voters
    would not constrain the Board from exercising its independent power to
    do so.
    6
    2. Issuance of temporary injunction.        The district court held a
    hearing on the plaintiffs’ application for temporary injunction on
    August 24, 2017. The plaintiffs argued, among other things, that they had
    established a likelihood of success on the merits, that the right to vote was
    threatened by the Board’s actions and inactions, and that the balance of
    harms favored the entry of a temporary injunction placing the matter on
    the September 12 ballot and enjoining the defendants from demolishing
    Hoover until the referendum is held. The plaintiffs further asked that all
    early ballots filed for the September 12 ballot be invalidated as they did
    not present the ballot measure sought by the plaintiffs. The defendants
    responded that there was little likelihood that the plaintiffs would prevail
    on the merits, that they lacked standing to bring the action, that no right
    of action existed under applicable statutes, and that the public would be
    harmed if the Board was not allowed to conduct its business as planned.
    On September 6, 2017, the district court entered its order on the
    temporary injunction matter. At the outset, the district court found that
    the plaintiffs had standing to seek enforcement of applicable statutes and
    that the plaintiffs had a private right of action to enforce them. The district
    court further concluded that the Board was legally constrained in its
    challenge to the petition by its failure to file an objection under Iowa Code
    section 277.7 and that it lacked authority to unilaterally determine the
    petition was unauthorized by law.
    Turning to the question of whether a temporary injunction should
    be granted, the district court found that the plaintiffs demonstrated
    substantial injury or damages would result if an injunction was not
    granted. The district court granted the plaintiffs a temporary injunction
    requiring the Board to direct the Johnson County Commissioner of
    Elections to place the plaintiffs’ ballot measure before the voters at the
    7
    next regular election.      Further, the district court denied the plaintiffs’
    request   to   invalidate    early   ballots    cast   in    connection   with   the
    September 12,     2017      election;   to     place   the   referendum    on    the
    September 12 ballot; or, in the alternative, to schedule a special election
    on the matter.     Additionally, the district court declined to enter an
    injunction preventing the Board from demolishing Hoover, noting that
    there were no immediate plans to do so. Following the district court’s
    temporary injunction, the voters in Johnson County approved the FMP at
    the September 2017 general election.
    3. Ruling on motions for summary judgment.                 The parties filed
    comprehensive competing motions for summary judgment.                      In their
    summary judgment papers, the plaintiffs sought rulings from the district
    court that (a) the defendants violated state election laws; (b) the defendants
    violated both 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and § 1985; (c) no defendant has qualified
    immunity; (d) no defendant has absolute immunity; (e) the plaintiffs are
    entitled to damages that the court should calculate and assess against the
    defendants, jointly and severally, including actual, nominal, presumed
    substantial, and punitive, as well as attorneys’ fees, interest, expenses,
    and court costs, or, in the alternative, schedule a hearing on damages; (f)
    demolition of a schoolhouse is a disposition of the same under all
    applicable statutes; (g) if a majority vote against the ballot measure,
    preservation is binding on the defendants; (h) the temporary injunction
    previously entered should be expanded and made permanent, the bond
    exonerated, and the plaintiffs given other appropriate relief to protect
    against further deprivation and dissipation of their constitutional rights;
    and (i) the affirmative defenses asserted by the defendants are without
    merit as a matter of law.
    8
    In turn, the defendants filed a generally mirror-image motion
    seeking summary judgment in the defendants favor on all issues raised by
    the plaintiffs. In addition, the defendants sought rulings from the district
    court that (a) the plaintiffs lack standing to litigate; (b) the plaintiffs do not
    have a private right of action under Iowa Code sections 278.1 or 297.22 to
    bring the action; (c) the term “disposition” does not include demolition of
    a school building; (d) the plaintiffs’ claims are moot; (e) the plaintiffs’
    claims are time barred as the Board has approved the FMP; and (f) it is the
    role of the Board, and not the plaintiffs, to make decisions regarding
    demolition of a school building.
    After a hearing, the district court entered an order on the motions
    for summary judgment on April 26, 2018. At the outset, the district court
    found that the plaintiffs were entitled to the remedy already provided
    under Iowa election law directing the Board to place the matter on the next
    general election ballot but denied any relief beyond that already ordered.
