Commissioners of Santa Fé County v. Territory of New Mexico Ex Rel. Coler

215 U.S. 296, 30 S. Ct. 111, 54 L. Ed. 202, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1759
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 20, 1909
Docket42, 43
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 215 U.S. 296 (Commissioners of Santa Fé County v. Territory of New Mexico Ex Rel. Coler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioners of Santa Fé County v. Territory of New Mexico Ex Rel. Coler, 215 U.S. 296, 30 S. Ct. 111, 54 L. Ed. 202, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1759 (1909).

Opinion

Me. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

These appeals are prosecuted to review judgments of the Supreme Court of New Mexico, modifying, and affirming as modified, judgments of mandamus of the District Court of Santa Fé County, commanding the appellants to levy a tax of ten mills in each case on each dollar of taxable property in the county, to pay certain judgments for the amount of principal and interest upon bonds issued by the county. The cases are here on separate records, but as they are submitted together we dispose of them, as the Supreme Court of the Territory did, in one opinion.

The proceedings were commenced by petitions, which are alike, except as. to the amount of the judgment recovered. In No. 42 it is'alleged to be $60,926.02; in No. 43 it is alleged to be $74,358.19. Both judgments. were recovered in the District Court of the county in which the petitioners (appel-lees here) were complainants and the board of county commissioners were defendants. It is alleged that the judgments ordered the sums due as above stated, and the interest thereon to become due at five per cent per annum from the date of the judgments, "to be assessed and levied upon and out of the taxable property situate in the said county of Santa Fé, and to cause the same to be collected in the manner provided by law, and to pay the same out of the treasury of said county to the said complainants, their legal representatives or assignees, upon the delivery of a proper voucher therefor/’ Default in the payment of each of the judgments and its •requirements is alleged, and that the board , held .a meeting during the month of July or August, 1905, and made a levy *300 for-various territorial-purposes, but "wholly failed and refused to make any levy whatsoever, and still fail and refuse to make any levy whatsoever, for the said year of 1905, for the purpose of raising funds to pay the aforesaid judgment and interest and costs thereon.” The want of a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law is also alleged. Peremptory writs of mandamus were issued without a hearing.

Subsequently the appellants filed a petition' in each case in the District Court and prayed “that the peremptory- order be suspended herein, and that they be permitted to show • cause and be heard before the order and writ are made permanent.”

To sustain this prayer they alleged that at the date of the rendition of the judgments of appellees all of the property, within the county of Santa Fé subject to taxation was liable for the payment' of its pro rata of the judgments; that the thirty-fifth legislative assembly “eliminated” portions of Santa Fé County, and. attached them respectively to the county of Rio Arriba and the county of Torrance, and made them subject to their proportions of the indebtedness of Santa Fé County; that the taxable property situate therein is liable for its part of the indebtedness; that the county commissioners, áre without jurisdiction to levy and assess taxes upon it, and that the'peremptory writs include only “the property and territory within the present boundaries” of Santa Fé, - and do not. pretend to include that in Rio Arriba and Torrance; that by a mandamus issued out of the district court on the twenty-fifth day of January,. .1901, the eounty commissioners were required to levy a tax upon the taxable property in Santa Fé sufficient in amount to produce a sum of $135,284.19, with interest thereon from the twenty-fourth'of September, 1900, until paid at- five per cent per annum, and $30.00 cost?, the said sum bejng for the amount of the judgments in cases 4091 and 4092 of the district court of Santa Fé County; that the board obeyed the writ and levied eighty-two mills on each dollar of taxable valuation, and *301 certified the same to the treasurer and ex officio tax collector of the county, and directed 'him to place the same on the tax rolls and collect in the manner provided by-law; that the levy is still standing on the tax rolls of the county, and is a lien upon the taxable property of the county as then existing, and subject to the payment;of the judgments; that the commissioners are without authority to enforce the same, and that the levy is ample and sufficient to cover the amount of the judgments in cases Nos. 4091 and 4092, and that the levy of ten mills in each case is largely in excess of the amount required, and is “unjust and unfair” to the taxpayers of the county of Santa Fé, and ruinous to its “progress and prosperity.” It is alleged that the board is entitled to be heard on the amount of levy, or whether any levy should be ordered, as there exists a legal and adequate levy to cover the judgments; that it is impossible to determine the amount of levy necessary to be made for the year succeeding 1905 until the tax roll for that year has been completed and the amount of taxable-property determined; that the board should not be held in default until the time shall arrive when the levy can be made, and they shall have failed to perform their duty'; that the levy of the tax, as required by the writ, is not one which' the law “enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust or station,” because the levy of eighty-two mills, when collected, will be sufficient to pay the judgments, and that it is not a duty of the board to collect it, but “the duty of the treasurer and ex officio tax collector, of Santa Fé County.” It is alleged appellees have a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at latv.

' As ah additional ground of the motions, it is alleged that the act of Congress, by which the bonds are “pretended to have been validated, approved, and confirmed, is indefinite, uncertain, and incapable of .reasonable interpretation and enforcement, so as to be applied to any bonds issued by the 'county of Santa Fé,” and does not sufficiently identify what bonds are intended to be validated, ,approved and confirmed; *302 nor what holders of the bonds, it being alleged that they “ are subjects of different ownership and are not all in the hands of one. person, and it cannot be determined from the said act of Congress what holder of said bonds, in excess of the amount named in the said act of Congress, shall not have the benefits of validation:” And further,- that at the timo of the passage of the act of Congress there was more than one refunding act in force in the Territory,'but what refunding act is referred to by the act of Congress is not disclosed, j

The motions to suspend the peremptory writs were denied and the orders defying them were affirmed by the Supreme Court of the Territory. The latter court, however, modified the writs, as will be presently pointed out.

The assignments of error in-thé Supreme Court of the Territory repeated. and emphasized the grounds urged in the motions to suspend the peremptory writs of mandamus. In this court the modification of the judgments by the Supreme Court of the Territory is attached and some new contentions are made.

The case is submitted on briefs, and we shall not attempt to trace an exact correspondence of the arguments of appellants with the assignments of error, nor indeed'shall we follow the details of the argument, but consider those matters only which we think can in any way affect the merits of the controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
215 U.S. 296, 30 S. Ct. 111, 54 L. Ed. 202, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-of-santa-fe-county-v-territory-of-new-mexico-ex-rel-coler-scotus-1909.