Board of County Com'rs v. Kiowa Nat. Bank

1935 OK 1146, 52 P.2d 777, 175 Okla. 3, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 796
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 26, 1935
DocketNo. 24249.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1146 (Board of County Com'rs v. Kiowa Nat. Bank) 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
Board of County Com'rs v. Kiowa Nat. Bank, 1935 OK 1146, 52 P.2d 777, 175 Okla. 3, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 796 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

Prior to April 1, 1910, the county commissioners of Kiowa county, pursuant to the laws then existing, formed and organized Otter creek drainage district within the territorial limits of Kiowa county. With the organization of the drainage district, contracts were let and the work contemplated was performed, in payment for which, as the same progressed, the county commissioners caused their warrants to be issued on the various funds then in the hands of the treasurer of Kiowa county.

The project having been completed and *4 paid for by warrants thus issued, the county commissioners issued their ten-year bonds, to the number of 31, in the aggregate amount of $17,500, and delivered the same to the Farmers & Merchants Bank of' Snyder, Okla., which bank had paid the various warrants issued by said board of county commissioners as they were presented by the parties to whom they were issued; and by such exchange took up said warrants. Assessments were levied against the property embraced in the drainage district and collections made and all bonds paid with the exception of bonds numbered 28, 20, 30, and 31, aggregating the total amount of $4,500, due on April 1, 1920.

When the above-mentioned bonds fell due and there was no money on hand to pay them, it was then discovered that the assessments levied and collected against the property benefited by the project was insufficient to equal the amount of the bonds issued. $2,038.01 of this delinquent amount was due to the fact that this amount was levied against untaxable Indian lands, and the court’s judgment recited that “the cause of further shortage in the fund is not easily discernible from the record.” The Farmers & Merchants Bank of Snyder, while the holder of the bonds here in question, was, with all its assets, taken over by the State Bank Commissioner and these bonds' were afterward sold to the Kiowa State Bank of Snyder, Okla.

In the meantime a portion of the territory embraced in the Otter creek drainage district was detached from Kiowa county and attached to Tillman county. The bonds not having been paid, suit was brought in the district court of Kiowa county, in which judgment: was sought against both counties. Before the cause was disposed of, the remainder of the territory embraced in the drainage district was detached from Kiowa county and attached to Tillman county. The district court of Kiowa county rendered judgment for the plaintiff, from which appeal was taken to this court (Board of Commissioners v. Kiowa National Bank, 141 Okla. 271, 284 P. 634), and this court held that, the entire area covered by the Otter creek drainage district having been detached from Kiowa county, the district court of that county had no jurisdiction and remanded the cause to the district court of Kiowa county with instructions to transfer the cause to the district court of Tillman county. In the meantime the Kiowa National Bank became the owner of all the assets of the Kiowa State Bank and was substituted as plaintiff, and the drainage district and drainage commissioners were made additional parties defendant.

Upon trial of the cause in the district court of Tillman county, judgment was rendered against Kiowa county for the sum of $632.23, with interest, this being the amount of money the evidence showed remained in the hands of Kiowa county from the collected assessments against the drainage district, and judgment was rendered against Tillman county for the sum of $199.57, the amount shown to have been collected by Tillman county. The court further found that the plaintiff was entitled to recover $2,038.91, the amount assessed against the Indian lands, and issued its peremptory writ of mandamus directing the board of county commissioners of Tillman county to take the necessary steps and levy additional assessments against the property of the drainage district in order to raise said amount, and held that these amounts were all that plaintiff was entitled to recover.

From this judgment the defendants appeal.

It was the contention of plaintiff in the trial court, and as defendant in error it is its contention here, that in view of the fact that the county commissioners failed to take steps to cause a reassessment of the property benefited by the drainage district to provide the funds for satisfying the unpaid balance! due on the bonds, the counties themselves became liable, and it asked for judgment against the counties.

The trial court declined to take that view of the case and held that the counties were not individually liable except in so far as the two counties involved had in their possession funds which had been collected for the drainage district from the assessments levied upon the property.

In Severns Paving Co. v. Oklahoma City, 158 Okla. 182, 13 P. (2d) 94, this court had a similar question before it, under a different statute, however, but there is similarity in the questions presented in the points of law involved, and in the 4th paragraph of the syllabus we said:

“Paving bonds cannot be enforced against city issuing same as debt, nor as measure of damages either in action ex contractu or in action ex delicto, for neglect, delay, or refusal to assess or reassess property.”

In Guaranty Title & Trust Co. v. City of Sapulpa, 164 Okla. 271, 23 P. (2d) 629, in the 2d paragraph of the syllabus we said:

“That city making improper sewer district *5 assessment fails, after demand, to make proper assessment, does not entitle holder of tax warrants to personal judgment against city; proper remedy being by mandamus.”

We therefore conclude that the district court of Tillman county committed no error in refusing to render judgment against the counties for their fáilure to collect, for tha account of the drainage district, sufficient funds to pay the bonds, neither did it commit error in rendering judgment against the counties for the amount they had collected and had on hand which had not been applied to the payment of the bonds. The counties were acting somewhat in the capacity of trustee and had no right to withhold these funds, but they should be applied toward liquidating the outstanding bonds.

It is our conclusion, however, that the trial court did err in that part of its judgment requiring the county commissioners to levy an additional assessment against the. property already properly assessed for the purpose of paying that amount which could not be collected because of the fact that it had been levied against nontaxable Indian lands. This conclusion is reached after an examination of the case of Wrightsman v. Stevenson, 168 Okla. 63, 33 P. (2d) 499, and the authorities therein cited. In that case we had under consideration assessments imposed for the improvement of, not a drainage district, but a water improvement. district, and the statutes pertaining thereto are very similar, and in discussing that question, we said:

“Plaintiff points out that within the territorial boundaries of the district as outlined by the board of county commissioners and as approved by the qualified electors is included a cemetery and some restricted Indian lands, which lands are not liable for the assessments placed against them.
“The general rule is that restricted Indian lands are not subject to special assessments for improvements such as are involved in the case at bar. Stuckey v.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1146, 52 P.2d 777, 175 Okla. 3, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-county-comrs-v-kiowa-nat-bank-okla-1935.