    As part of its order, the district court repeated its earlier conclusion that
    the term “disposition” within the scope of Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b)
    encompasses demolition. Further, the district court extended its previous
    injunction to prohibit the Board from taking any steps to demolish or
    otherwise dispose of Hoover Elementary School prior to the vote.
    The district court denied the plaintiffs summary judgment on their
    42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985 claims. The district court held that there was
    no evidence in the record to support the plaintiffs’ claims of violation of
    their right to vote or First Amendment rights. On their due process claims,
    the district court found that procedural due process was satisfied through
    the court hearing and action, as the plaintiffs have obtained the requested
    relief of having the proposition placed on the ballot.          With respect to
    substantive due process, the district court concluded that nothing in the
    9
    record shocks the conscience of the court or interferes with rights implicit
    in ordered liberty. The district court further found no conspiracy to violate
    constitutional rights of the plaintiffs, noting that all the actions of the
    defendants were taken in connection with regularly held Board meetings
    and discussions were part of the Board’s responsibilities.
    The district court also considered the question of whether the
    defendants were entitled to qualified immunity.          The district court
    concluded that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity as a
    matter of law because they were not acting outside the clearly established
    scope of their discretionary authority.
    The district court considered whether the vote on the ballot
    proposition submitted to the voters would be binding on the Board. In its
    narrative, the district court stated that a “yes” vote on the proposition
    would require the school district to proceed with demolition. Meanwhile,
    the district court indicated that if “no” prevailed, nothing in the language
    of the proposition would require preservation of the Hoover building. Yet,
    the district court ended its discussion by concluding that the binding
    nature and effect of an eventual vote was not ripe for adjudication.
    4. Additional ruling of the district court. In its ruling on the motions
    for summary judgment, the district court asked the parties to make written
    submissions to the court regarding whether any issues remain open for
    resolution now and identifying what specific issues remain going forward
    for trial. The plaintiffs responded that the district court should make the
    injunction permanent and exonerate the cash bond posted by the
    plaintiffs, clarify its ruling regarding the impact of a no vote on the Board,
    and award the plaintiffs attorneys’ fees and the costs of the action. The
    defendants responded that no further issues remained for trial and the
    10
    case could be closed. In response, the district court released the bond but
    denied further relief.
    5. Appeals.    The plaintiffs filed a timely notice of appeal of all
    adverse rulings. The defendants cross-appealed.
    II. Standard of Review.
    We review rulings on motions for summary judgment for correction
    of errors at law. Winger Contracting Co. v. Cargill, Inc., 
    926 N.W.2d 526
    ,
    535 (Iowa 2019); Morris v. Steffes Grp., Inc., 
    924 N.W.2d 491
    , 495 (Iowa
    2019). Where constitutional issues are involved, however, review is de
    novo. Weizberg v. City of Des Moines, 
    923 N.W.2d 200
    , 211 (Iowa 2018);
    Rolfe State Bank v. Gunderson, 
    794 N.W.2d 561
    , 564 (Iowa 2011).
    III. Discussion.
    A. Meaning of “Disposition” Under Iowa Code Section 278.1.
    1. Introduction. A threshold issue in this litigation is whether the
    district court was required to instruct the county auditor to place the
    plaintiffs’ question raised in its petition on the November 2017 general
    election ballot. Two key provisions in the Iowa Code are controlling.
    Iowa Code section 278.1 empowers voters of a school district to
    decide certain issues. Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b) provides,
    The voters at the regular election shall have the power to []
    ....
    . . . direct the sale, lease, or other disposition of any
    schoolhouse or school site . . . and the application to be made
    of the proceeds thereof.
    Iowa Code section 278.2 provides the manner in which citizens may
    place questions within the scope of Iowa Code section 278.1 on the ballot.
    In order for citizens to require the school board to place a question on the
    ballot under Iowa Code section 278.1, a petition conforming to the
    11
    standards outlined in Iowa Code section 278.2 must be presented to the
    school board with the signatures of the requisite number of voters. If such
    a provision is presented to the board, Iowa Code section 278.2 states that
    “[t]he board . . . shall[] direct the county commissioner of elections to
    provide in the notice of the regular election for the submission of any
    proposition authorized by law to the voters.”
