Allen and Rixse v. Co. Comr's. Cleveland Co.

1903 OK 35, 73 P. 286, 12 Okla. 603, 1903 Okla. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 8, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1903 OK 35 (Allen and Rixse v. Co. Comr's. Cleveland Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen and Rixse v. Co. Comr's. Cleveland Co., 1903 OK 35, 73 P. 286, 12 Okla. 603, 1903 Okla. LEXIS 34 (Okla. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by'

Irwin, J.:

The decision of this case depends entirely upon the question: Who has the legal right to determine in what newspaper delinquent tax lists shall be published, the-county commissioners or the county treasurer?

The amendment to the Statutes of the Territory of 1893,. section 9, of article 10, entitled “Revenue,” as amended by section 5, of article 3, of chapter 43 of the Laws of .1895, which was the law on the subject in force at the time the services mentioned herein were rendered, reads as follows:

“The treasurer shall give notice of the sale of real property by the publication thereof once a week for three consecutive weeks, commencing after the third Monday in October preceding the sale, in some newspaper in the county. * *

*606 Then, said section provides in detail what such notice .shall contain as to the description of the property and a description of the taxes which are delinquent.

Now this section makes it the duty of the county treasurer .'to publish this list, and the natural inference would be that the party upon whom the law cast the duty, should be the proper person to select the medium through which this publication was to be made, and it being the duty of the treasurer to cause this publication to be made, it would seem to be his right to select the newspaper, unless a contrary intention of the legislature was manifest in the statute. This duty of publishing the delinquent tax list is only imposed by stattite, .and if the statute docs not in express terms or by reasonable implication indicate a different intention, then the person whose duty it was to have the same published would be considered the proper person to select the agency by which this notice was given, and the legislative will carried out.

But it is contended by the defendants in error that this authority has been given to the commissioners of the county not in express terms, but by reasonable implication; and to support this contention, they cite running section 1785, Statutes of 1893, being section 19, of chapter 22, entitled “Counties and County Officers,” which provides that the commissioners “shall have power to make all orders respecting 'the property of the county, to sell the public grounds of the county and to purchase other grounds in lieu thereof. * * *”

And also section 20 of the same chapter, which provides that “they shall superintend the fiscal concerns of the county and secure their management in the best manner, keep . account of the receipts and expenditures, * * * * etc.”

*607 But we do not think these provisions reach or were intended to reach the 'point in controversy in this case.

The various sections-of said chapter 22 contain provisions regulating the manner of election and qualification of county commissioners and defines their powers and duties. The fifth paragraph of section 19 of this section contains a provision specifying what blanks, plats and stationery shall be furnished by the commissioners to the various county officers therein named, including the county treasurer, to be paid out for the county treasury.

Section SO of this chapter provides for printing a statement of the county receipts and expenditures for the year, but so far as we can find in said chapter there is no express authority given to the commissioners to publish delinquent tax lists, nor is any other general authority given to control ;and manage county printing, in general or special terms.

An examination of the statutes of the territory and the amendments thereto on the subject of revenue, will disclose what seems to us a significant fact, and one which sheds light upon the question of legislative intent as to the person whom the legislature intended should make the selection of a newspaper to publish the delinquent tax list in. The Revised Statute of Oklahoma, 1893, article 10, section 9, chapter 70, was 'as follows:

"The treasurer shall give notice of the sale of real property by publication thereof once a week for three consecutive weeks, commencing the first week in August preceding the sale in the official newspaper in his county. * *

This was the law on the subject until the act of 1895, article 3, chapter 43. Then the language of the act was *608 changed, the only change being as to.the time of publication, changed from the first week in August to the third week in October, preceding the sale, and changing the words “official newspaper/’ to “some newspaper.”

The act of 1895 reads as follows:

“The treasurer shall give notice of the sale of real property by the publication thereof once a week for three consecutive weeks, commencing after the third Monday in October preceding the sale, in some newspaper in the county. * * *”

So the law was by this amendment changed so that instead of reading, “by publication in the official newspaper in his county,” it was made to read, ifby publication in some newspaper in the county.”

Now, if the question as to who should have the right to select an official newspaper for the county, it might reasonably be contended that as the county commissioners had control and management generally of the fiscal affairs of the county, they would be the proper authority to determine this question, and if they had made a choice of a newspaper which should do the county printing, and to be generally recognized as the official newspaper of the county, then as the law stood prior to the amendment of 1895, it might be reasonable to suppose that it would be the duty of the county treasurer to recognize such paper as the official paper of the county, and in obedience to the statute, publish the delinquent tax list in that paper, and he would have no choice in the matter, but it seems to us equally reasonable to suppose that when the legislature in its wisdom saw fit to» take from the act the words “official newspaper” and substitute therefor the words “some *609 newspaper/5 it was for some definite and distinct purpose, and that therefore they made manifest their intention to in some manner change the law as to the newspaper in which said lists must be published. It would not be reasonable to suppose that the law-making power made this change of language without any purpose, or that the same was carelessly or thoughtlessly done; it would be more reasonable to suppose that when they made this change in the language of the law they had the act they were amending before them, and comprehended and understood the change they were making, and made such change for a well understood purpose.

The publishing of a list of the real estate which was to be sold for delinquent taxes is a very important matter to the tax paying public, and one which to a certain extent affects the title to the real estate of the county, and a duty which public policy and the stability of titles requires should be done with accuracy and skill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1903 OK 35, 73 P. 286, 12 Okla. 603, 1903 Okla. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-and-rixse-v-co-comrs-cleveland-co-okla-1903.