Board of County Commissioners v. Nettleton

22 Minn. 356, 1876 Minn. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 27, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 22 Minn. 356 (Board of County Commissioners v. Nettleton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of County Commissioners v. Nettleton, 22 Minn. 356, 1876 Minn. LEXIS 9 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

G-ileillan, C. J.

Proceedings under the act of 1874 to provide for the assessment and collection of taxes. The board of county commissioners for the county of St. Louis, in the year 1874, made up the amounts to be levied for county purposes, by the items, as set out in the record of their proceedings, as follows, to wit:

County general fund, $18,000.00; county poor fund, $8,000.00; county road fund, $8,000.00; railroad bond interest, $12,000.00.

[358]*358As to the items for “comity road fund’ ’ and ‘ ‘railroad bond interest,” the defendants claim that such taxes were levied without authority of law, and were, therefore, invalid. It is contended by the county that the court has not jurisdiction to enquire whether the tax was levied without authority of law unless it be alleged in the answer that such levy ‘ ‘ has resulted to the jjrejudice of the party objecting,” and that the taxes “have been partially, unfairly, or unequally assessed.”

It was the intent of the act of 1874 to require the owner of property to interpose, in these proceedings, every defence or objection to a sale of the lands for the taxes appearing on the list filed, which he may claim, so that all such defences or objections may be tried and disposed of, and a conclusive judgment, affirming the taxes and the right to sell for them, entered, and a good title passed to purchasers at the sale. The defence that the tax is void for want of authority to levy it does not come under § 119, which relates to those objections or defences that are based, not on want of authority to levy the tax, but on some omission to do, or irregularity in doing, the things required by the statute to be done in assessing or levying a tax otherwise valid. The court below ruled correctly on this point.

The items in the levy which are objected to are the county road fund, the railroad bond fund, and also an item, included in the list, for a sinking fund for the city of Duluth.

The objection to the item for county road fund is that the board of county bommissioners have no authority to levy a road tax as such — that is, they have no authority to provide-by taxation for a separate and distinct fund for roads and bridges. The statute designates all roads located by state or county authority as county roads, (Laws 1878, ch. 5, §55,) and gives to the county commissioners general supervision over such roads, and gives them power to appropriate such sums of money from the county treasury as they think advisable for opening, vacating, resurveying, or otherwise [359]*359improving such roads, not exceeding in any one year the sum or ratio of $1,000.00 to each $500,000.00 of assessed valuation of real estate in such county. Additional sums' may be appropriated to building bridges, and -opening and repairing county roads, if ratified by a vote of the people, Section 56. Section 7 6, ch. 1, Laws 1874, provides that £ ‘ the county commissioners shall, at their July session, annually determine on the amount to be raised for- ordinary county purposes, for the support of the poor, and for interest and principal on the county debt.” Section 79 of the same act provides that there shall be levied annually for ‘£ all county expenses of each of the several counties, other than for roads and bridges, and the payment of the interest and principal of the debts of the county, such rate as the commissionei’s of such county determine to be necessary, not exceeding ten mills on the dollar on the taxable property of the county.”

The authority of the county commissioners to provide in the tax levy for such sums as, during the year, they are authorized and may find it necessary to appropriate from the county treasury for opening, vacating, resurveying, or otherwise improving county roads, cannot be doubted. Their authority to appropriate in advance, and at the time of making the estimate for the levy, any sum to such exclusive use — that is, to provide for such purpose a distinct and separate fund that cannot be used for any other purpose — is' quite another thing. It is doubtful — although the language of § 79 of the act of 1874 may perhaps suggest that it may be done — whether they have any such authority. If they have not, any attempt by the board, after they have made the estimate, to set apart the sum so estimated as a separate fund would be null. But although the setting apart would be null, it would not invalidate their determination as to how much it is necessary to bring into the treasury for roads and bridges, nor invalidate the levy based on such determination.

[360]*360The amount which the commissioners were, under § 79, ch. 1, of the act of 1874, authorized to have levied for ail county expenses, other than for roads and bridges, and payment of the county debt, was $27,071.64. The amount which they estimated, represented by what is called the general county fund ” and the “ county poor fund,” was $24,000.00. The amount which could be appropriated during the year to roads was $4,700.00, instead of $8,000.00, as included in the commissioners’ estimate and in the levy. There was estimated and inserted in the levy an excessive amount. On March 9, 1875, an act of the legislature was passed, (Sp. Laws 1875, ch. 164,) the first section of which reads as follows : “ That the assessment of taxes heretofore made and provided for in the tax levy of said St. Louis county, for the year eighteen hundred and seventy-four, to defray the expense of establishment and construction of a road from the city of Duluth to the west line of the county of St. Louis, commonly called the Swan Lake road, be and the same is hereby legalized and made valid, and said sum so assessed as aforesaid shall be levied, collected, and become due and payable as other taxes for the year eighteen hundred and seventy-four.”

There is no specific item in the record of the estimate of the board of commissioners to which this act can, prima facie, apply. On the trial below the county offered this act in evidence, and also to prove by parol that in the item for county road fund, $8,000.00, there was included $4,000.00 estimated by the board to provide for the payment of principal and interest of interest-bearing county orders, for defraying the expenses of establishing and the construction of the Swan Lake road. This Avas objected to on the ground that the evidence was immaterial and irrelevant, and that parol testimony could not be introduced to change or vary the records of the board, and that the record is conclusive against the county upon the question whether said sum of $4,000.00 was intended for said pur[361]*361pose. The question on this objection is not whether the board could legally provide a fund for the Swan Lake road, but it is this : Does the act of 1875 refer to and legalize the item of $8,000.00 for county road fund, or the excess of such sum over what the board could, .during the year, ■appropriate to roads; and, for the purpose of ascertaining that, is it proper to prove by parol that in the $8,000.00 ■there was included an amount for the Swan Lake road?

We think it was, because it is not necessary that the record of the amount estimated for any general puipose should set out in detail every item making up the amount. For instance, the amount determined upon for general •county fund is $18,000.00.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Minn. 356, 1876 Minn. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-county-commissioners-v-nettleton-minn-1876.