    There is no dispute that the petition presented by the plaintiffs in
    this case has the requisite number of signatures.       The fighting issue,
    however, is whether the plaintiffs’ proposed ballot question concerns a
    disposition of property entitling them to present the issue to the voters.
    2. Preservation of statutory interpretation question in the district
    court. The plaintiffs claim that the defendants failed to preserve in the
    district court the question of whether a demolition is a disposition under
    Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b). The defendants raised the issue in their
    brief resisting the motion for injunction and again in their brief in support
    of summary judgment. The district court also explicitly ruled upon the
    issue in its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and ruling on application
    for temporary injunction and incorporated the ruling in its ruling on
    motions for summary judgment. We find the issue has been adequately
    preserved. Lamasters v. State, 
    821 N.W.2d 856
    , 864 (Iowa 2012) (“Where
    the trial court’s ruling, as here, expressly acknowledges that an issue is
    before the court and then the ruling necessarily decides that issue, that is
    sufficient to preserve error.”); see also Meier v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    ,
    540 (Iowa 2002) (“The claim or issue raised does not actually need to be
    used as the basis for the decision to be preserved, but the record must at
    least reveal the court was aware of the claim or issue and litigated it.”);
    Metz v. Amoco Oil Co., 
    581 N.W.2d 597
    , 600 (Iowa 1998) (“Our preservation
    12
    rule requires that issues must be presented to and passed upon by the
    district court before they can be raised and decided on appeal.”).
    The plaintiffs also assert that the defendants are not entitled to relief
    because they failed to file objections to the petition with the objections
    committee or failed to bring a declaratory action in district court after the
    plaintiffs presented their petition. See Berent v. City of Iowa City, 
    738 N.W.2d 193
    , 197–201 (Iowa 2007). This procedural question—akin to an
    exhaustion requirement—is separately considered in division III.B below.
    3. Positions of the parties.    The plaintiffs maintain that the term
    “other disposition” includes demolition of an existing school building. The
    plaintiffs point to Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, which
    states that “disposition” includes “the act or the power of disposing” and
    “dispose of” means “to get rid of, throw away, discard.” According to the
    plaintiffs, disposition in Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b) includes action “to
    get rid of” of a building and “to get rid of” a building includes demolition.
    The plaintiffs assert they are using an ordinary rather technical approach
    to interpretation of the statute and cite State v. Tarbox, 
    739 N.W.2d 850
    ,
    853–54 (Iowa 2007) for that proposition.
    The plaintiffs further note that under Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b),
    the voters may direct the disposition of a “schoolhouse or school site.” By
    including separate terms for schoolhouse and school site in the statute,
    the plaintiffs maintain that the legislature must have intended that the
    term “disposition” applies to disposition of a schoolhouse that does not
    involve disposition of the site; in other words, demolition of a schoolhouse
    absent sale of the underlying site.
    The plaintiffs additionally assert that the school district is
    inconsistent in its treatment of the term “other disposition” (and “dispose
    of”) in related statutes.   The plaintiffs claim that the school district
    13
    interprets the term “dispose of” in Iowa Code section 297.22 (describing
    the power of the school board to “dispose of, in whole or in part, a
    schoolhouse, school site, or other property belonging to the district”) to
    include demolition, but then interprets the term “other disposition” in Iowa
    Code section 278.1(1)(b) (describing the power of voters to “direct the sale,
    lease, or other disposition of any schoolhouse or school site or other
    property belonging to the corporation”) to not include demolition.
    Finally, the plaintiffs assert that to the extent the statute is
    ambiguous, it should be liberally interpreted to promote citizen access to
    the ballot.   In support of their argument, the plaintiffs cite Devine v.
    Wonderlich, 
    268 N.W.2d 620
    (Iowa 1978) (en banc). In Devine, this court
    emphasized the fundamental nature of the right to vote in elections for
    officeholders such as county supervisor. 
    Id. at 623.
    In contrast, the defendants claim that the demolition of a building
    is not an “other disposition” of property under Iowa Code section
    278.1(1)(b). In support of their argument, the defendants argue that “other
    disposition” does not include demolition because the statute gives voters
    the power not simply to direct disposition of the property but also to direct
    “the   application   to   be   made   of   the   proceeds   thereof.”   Iowa
    Code § 278.1(1)(b). Demolition, the defendants note, is not a process that
    leads to proceeds.
