Bridges v. State Ex Rel. Vaughn

190 N.E. 758, 208 Ind. 684, 1934 Ind. LEXIS 215
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1934
DocketNo. 26,400.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 N.E. 758 (Bridges v. State Ex Rel. Vaughn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridges v. State Ex Rel. Vaughn, 190 N.E. 758, 208 Ind. 684, 1934 Ind. LEXIS 215 (Ind. 1934).

Opinion

Fansler, J.

—Appellee relator, the holder of a road improvement bond issued by the commissioners of Putnam county for the construction of a free gravel road, payable from a tax levy on the property of Floyd township in that county, brought suit on behalf of all holders of bonds issued in that county for the construction of highways falling due in 1933, seeking to mandate the defendants, the auditor and treasurer of Putnam county, to issue and pay warrants in satisfaction of their bonds maturing in 1933 from the gasoline tax and automobile *685 license fees collected by the state and apportioned to Putnam county, pursuant to ordinances and orders of the county council and board of county commissioners of Putnam county, apropriating funds from the special road fund for the purpose of paying said bond maturities, and directing the payment thereof.

Appellant filed an intervening petition alleging that he is a taxpayer, and that he operates an automobile, and uses the highways of the county. He was permitted to intervene as a party defendant. Demurrers to the complaint were overruled, and the defendants answered in general denial. There was a special finding of facts, and a decree mandating the auditor and treasurer as prayed.

The errors assigned question the right of the county to use the gasoline tax and automobile license fund for the payment of highway bonds.

It appears that in September, 1932, the board of commissioners of Putnam county levied a tax to pay all county unit and township road bonds maturing in 1933, with interest; that the county board of tax adjustment in October, 1932, struck out and eliminated the levy, and no tax was levied or collected to pay bond maturities ; that in February, 1933, the county council adopted an ordinance transferring from the county gasoline fund to the general fund the sum of $18,256, to be used in payment of county unit road bonds, and the sum of $44,203.31 to be used in payment of township road bonds of various townships in the county therein enumerated. On March 11, 1933, the board of commissioners adopted an ordinance transferring and appropriating ■the same funds for the same purpose. On the 1st day 'of January, 1933, there was in the fund $37,408.20, representing an unexpended balance in the fund at the end of the year 1932. In January a payment was re *686 ceived from the auditor of state, and on the 18th day of February, 1933, the date of the passage of the ordinance by the county council, there was $72,378.36, and approximately the same amount was in the fund on the date of the passage of the ordinance by the county commissioners. It appears that, before appropriating the money for the payment of bonds, the individual members of the county council and the board of commissioners made individual and personal inquiries and an investigation, and determined that the money in the special road fund on hand at the time of the transfer, and the estimated further receipts from the state during the year, would be in excess of the amount required to construct, maintain, or repair roads and bridges in the county during the year.

§6 of the original Gasoline Tax Law (Acts 1923, p. 535), after providing for distribution of a certain portion of the tax to the various counties, provides:

“All moneys so distributed to the several counties of the state shall constitute a special road fund for each of the respective counties and may be used by the board of commissioners of any county in the construction, maintenance or repair of any public highway within such county.”

The clause was amended (Acts 1925, §2, p. 368) to read:

“All monies so distributed to the several counties of the state shall constitute a special road fund for each of the respective counties and may be used by the board of commissioners of any county in the construction, maintenance or repair of any public highway or public highway bridge within such county.” 1

By the act of the special session of 1932, §1, p. 22, the clause was changed to read:

“All moneys so distributed to the several counties of the state shall constitute a special road fund for each of the respective counties and may be used *687 by the board of commissioners of any county in the construction, maintenance or repair of any county highways or bridges on such county highways within such county.”

It will be noted that previous to this amendment the fund might be used to. maintain or repair public highways, and by this amendment it is changed to county highways. The act, by a special provision, became effective on and after January 1, 1933. At the same session of the legislature, by ch. 16 of the Acts of 1932, p. 28, jurisdiction of all township highways was transferred to the county commissioners, and all such township highways were made a part of the county highway system. This act, by a special provision, went into effect on the 10th day of September, 1932. The change, therefore, from the words “public highways” to “county highways,” in the amendment of 1932, does not affect the situation we are confronted with here, for the reason that it did not become effective until after all township highways had become county highways under the statute last referred to.

It is contended by appellant that the act discloses an intention on the part of the legislature to provide a new plan for financing the future construction, maintenance, and repair of highways, by transferring the future burden of taxation to the automobilists who use and enjoy the benefits of highways. If this is true, we must interpret the legislative intention as affecting the transfer of the burden in March, 1923; and an allocation of any funds to the payment of any cost of construction, maintenance, or repair of any county or township highway incurred since the original enactment of the law would conform to the legislative intention, since the future referred to must be deemed to begin when the law was enacted.

If the cost of the construction of the highways in the *688 first instance might have been paid out of funds derived from the gasoline tax and automobile license fees, we see no reason why the unpaid balance of the indebtedness incurred for their construction might not now be paid out of any surplus revenue in the fund. Such a disposition of the fund is clearly within the legislative intention as to the use to which it might be put. It may be, and probably is, true that in the early years of the distribution of this tax, roads were not so well improved, needed more maintenance and repair, and that there was necessity for the construction of more new roads than at present, and that the funds so derived were not sufficient to pay all the costs of construction, maintenance, and repair, but that with the years the revenue from this source has increased; that because of new and better construction, fewer new roads are required, and that the expense of maintenance and repairs has greatly decreased. It seems that the funds now available are more than enough to pay all of the cost of current construction, maintenance, or repair, leaving a surplus as is indicated in the case at bar.

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Related

Bateman v. State
14 N.E.2d 1007 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1938)
Board of Commissioners v. Farmers State Bank
10 N.E.2d 769 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1937)
Williams v. Willett
1 N.E.2d 664 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
190 N.E. 758, 208 Ind. 684, 1934 Ind. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridges-v-state-ex-rel-vaughn-ind-1934.