Blume v. Crawford County

250 N.W. 733, 217 Iowa 545
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 24, 1933
DocketNo. 42251.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 250 N.W. 733 (Blume v. Crawford County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blume v. Crawford County, 250 N.W. 733, 217 Iowa 545 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.

The Crawford County Farm Bureau Association was incorporated in 1918. This action was brought in January, 1933, against Crawford county, its officers, and against the Crawford County Farm Bureau Association to recover moneys paid and to enjoin the appropriation of 1933. Plaintiffs claim that Crawford county appropriated and paid to the Crawford County Farm Bureau Association various sums from $1,000 to $3,000 per year from 1918 to and including 1932.

Prior to March, 1919, the farm aid statutes authorized an appropriation of $2,500 per year to farm associations where the association certified that it had at least two hundred members and had raised from them a yearly subscription of not less than $500.

The statute in force from 1919 to May, 1929, was section 2930 of the Code of 1927, as follows:

“When articles of incorporation have been filed as provided by this chapter and the secretary and treasurer of the corporation have certified to the board of supervisors that the organization has among its membership at least two hundred farmers or farm owners in the county and that the association has raised from among its members a yearly subscription of not less than one thousand dollars, *547 the board of supervisors shall appropriate to such organization, from the general fund of the county, a sum double the amount of such subscription.” (Italics ours.)'

It is claimed that the amounts appropriated to and received by the defendant farm association prior to 1929 were illegal because the farm association had not so raised a yearly “subscription” of either $500, $1,000, or any other amount, prior to May, 1929.

Plaintiffs also claim that no appropriation could be legally made to, or received by, said farm bureau association since May, 1929, because it did not during that time have at least two hundred bona fide members whose aggregate yearly membership “dues and pledges” to such organization amounted to not less than $1,000.

Plaintiffs also claim that the farm aid laws (chapter 138 of the Code) both now and as originally enacted are unconstitutional because they indirectly confer and delegate the power of taxation to the farm bureau. They also claim that prior to May, 1929, no provision was made by the association for raising money from the members by “subscription” and that no “subscriptions” were in fact raised during that time; that the statute only permitted appropriations in double the amount of the subscriptions raised from the membership, and that prior to 1929 no subscriptions whatever had been raised. Plaintiffs contend that, although dues in the amount of $5 each was paid by the members, such dues could not be considered as subscriptions, and therefore all moneys paid between 1918 and 1929 and received by the farm bureau were unauthorized by law.

Defendant contends that all payments made prior to 1929 have been so long acquiesced in by the plaintiffs and all parties interested; and that all moneys so received by the defendant farm bureau were expended by that association for the objects and purposes thereof during all that time under the bona fide belief of the legality of said appropriations; that, by reason of the delay and laches of the plaintiffs in commencing this action and in allowing the counties to pay and the farm bureau to receive and expend such money, without any objection on the part of plaintiffs, or the parties they represent, they are barred and estopped from making any claim for refund of' said amounts. Defendants further contend that all claims for payments received by the farm bureau association prior to 1928, regardless of their legality, are barred by the statute of limitations.

*548 Defendants further claim that the amendment of 1929 changed the former statutory provisions for dues, by providing that, instead of yearly dues of $1, the yearly dues “shall be not less than $1.00”; defendants contend that under the present law the county had authority to make the appropriation made in 1929. The defendants also claim that it is a corporation organized under the laws of Iowa relating to farm aid associations, and ‘that said farm bureau has operated for the purposes sanctioned by its articles of incorporation and the laws of the state.

I. We will first consider the constitutionality of the farm aid laws. Plaintiffs claim that the entire farm aid laws, contained in chapter 138 of the Code, are unconstitutional because they delegate to the farm bureau power to levy a tax; and that the legislature has no power to vest the levying of a tax in a body not directly responsible to the people.

Section 2930 of the Code provides that, when certain requirements have been met by a farm association, “the board of supervisors shall appropriate to such organization from the general fund of the county a sum double the amount of the aggregate of such dues and pledges.” This statute contains no specific provision for the levying of any tax by any person. It does not even provide that the board of supervisors shall levy any tax. It simply directs and commands the board of supervisors to appropriate certain moneys in aid of farm associations, which have adopted articles of incorporation substantially as set out in section 2926. It is claimed that this provision in effect authorizes the farm bureau to levy a tax. In support of their contention plaintiffs refer to the rule announced in State v. Mayor of City of Des Moines, 103 Iowa 76, 72 N. W. 639, 39 L. R. A. 285, 64 Am. St. Rep. 157.

We had occasion to discuss the case relied upon in the case of Fevold v. Board of Supervisors of Webster County, 202 Iowa 1019, 210 N. W. 139, where we said:

“It was held in that case that a statute authorizing a library board, appointed by the mayor, to fix and determine the amount of a library tax, which the city council was' then required to levy, was invalid. It was said the right to fix and determine was equivalent to the right to levy, and that the Legislature had no power to vest the levying of the tax in a body not directly responsible to the people of the city. We think the principle there announced is not controlling under the situation presented here.”

*549 In the case of Fevold v. Webster County it was claimed that section 2689 of the Code was unconstitutional, for the same reasons advanced in the case of State v. Mayor, 103 Iowa 76, 72 N. W. 639, 39 L. R. A. 285, 64 Am. St. Rep. 157.

Section 2689 provides as follows:

“Should it appear to the secretary of Agriculture that the balance in such fund is sufficient, with the county’s allotment of state and federal funds available, to carry on the work in such county for the ensuing year, he shall so certify to the county auditor and when such certification has been made the board shall make no levy for such tuberculosis eradication fund for such year.”

In the Webster County case we further said:

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Bluebook (online)
250 N.W. 733, 217 Iowa 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blume-v-crawford-county-iowa-1933.