    The defendants do not shy away from a battle of dictionaries. The
    defendants point out that the Merriam Webster Law Dictionary defines
    “disposition” as “transfer to the care or possession of another” and “dispose
    of” as “to transfer to the control or ownership of another.” Further, the
    defendants note that Black’s Law Dictionary defines “disposition” as “[the]
    act of disposing; transferring to the care or possession of another” and
    “dispose of” as “to alienate or direct the ownership of property, as
    14
    disposition by will . . . to exercise finally, in any manner, one’s power of
    control over; to pass into control of someone else; to alienate, relinquish,
    part with, or get rid of; to put out of the way; to finish with; to bargain
    away.”
    The defendants further note that the Iowa legislature in 2008
    enacted legislation providing a definition of “other disposition” and
    “dispose of” for purposes of Iowa Code sections 278.1 and 297.22 that
    included “demolition.” See 2008 Iowa Acts ch. 1148, §§ 1–2 (codififed at
    Iowa Code § 278.1(1)(b) and § 297.22 (2009)). This legislation, however,
    was repealed the following session. See 2009 Iowa Acts ch. 10, §§ 1–2, 4
    (codified at Iowa Code § 278.1(1)(b) and § 297.22 (Supp. 2009)). According
    to the defendants, the history of the adoption and then rejection of a
    legislative definition of the term “disposition” that included demolition
    demonstrates a legislative intent not to include demolition within the scope
    of the statutes. See Summerhays v. Clark, 
    509 N.W.2d 748
    , 751 (Iowa
    1993) (en banc) (finding that removal of a word from a statute indicates
    desire to narrow its scope).
    The defendants note that the Board has broad and exclusive power
    to determine the location of a schoolhouse under Iowa Code sections 297.1
    and 279.11. See Kinney v. Howard, 
    133 Iowa 94
    , 96, 
    110 N.W. 282
    , 283
    (1907) (holding the relocation of the schoolhouse site “was a matter for the
    school board of the township” pursuant to Iowa Code sections 2773 (now
    section 297.1) and 2801 (1897) and could not be questioned by
    injunction). According to the defendants, the ability to determine that
    Hoover Elementary should be located at another location implies the
    ability to use its current location for other purposes, including demolition
    and use of the site for other school purposes.
    15
    Finally, the defendants assert that Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b)
    should not be interpreted to vest the voters with the power of referendum
    for every demolition of school property.    According to the defendants,
    under the plaintiffs’ theory, any demolition of, say, a wall or a part of a
    building (as happens with renovations and routine maintenance) could
    trigger a voting process.
    4. Discussion. If a statute is unambiguous, we look no further than
    the express language of the statute. See State v. Howse, 
    875 N.W.2d 684
    ,
    691 (Iowa 2016); State v. Tesch, 
    704 N.W.2d 440
    , 451 (Iowa 2005). If the
    statute is ambiguous, however, we use a variety of methods, including
    traditional tools of statutory construction, to determine the meaning of the
    statute. State v. Doe, 
    903 N.W.2d 347
    , 351 (Iowa 2017); State v. Nall, 
    894 N.W.2d 514
    , 518 (Iowa 2017).
    A statute is ambiguous if “reasonable minds could differ or be
    uncertain as to the meaning of a statute.” Holiday Inns Franchising, Inc. v.
    Branstad, 
    537 N.W.2d 724
    , 728 (Iowa 1995); see also State v. McIver, 
    858 N.W.2d 699
    , 703 (Iowa 2015). Further, we have stated that “[w]ords are
    often chameleons, drawing their color from the context in which they are
    found.” Rolfe State 
    Bank, 794 N.W.2d at 564
    . Ambiguity may arise not
    only from words themselves but “from the general scope and meaning of a
    statute when all its provisions are examined.” Carolan v. Hill, 
    553 N.W.2d 882
    , 887 (Iowa 1996).
