C.M. St. P.R.R. v. Shoshone Co.

116 P.2d 225, 63 Idaho 46
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1941
DocketNos. 6907, 6909, 6905.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 116 P.2d 225 (C.M. St. P.R.R. v. Shoshone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.M. St. P.R.R. v. Shoshone Co., 116 P.2d 225, 63 Idaho 46 (Idaho 1941).

Opinions

*49 AILSHIE, J.

— Three separate actions were instituted by the respective appellants, named in the caption hereof, for the recovery of taxes paid to Shoshone county under protest. The taxes were exacted and collected under the provisions of sec. 32-406, as amended by chap. 249, 1939 Sess. Laws, p. 612. The statute as amended is as follows:

“Section 32-406. Tax Levy — Certification—Limit— Collection — Special Fund____Whenever any school district shall lapse under the provisions of Section 32-327, Idaho Code Annotated, the County Superintendent of Public Instruction shall, until the entry of the order annexing the territory embraced in said school district to an adjacent or contiguous organized school district under the provisions of Section 1 of this act, on or before the first day of September... .of each year, certify to the clerk of the Board of County Commissioners the amount of money which, when augmented ... .by the estimated proceeds of any apportionment of general school funds to accrue thereto during the ensuing year, will be sufficient to pay, to districts entitled thereto, tuition of all persons of school age residing in such unorganized or lapsed district, as estimated by .... said County Superintendent of Public Instruction, and thereafter____the Board of County Commissioners, at the time of making the annual county levy, shall levy, in addition to the levy provided for in Section 32-328, Idaho Code Annotated, upon all taxable property in such unorganized or lapsed *50 district, not exempt from taxation, a tax sufficient to pay such estimated claims, which tax shall be certified to the County Auditor as other tax levies are certified, extended on the tax rolls of the county against property in such unorganized or lapsed district, and collected as other property taxes are collected. The proceeds of such tax levy shall be placed in the treasury of such county in a special fund to be known as ‘Unorganized or Lapsed School District No.......Fund.’ However, in no event shall the Board of County Commissioners each year make a levy under the provisions of this section of less than three mills, and whenever the proceeds of such tax levy is in excess of an amount sufficient to pay all tuition claims against such fund, the balance remaining in said fund after the payment thereof shall be placed by the County Treasurer in the ‘County School Fund.’ ”

The italicized portion of the statute quoted constitutes the new, changed, and added matter, in the amendatory section, that was not in the original section as found in the annotated code of 1932.

The plaintiffs paid the tax exacted under protest and these actions were subsequently instituted to recover the amounts paid.

Demurrers were sustained to the several complaints and the plaintiffs declined to further plead; judgments were entered in favor of the county.

It is urged by the appellants, in the outset, that the county commissioners never acquired jurisdiction to levy the tax, for the reason, as alleged by the complaints, that the several preliminary steps required by the statute, as conditions precedent to the levy of the tax, were never performed. To this contention, respondents say: “it must here be further admitted that the levy is sustainable only as the mandatory levy required by the last sentence in Section 32-406, as amended.” The part of that sentence material to this issue reads: “However, in no event shall the Board of County Commissioners each year make a levy under the provisions of this section of less than three mills.” If this statute is valid, it would seem to follow, from the language used, and the admissions of counsel, that the performance of the preliminary steps prescribed would be merely directory and not mandatory, to the *51 limit at least of the minimum 3-mill levy prescribed by the act. The view we take, of other aspects of the case, renders it unnecessary for us to further consider this contention.

The two principal grounds urged for a reversal of the judgments are:

(1) That, since there were no children of school age within the unorganized territory, there existed no necessity and no legal cause for levying a special tax, under sec. 32-406,1. C. A., as amended by chap. 249, Sess. Laws 1939;

(2) That certain provisions of sec. 32-406,1. C. A., as amended by chap. 249, Sess. Laws 1939, are unconstitutional and void, because of being in conflict with secs. 5 and 6, Art. VII of the Constitution.

Addressing ourselves to the first objection, we are reminded that, in construing statutes, we should assume that the legislature intended to enact a valid and constitutional law and for that reason should give the act as favorable interpretation as possible. (In re Gale, 14 Idaho 761, 95 Pac. 679; Grice v. Clearwater Timber Co., 20 Idaho 70, 77, 117 Pac. 112; Continental Life Ins., etc. Co. v. Hattabaugh, 21 Idaho 285, 304, 121 Pac. 81; Geo. B. Wallace, Inc., v. Pfost, 57 Idaho 279, 292, 65 Pac. (2d) 725; Robinson v. Enking, 58 Idaho 24, 27, 69 Pac. (2d) 603.) We must then assume, that the purpose of providing for the levy of this special tax on “unorganized school districts” was to provide revenue for payment of tuition for children of school age residing in the district. That the legislature so intended, is emphasized by sec. 32-408, I. C. A., as amended by chap. 249, 1939 Sess. Laws, p. 614, which provides as follows:

“No moneys shall be drawn or paid out of any unorganized or lapsed school district fund for any other purpose than the payment of the tuition chargeable against persons residing in such unorganized or lapsed district except for the purpose of refunding excessive or illegal taxes, or rectifying errors in accounting, or paid into the County School Fund as provided in Section 32-406 as amended by this act.”

Now it stands admitted, that there are no children *52 of school age within this unorganized district and no outstanding claims. It must necessarily follow, that if the object or purpose of the tax never arises, then the grounds for levying the tax must fail. The people can not be taxed except for a lawful purpose. Here there is no lawful purpose; therefore no lawful tax.

This brings us to the second ground urged for reversal of the judgment. It appears that the legislature, at its 1939 session, was not content to leave the levying of a special tax, in unorganized districts for school purposes, to the county commissioners, as trustees of the district, but arrogated to itself the power to declare the levy of such a tax, up to 3-mills, compulsory and mandatory

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Bluebook (online)
116 P.2d 225, 63 Idaho 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cm-st-prr-v-shoshone-co-idaho-1941.