Bank of Indian Territory v. Eckles

1907 OK 93, 91 P. 695, 19 Okla. 159, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1907 OK 93 (Bank of Indian Territory v. Eckles) 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
Bank of Indian Territory v. Eckles, 1907 OK 93, 91 P. 695, 19 Okla. 159, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 171 (Okla. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Burford, C. J.:

The ICiowa, Comanche, and Apache Indian country was opened to settlement on August 6, 1901, and Comanche county is composed of territory which originally was a portion of said Indian reservation. The county government was organized immediately after the opening of said reservation to white settlement, and W. W. Painter w;as by the governor appointed and qualified as sherifE of said county, and proceeded to discharge the duties of said office until his successor was elected and qualified in January, 1903. This proceding is for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the treasurer of said county to pay four several warrants issued by the board of county commissioners to Painter, and by him assigned to the plaintiff. The petition for an alternative writ avers that on January 5, 1903, the board of county commissioners of Comanche county, Oklahoma, issued to *160 W. W. Painter warrant No. 64 for $10.40, warrant No. 65 for $1.15, warrant No. 46 for $985.80, and warrant No. 47 for $1,687.90; that there was at the time ample funds in each of the funds upon which said warrants were issued to-pay all indebtedness against said funds, including these warrants; that the county treasurer refused to pay them; that the Bank of Indian Territory was the owner of each of said warrants by assignment from Painter for a valuable consideration; and it was asked that an alternative writ issue, directing the treasurer to pay said warrants from the funds in his hands or show cause why he refused. The county treasurer, by way of return to the alternative writ, admitted all the averments contained in the petition, but alleged that each of said wararnts was issued by the board of county commissioners withoiit authority of law and in payment of claims for which Comanche county was not liable; that all of said warrants were for indebtedness incurred prior to the time for collecting county taxes in the calendar year next succeeding the opening, and that the incurring of said indebtedness had never been authorized by the secretary of the interior; that warrant No. 65, for $1.15, was issued to Painter for repairs on the county jail, furnished on October 24, 1902; that warrant No. 64, for $10.40, was issued for stamps bought and paid for by Painter as sheriff, between October 3, 1902, and October 31, 1902; that warrant No. 46, for $985.80, was issued to Painter for criminal work done by him as sheriff of said county from January 1, 1902, to March 31, 1902; that warrant No. 47, for $1,687.90, was issued to Painter for criminal work done by him as sheriff of said county during the quarter ending June 30, 1902; that said funds in the hands of the county treasurer were not liaole for any of said indebtedness, but that the said indebtedness was payable, if at all, out of the funds derived from' the sale of lots in the town of Lawton, which fund was in the hands of the secretary of the interior, and had never been in the hands of the county treasurer or subject to the order of the board of county commissioners; that there *161 was at that time in the hands of the secretary of the interior a sufficient balance of said town lots sale fund to pay all charges against the same, and to more than pay plaintiff’s claims. To this return to the' alternative writ the plaintiff filed a general denial. The alternative writ and the return constitute the pleadings in the case, and the reply should be treated as a demurrer to the .return. The facts are admitted in the argument to be as alleged in the writ and return, and the court so found.

The facts presented call for the application and interpretation of the act of congress of March 3, 190T, 31 Stat. 1093, 1094,' c. 846. This act provides for the reservation of lands in each county for a county seat, the manner, of disposal of the town lots, and the disposition to be made of the funds arising from such sale. It may be stated generally that the power of congress to dispose of the public lands, as well as to legislate directly for the territories, is unquestioned. In any case, when congress legislates upon any subject over which it has jurisdiction, its laws supersede all laws upon the same subject and serving the’ same purposes enacted by any of its subordinate dependencies. The territory of Oklahoma possessed the legislative power to create county offices, to fix their compensation, and provide the manner of their payment. Congress possessed, the same powers. Yet there could be no conflict of authority or of law. The superior includes the inferior. Its laws are paramount, and when the superior legislates and makes specific provision for the payment of county officers and provides the fund from which they are to be paid, the laws of the territory upon the same subject are suspended and inoperative, and the laws of congress must prevail. The portion of the act in question is as follows: “The receipts from the sale of these lots in the respective county seats shall, after deducting the expenses incident to the surveying,, subdividing, platting and selling of the same,' he disposed of under the direction of the secretary of the interior in the following manner: A court-house shall be erected therwith at such county seat at cost of not exceeding ten *162 thousand dollars, and the residue shall be applied to the corstiuction of bridges, roads and such other public improvements as the secretary of the interior shall deem appropriate, including the payment of all expenses actually necessary to the maintenance of the county government until the lime for collecting county taxes in the calendar year next succeeding the time of the opening. No indebtedness of any character shall be contracted or incurred by any of said counties prior to the time for collecting county taxes in the calendar year next succeeding the opening, excepting where the same shall- have been authorized by the secretary of the in terior...In the interpretation of statutes, courts must find the meaning and intent in the language of the act itself, where there is no repugnancy or uncertainty. This statute seems clear. Congress knew what it wanted to accomplish, and said so; and we have no right to read into it some other purpose or meaning. Congress recognized the fact that under the laws of Oklahoma, which were then operative in these Indian reservations, countjr governments would be put in operation as soon as the country was opened to settlement, and by section 2 of the act it was provided: "The governor of the territory shall appoint and commission for each county all county and township officers made necessary by the laws of the territory of Oklahoma, who shall hold their respective offices until the officers elected by the people at the general election next following the opening shall have qualified.” Congress knew that these officers so appointed would have to be paid, and the funds for the maintenance of a county government would have to be provided. By the laws of Oklahoma no taxes would be available for the payment of current expenses until December, of the next year following the opening. The country was opened in August after the time for the assessment of property for that year had elapsed. The first assessment that could be made under our. laws would be in the spring of the following year, and -the first installment of taxes from this assesment would be payable December 15, 1902, and until this date congress made provision for maintaining *163

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1907 OK 93, 91 P. 695, 19 Okla. 159, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-indian-territory-v-eckles-okla-1907.