    Upon our review of Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b), we conclude the
    term “other disposition” is ambiguous. It certainly could reasonably be
    interpreted to include demolition of buildings.    On the other hand, in
    context, it could also reasonably be interpreted to include transactions
    involving only the transfer or exchange of ownership of schoolhouses,
    school sites, and other school district property, but not mere demolition.
    16
    We do not find a number of the arguments advanced by the parties
    regarding this question to be very persuasive. For example, we do not find
    that the amendments to Iowa Code sections 278.1 and 297.22 definitions
    that occurred in 2008 and 2009 are dispositive regarding legislative intent.
    In 2008, the legislature amended language in the Iowa Code to authorize
    the board of directors of a school district to dispose of school property and
    prohibited voters from taking action contrary to the board for a one year
    period.   See 2008 Iowa Acts ch. 1148, §§ 1–3 (codified at Iowa Code
    § 278.1, § 297.22, and § 297.25 (2009)).         Among other things, the
    legislation specifically defined “dispose” and “disposition” to include “the
    exchange, transfer, demolition, or destruction of any real or other property
    of the corporation.” 
    Id. § 1
    (codified at Iowa Code § 278.1(1)(b) (2009))
    (emphasis added).
    If this definition remained in the Code today, this litigation would
    not have arisen. But in 2009, the legislature repealed the changes made
    in 2008, including the definition of dispose and disposition that specifically
    included demolition. 2009 Iowa Acts ch. 10, §§ 1–4 (codified at Iowa Code
    § 278.1(1)(b), § 297.22, and § 297.25). The repeal did not simply remove
    a term from a legislative definition, but repealed the entire legislative
    definition along with other provisions of the statute. 
    Id. The end
    result
    was that the law was returned to its pre-2008 position, not only on
    definitional issues, but on issues related to the power of voters and school
    boards that were also addressed in the 2008 legislation.
    While the school district argues that the repeal demonstrates that
    the legislature intended to exclude demolition, we think this conclusion
    does not necessarily follow. The legislature certainly decided that it was
    unsatisfied with the changes enacted in 2008, but the changes in 2008,
    however, included an expansion of the power of school boards and a
    17
    limitation on the power of voters in connection with disposition of all
    manner of school property. The legislature apparently decided to return
    the law to its prior state which, as we have observed, is ambiguous. It is
    not clear whether the 2008 legislative definition of dispose and disposition
    was designed to clarify or modify preexisting law.
    We also do not believe the scope of the statute authorizing voter
    referenda should be broadly construed in favor of voters is a helpful or
    persuasive concept.     The plaintiffs rely upon Devine, 
    268 N.W.2d 620
    .
    Devine involved the elections of representatives in our government, a
    process that the Supreme Court has identified as essential to our
    democracy. 
    Id. at 623;
    see also Wesberry v. Sanders, 
    376 U.S. 1
    , 17, 
    84 S. Ct. 526
    , 535 (1964) (“No right is more precious in a free country than
    that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under
    which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic,
    are illusory if the right to vote is undermined.”). The Devine case dealt
    with regulation of the election process itself, namely, how challenged
    ballots should be treated in an election 
    contest. 268 N.W.2d at 624
    . In
    that context, we emphasized that statutes regulating the process of
    election of representatives of government should be “construed liberally in
    favor of giving effect to the voter’s choice.” 
    Id. at 623.
    We do not in any way retreat from Devine. But the context of this
    case before us is different. Here, we are not dealing with regulation of the
    voting process in an election of our governmental representatives. Instead,
    we are trying to divine the boundary between the power our legislature has
    allocated to the voters on the one hand and school boards on the other.
    While democratic values may be promoted in referenda, the school
    board is comprised of democratically elected officials empowered to
    conduct the school district’s business through the deliberative process.
    18
    Both the actions of the voters through the referendum process and
    decisions of elected officials in a deliberative setting have been established
    by the legislature and are entitled to respect.      We are not inclined to
    expansively read the power of the voters at the expense of the deliberative
    processes of the elected school board through a rule of construction. We
    think a straight up interpretation of the applicable statutes is a better
    approach than one that puts a thumb on the scale in favor of the voters
    acting through referenda.     After all, the voters have elected the school
    board members too.
