Bodine v. City of Oklahoma City

1919 OK 368, 187 P. 209, 79 Okla. 106, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 221
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
Docket10875
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1919 OK 368 (Bodine v. City of Oklahoma City) 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
Bodine v. City of Oklahoma City, 1919 OK 368, 187 P. 209, 79 Okla. 106, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 221 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

In 1911 the city of Oklahoma City adopted a charter form of government, and by the terms of its charter provided a complete system of assessing, levying, and collecting taxes, independent of the instru-mentalities furnished by the general laws of the state. The charter further provided that the board of city commissioners should prepare a budget, comprising all such estimated amounts found to be necessary to pay the probable expenditures of the city for the next ' ensuing year, and that the tax levy made by them should be based thereon; the levy, however, not to exceed the limit provided by the Constitution and laws of the state.

The Legislature of 1917 (chapter 226, sec. 1. Sess. Laws 1917) provided for the creation o'a county excise board, consisting of certain county officials, and in section 2 of said chapter provided that the county commissioners, the mayor and council of a city operating under a charter, and the proper officials of a city, town, township, and school district should file an estimate of the probable needs of these municipalities for the ensuing year, and in section 5 provided that the county excise board should have the power and authority to revise and correct the estimates of these municipalities.

The mayor and city commissioners of Oklahoma City have prepared a tax budget and filed the same with the proper county officer, as by its charter provided. The county excise board, claiming to have the authority under section 5, is threatening to revise and correct the city budget by either altering, changing, increasing, decreasing, or rejecting the items set forth in the budget claimed by the commissioners to be necessary for municipal purposes. The city instituted suit against the members of the county excise board, and the trial court enjoined them from revising or correcting the tax budget, from which judgment they appeal to this court.

The only question for consideration here is whether of not the county excise board is authorized under section 5 to revise and correct the budget or estimate of the probable needs of the city for all necessary municipal purposes for the ensuing year as prepared by the city.

It is to be seen that the power and authority to revise and correct the tax budged is by the charter conferred upon certain city officials, and under section 5, supra, it, is claimed that it is conferred upon the c.-unty excise board. We are thus called upon to decide this conflict.

The authority to adopt a charter form of government is provided in section 3a, art. 18. of the Constitution, which, as far as the issue herein involved, is as follows:

“Any city containing population of more iban 2,000 inhabitants may frame a charter for its own government consistent with and subject to the Constitution and laws of this state. * * *”

Section 539 of the Revised Laws of 1910 ovovides:

“When a charter for any city of this state shall have been framed, adopted and approved according to the provisions of this article, and any provisions of such charter shall be in conflict with any law or laws relating to cities in force at the time of adoption and approval of such charter, the provisions of such charter shall prevail and be in full force, notwithstanding such conflict, and shall operate as a repeal or suspension of such state law or laws to the extent of such con- *108 fliet; and such state law or laws shall not thereafter be operative in so far as they are in conflict with such charter; Provided, that such charter shall be consistent with and subject to the provisions of the Constitution, and not in conflict with the provisions of the Constitution and laws relating to the exercise of the initiative and referendum and other general laws of the state not relative to cities of the first class.”

Section 539 provides the method of interpreting a general statute when the same is in conflict with the terms of a charter cov.ering municipal matters.

This court, in interpreting section 539 in Lackey v. State, 29 Okla. 255, 116 Pac. 913, said:

“It is clear that the foregoing statute intends to provide tliat wherever a freeholder’s charter has been adopted under the provisions of the Constitution, and conflicts with any law of the state relating to municipal matters of cities of the first class, the provisions of said charter shall prevail.”

And, in Mitchell v. Carter, 31 Okla. 592, 122 Pac. 691, said:

“In other words, the effect of said statute was to declare the law as it already existed in the Constitution, merely setting out the same in greater detail than as contained in article 18. In Lackey v. State, supra, the rule was declared that whenever any matter fell ‘within the domain of municipal government’ or related solely to municipal affairs, such provision of a municipal charter, adopted pursuant to the provisions of article 18, superseded the general state laws.”

We have examined the many items going to make up the estimate or tax budget prepared by the city, and find that all items therein are within the domain of municipal government and relate solely to municipal affairs.

So, under the provisions set forth in section 539, as interpreted in Lackey v. State, supra, we find that as a matter of law the terms of the charter must prevail where it conflicts with the general law in reference to revising and correcting the budget or estimate of the city, this being the legislative intent, and for that reason the county excise board has no authority in reference to same.

We believe that an element of doubt has entered into this case as to the power of a city to impose a tax for all necessary municipal purposes through an erroneous interpretation of the case of Thurston, Co. Treas., v. Caldwell, 40 Okla. 206, 137 Pac. 683. In that case the issue was whether or not the act creating a county excise board for the purpose of levying a tax was repugnant to section 20, art. 10, of the Constitution, .which provides:

“The Legislature shall not impose taxes for the purpose of any county, city, town or other municipal corporation, but may, by general laws, confer on the proper authorities thereof, respectively, the power to assess and collect such taxes.”

Justice Kane, in speaking for the court, correctly interpreted the law in that case as applied to the issue therein raised, holding that section 20 was not a limitation on the Legislature to impose a tax in which the state has a sovereign interest. The principle of law therein laid down is not applicable to the issue in this ease. The power to impose a tax under article 18 is independent of the limitations as set forth in section 20. A city, under its charter, may impose a tax for all necessary municipal purposes, for the reason that implied authority is granted under article 18.

A city could not function without this authority. We do not believe that the framers of the Constitution inteuded to breathe life into a municipal corporation through a charter as provided by article 18, and at the same time provide for the means to strangle it to death by denying to it the power of taxation for municipal purposes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 368, 187 P. 209, 79 Okla. 106, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bodine-v-city-of-oklahoma-city-okla-1919.