Board of Commissioners v. Featherstone

174 P. 192, 26 Wyo. 1, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 20
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1918
DocketNo. 881
StatusPublished

This text of 174 P. 192 (Board of Commissioners v. Featherstone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Featherstone, 174 P. 192, 26 Wyo. 1, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 20 (Wyo. 1918).

Opinion

Potter, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by the Board of County Commissioners of the 'County of Albany, against Bernard [10]*10Featherstone, the county treasurer of said county, to restrain and enjoin the defendant from advertising for sale, at the expense of the county,.any of the lands within the Laramie Valley Municipal Irrigation District for delinquent taxes levied for the payment of interest upon the bonded indebtedness of said district, or for other district purposes. 'A temporary restraining order was granted, and subsequently by an amended petition said Irrigation District was made a party defendant, and specific relief was asked against it to reimburse the county for the expense of previous advertisements. A similar action having been commenced against the county treasurer and the district by C. P. Arnold, as a resident and taxpayer of the county, the latter was permitted to intervene in this action 'brought by the county, upon his petition filed in the other action. The treasurer and the district each appeared, the former filing a separate answer in each action. The answer of the district in the action brought by Mr. Arnold was, by written stipulation, received and considered as its answer in this case. The defendant Featherstone having been succeeded in the office of county treasurer by one H. Maynard, the latter, prior to judgment and upon his petition, was made a party defendant by order of the court, but not substituted for his said predecessor in office; his petition stating that he submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court and consented to and requested an injunction restraining the publication of the delinquent district tax list at the expense of the county.

As the result of a trial there were special findings of fact and law apparently intended to dispose of the issues in both actions, and a judgment was entered declaring that the plaintiff and intervenor take nothing by their several actions and that the same be dismissed, that the defendant Featherstone, as treasurer, recover from them his costs, and that the restraining order be dissolved. The plaintiff and intervenor severally excepted to several of the conclusions of law and the refusal of the court to find upon the law as requested, and the defendant treasurer excepted to two findings of law. The plaintiff and intervenor have brought the case here on [11]*11error, and the defendant treasurer has filed a cross-petition in error presenting his objections to the conclusions of law excepted to by him. The Irrigation District was, made a defendant in error and has filed briefs herein, and the cause was heard upon the briefs of the several parties and also upon oral argument by counsel for each of them.

The particular cause or occasion for bringing the action when it'was commenced, May 6, 1914, was the proposed inclusion of the lands in said irrigation district upon which taxes levied for that district were delinquent, in the publication in that year of the county treasurer’s notice of the sale of realty for delinquent taxes, without providing for the expense thereof so as to relieve the county from liability therefor. The county treasurer is ex-officio collector of taxes, and such publication is required as to delinquent state, county and school district taxes during or previous to the first week in June in each year by Section 2413, Compiled Statutes of 1910, which declares also that the advertisement shall include the delinquent taxes for the preceding year or years. The notice is generally provided for by Section 2421, whereby the treasurer is required to give notice of the sale of real property for delinquent taxes by publication once a week for four consecutive weeks in a newspaper in his county, if there be one, stating the time and place of sale, with a list of the lands; and that section also provides that ten per cent upon the amount of the taxes due shall be added when lands are advertised. Another section (Sec. 2411) provides for a fee of one dollar for advertising property for sale for taxes to be charged by the treasurer, as tax collector, and collected from the taxpayer. (See McCague Inv. Co. v. Mallin, 170 Pac. 763.) Under the statute providing for the organization of irrigation districts, prescribing the powers and regulating the government thereof, all district taxes, whether to pay accrued or accruing interest or principal upon its bonds or to provide for the maintenance, operating, and current expenses of the district, are required to be levied by the commissioners of the county wherein the office of the district is located; the statute providing for an assessment of [12]*12the lands in the district for that purpose by the county assessor, and a return by him to the county commissioners of the total amount of such assessment. (Comp. Stat., Secs. 845, 846, 847, 848.) Such taxes are declared to be special taxes. (Sec. 847.) The county treasurer is made district treasurer, and it is also provided that the county treasurer shall collect and receipt for all taxes levied for the district, in the same manner and at the same time as required for the collection of taxes on real estate for county purposes. That statute -also declares that the revenue laws of the state for the assessment, levying and collection of taxes on real estate for county purposes shall be applicable, except as therein modified, including the enforcement of penalties and forfeitures for delinquent taxes. (Id. Sec. 850.) And it contains no provision modifying the provisions of the revenue law concerning the sale of land for delinquent taxes.

Originally, and until 1907, when the statute providing for the organization of irrigation districts was enacted, the duties of a county and its officers in the assessment, levy and collection of property taxes were confined to taxes for state, county and school district purposes, and we understand that it was the custom of the several counties to pay or advance the cost of publishing the delinquent tax sale notices, usually by its allowance as a claim against the county, awaiting reimbursement therefor through the subsequent collection of the taxes with the amount authorized to be added to cover such cost. (See Com’rs v. Chaplin, 5 Wyo. 74; 37 Pac. 370; State ex rel. v. McGibbon, Id. 82, 37 Pac. 373.) But there is no express statutory provision for paying the expense of such publication as to irrigation district taxes in advance of their collection by sale or otherwise, or for reimbursing the county for extra expense, if any, in the assessment or collection of such taxes. And that is no doubt chiefly responsible for the present litigation.

The foregoing statement of the statutory provisions, and what is not provided for, is made here to explain the situation when the action was brought, in view of which we suppose the parties to have acted in framing the pleadings [13]*13and issues in the case. The facts are not in dispute, and might be stated 'by reciting the substance of the court’s findings. But a brief reference to the pleadings seems advisable to show the grounds alleged for equitable relief, for both actions were brought as in equity and relief is prayed for under that branch of the court’s jurisdiction. "

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Bluebook (online)
174 P. 192, 26 Wyo. 1, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-featherstone-wyo-1918.