    Upon our review of the applicable statutes and briefings of the
    parties, we conclude that the defendants have the better argument. The
    precise unit of language to be examined is not “disposition” or even “other
    disposition,” but rather “sale, lease, or other disposition.”      Iowa Code
    § 278.1(1)(b) (2017). A sale or lease involves the transfer of an interest in
    property to a third party. Applying the rule of ejusdem generis, any other
    disposition must also involve a transfer of an interest to a third party, as
    in a gift. See generally In re Estate of Sampson, 
    838 N.W.2d 663
    , 670 (Iowa
    2013) (finding that statutory interpretation required analysis of a term
    “with reference to the other items in the list”); Sallee v. Stewart, 
    827 N.W.2d 128
    , 153 (Iowa 2013) (“[W]hen a phrase . . . is added to a laundry
    list of terms all of which relate to [a larger theme], we interpret [the phrase
    in question] to be similar in character to the other [listed terms], all of
    which relate to [the larger theme]. The fancy term for this is ejusdem
    generis.” (Citation omitted.)); Iowa Comprehensive Petrol. Underground
    Storage Tank Fund Bd. v. Shell Oil Co., 
    606 N.W.2d 376
    , 380 (Iowa 2000)
    (“Under the doctrine of ejusdem generis, general words which follow
    specific words are tied to the meaning and purpose of the specific words.”).
    19
    A trial court in Florida recently struggled with the question of
    whether the demolition of a pier building provided the basis for a
    referendum under a city charter provision that required voter approval
    when waterfront property owned by the city was “sold, donated, or leased.”
    See Ford v. City of St. Petersburg, No. 522012CA010312, 
    2013 WL 9668711
    , at *3 (Fla. Cir. Ct. Apr. 5, 2013).      The charter provision
    defined “sale” to include “any ‘permanent disposition of an interest in real
    property other than a utility easement.’ ” 
    Id. The district
    court held that
    the purpose of the provision was to protect waterfront property from being
    alienated to third parties without the consent of the electorate and did not
    include demolition and repurposing of property. 
    Id. The trial
    court holding
    was affirmed on appeal in an unpublished opinion. See Ford v. City of
    St. Petersburg, No. 2D13–2118, 
    2013 WL 6283709
    , at *1 (Fla. Dist. Ct.
    App. 2013).
    Further, as argued by the defendants, the provision of the statute
    also authorizes the voters to direct “the application to be made of the
    proceeds thereof.”   Iowa Code § 278.1(1)(b).     Directing application of
    proceeds would fit awkwardly if the statute was interpreted to include
    demolition of property where no sale or transfer is involved and no
    proceeds are generated. Although perhaps it could be argued that the
    voters would have an interest directing the disposition of the salvage or
    rubble, “[w]e look for a reasonable interpretation that best achieves the
    statute’s purpose and avoids absurd results.”      State v. Gonzalez, 
    718 N.W.2d 304
    , 308 (Iowa 2006).
    Another factor that tips us toward the position of the defendants is
    the definitions found in the Meriam Webster Law Dictionary and Black’s
    Law Dictionary. These sources, of course, are designed to be used in a
    legal context, but that is hardly a disqualifying notion when the key issue
    20
    is whether the power to direct disposition of certain property rests with the
    school district or the voters.
    These legal definitions are consistent, for example, with the Uniform
    Probate Code, which generally provides personal representatives and
    conservators with the authority “acquire or dispose of an asset” but under
    a separate section authorizes trustees and personal representatives to
    “raze . . . buildings.”   See Unif. Probate Code § 3–715(6)–(7) (amended
    2010), 8 pt. 2 U.L.A. 208–09 (2013); 
    id. § 5–425(7)–(8),
    8 pt. 3 U.L.A. 116–
    17.   Apparently, the drafters of the Uniform Probate Code believe the
    authority to “dispose of an asset” is distinct as a concept, and is not
    inclusive of the authority to “raze . . . buildings.”
    We recognize that Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, cited
    by the plaintiffs, is a widely used dictionary. But it often contains multiple
    definitions.   This case is no exception.        One of the definitions for
    disposition in this dictionary is “the transfer of property from one to
    another (as by gift, barter, or sale, or by will).” Disposition, Webster’s Third
    New International Dictionary (unabr. ed. 2002).
    We also note that the Board is vested with nondelegable authority
    under the Iowa Code to determine the site of schools. See 
    Kinney, 133 Iowa at 96
    , 
    104, 110 N.W. at 283
    , 286; James v. Gettinger, 
    123 Iowa 199
    ,
    203, 
    98 N.W. 723
    , 724 (Iowa 1904). Here, the Board has determined that
    the site of an elementary school, Hoover Elementary, should be changed,
    that the current Hoover facility be demolished at its current site, and that
    the Hoover site should be repurposed and used in connection with the
    development of Iowa City High. In our view, while the voters under Iowa
    Code section 278.1(1)(b) could direct that the property be sold, leased, or
    even given away, they cannot use the referendum mechanism as a vehicle
    21
    to control the use of property within the district by the Board for various
    school purposes.
    We are also influenced by the apparent purpose of the statute. The
    parties have not provided, nor have we found, pertinent legislative history
    for the original statutory language. Yet, from the language and structure
    of Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b) and 278.2, we think it clear that the
    purpose of the statute is to give voters an avenue to regulate the
    relationship between school districts and third parties. By giving voters
    the potential to direct the disposition of school property, the legislature
    has provided a check on potential abuse by elected school officials in their
    real estate relationships with third parties.    When no third party is
    involved, however, the risk of abuse related to the management of the
    district’s real property is not present.
    Finally, we address arguments to the contrary raised by the
    plaintiffs. We do not think the use of the terms “schoolhouse” and “school
    site” in Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b) cuts in favor of the plaintiffs’
    approach. The use of two terms make it clear, for instance, that a lease of
    a schoolhouse and a sale of unimproved property both fall within the scope
    of the statute.
    We also do not see our approach as inconsistent with Iowa Code
    section 297.22. Under our approach, the term “disposition” in both Iowa
    Code section 278.1(1)(b) and Iowa Code section 297.22 do not include
    demolition. Authority for the school boards to demolish buildings may be
    found in other statutory provisions.       See, e.g., Iowa Code § 274.1
    (empowering school districts to “hold property”); 
    id. § 279.8
    (requiring
    rules “for the care of schoolhouse, grounds, and property”); 
    id. § 279.39
    (empowering school boards to provide suitable buildings for each school).
    22
    For all of the above reasons, we conclude that the defendants were
    entitled to summary judgment on the question of whether a “disposition”
    included demolition of a building without the transfer of property to a third
    party.
    B. Procedural Mechanisms Related to Challenges to the
    Referendum Process.
    1. Introduction. Even assuming that the term “other disposition”
    does not include demolition, the question arises as to whether the school
    district is nonetheless prohibited from refusing to direct the county auditor
    to place the matter on the ballot. The petition in this case had the requisite
    number of signatures, addresses, and dates under Iowa Code sections
    277.4, 277.7, and 278.2, and no objections were filed challenging the
    petition under Iowa Code sections 277.5 and 277.7. See 
    id. §§ 277.4,
    .5,
    .7; 
    id. § 278.2.
    The question arises regarding whether a governmental
    entity may launch a substantive challenge to the lawfulness of a petition
    that contains the requisite number of signatures.        Specifically, may a
    governmental entity refuse to place a referendum measure on the ballot
    based on substantive illegality, or must the government entity file a
    preelection declaratory action challenging the validity of the referendum?
    In considering these issues, the parties dispute the meaning and
    applicability of this court’s ruling in Berent, 
    738 N.W.2d 193
    .        Berent
    involved the intersection of three statutes: Iowa Code section 362.4,
    section 364.2, and section 372.11.         
    Id. at 199–201.
      The gist of the
    plaintiff’s claim was that the city council unlawfully refused to place on
    the ballot certain amendments to the city charter on the grounds that the
    proposed charter provisions were illegal. 
    Id. at 196.
    In Berent, three petitions were submitted to the city clerk pursuant
    to Iowa Code section 362.4 asking that three amendments to the city
    23
    charter be placed on the ballot. 
    Id. at 197–98.
    The city clerk determined
    that the requisite number of electors had signed the petition and accepted
    them for filing. 
    Id. at 198.
    Seven individuals and the League of Women
    Voters filed timely objections to the petitions. 
    Id. As a
    result, an objections
    committee was formed to consider the three petitions. 
    Id. The objections
    committee in Berent sustained at least one objection
    to each proposed charter amendment.            
    Id. One was
    found to be
    misleading, and two others were found to be “legally insufficient” because
    the substance of the proposals did not deal with general structure of
    governance and thus were not the proper subject for a city charter. 
    Id. at 198–99.
        The district court found that the objections committee had
    exceeded its authority. 
    Id. at 199.
    The city appealed. 
    Id. We affirmed.
        We noted that under Iowa Code section 362.4, a
    petition to amend a city charter is “valid” if it has the requisite number of
    signatures of eligible electors including their place of residence and the
    date upon which the petition was signed. 
    Id. at 200.
    Further, under Iowa
    Code section 372.11, the legislature directed that the city council “must”
    submit “valid” proposed charter amendments to the voters.             
    Id. We concluded
    that the objections committee thus exceeded its statutory
    authority when it sustained objections to the charter proposals based on
    grounds other than “validity” under Iowa Code section 362.4. 
    Id. at 200–
    01.
    We then considered whether the city could launch a preelection
    challenge to the substantive legality of the proposed charter amendments.
    
    Id. at 201.
    In concluding that it could launch such an action, we noted
    that the city had a pecuniary interest in avoiding the cost of a special
    election.   
    Id. at 202–03.
      We also determined that the question of the
    validity of the proposed charter amendments was ripe for judicial
    24
    resolution. 
    Id. at 203–06.
    On the merits, we concluded that two of the
    proposed charter amendments were inconsistent with Iowa law, and as a
    result, the city was under no obligation to place the questions on the ballot.
    
    Id. at 206–13.
       One of the proposals, however, was not substantively
    invalid and the voters were entitled to be heard on the question. 
    Id. at 210–13.
    2. Positions of the parties.    Relying upon Berent, the plaintiffs
    contend that once a referendum petition is timely filed with the requisite
    number of signatures, addresses and dates under Iowa Code sections
    277.4 and 278.2, the defendants had no choice but to direct the county
    auditor to place the matter on the general election ballot.
    The defendants find Berent inapposite. They focus our attention on
    the language of Iowa Code section 278.2 which directs the school board to
    place on the ballot petitions “authorized by law.” Unlike the restrictive
    language in the statutes in Berent, the defendants assert that the
    legislative directive (that the board shall place measures arising from
    citizen petitions on the ballot) is thus qualified by the requirement that the
    proposed ballot measure first be authorized by law.        According to the
    defendants, the school district, consistent with the statute, declined to
    direct the county commissioner to place the matter on the ballot because
    the question posed did not involve a disposition of school property as
    required by the statute.
    3. Discussion. In deciding whether the defendants have failed to
    preserve their claim under Berent, the starting point is examination of the
    statutes involved. In Berent, the statutory language was quite limited and
    did not give the city the authority to engage in substantive review of a
    proposed charter revision. 
    Id. at 200–
    01, 205–06.
    25
    The language in Iowa Code section 278.2, however, is markedly
    different. The school district is directed to forward to the county auditor
    only those petitions that are “authorized by law.” Iowa Code § 278.2. No
    such limitation appeared in the language of the statutes involved in Berent,
    which mandated that the city council place “valid” petitions, i.e., petitions
    with sufficient valid signatures, on the 
    ballot. 738 N.W.2d at 201
    .
    As a result, we conclude that Berent does not control in the very
    different   statutory   environment   presented    by   Iowa   Code   section
    278.1(1)(b). We conclude that the school district properly determined that
    the proposed ballot measure was not authorized by law because it did not
    direct the sale, lease, or other disposition of school property.
    IV. Conclusion.
    We conclude that the demolition of a school building is not a
    disposition under Iowa Code section 278.1(1)(b) and that the school
    district properly determined that because the ballot measure was not
    “authorized by law,” it was under no legal obligation to require the county
    auditor to place the matter on the ballot. In light of our holding, all other
    issues raised in the plaintiffs’ petition are either moot or resolved against
    the plaintiffs on the merits. As a result, the district court judgment in this
    case is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and the matter remanded to the
    district court for dismissal of the action.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED
    WITH DIRECTIONS.