Creek County v. Robinson

1925 OK 229, 245 P. 584, 114 Okla. 163, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 1024
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 23, 1925
Docket15547
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1925 OK 229 (Creek County v. Robinson) 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
Creek County v. Robinson, 1925 OK 229, 245 P. 584, 114 Okla. 163, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 1024 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

MASON, J.

The defendant in error, Clyde M. Robinson, was the owner and publisher of the Creek County Democrat, a newspaper which had been published in Shamrock, Okla., for a number of years. Arter October 1, 1923, the county treasurer of Creek county, being of the opinion that the board of county commissioners of said county had not designated a paper in which to publish the delinquent tax list for the year 1922, delivered the same, on October 9, 1923, to Robinson, who published it, as required by law, in said paper, it appears that there were 1.2S0 land descriptions for which a charge of 25 cents a piece was made, and 8,996 town lot descriptions for which a charge of 15 cents a piece was made, and 1,504 descriptions of paving tax for which a charge of 25 cents per description was made, or a total of $2,045.40. Robinson filed his claim for said amount with the board of county commissioners, and the same was disallowed. He then commenced this action, in the district court of Creek county, Okla., against the plaintiffs in error to recover such amount. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff for the amount sued for, together with costs and interest at 6 per cent., from which the county and the board of county commissioners have appealed.

For reversal, two questions are presented: First, that the county treasurer had no authority to designate the newspaper <.f the plaintiff for such publication; and second, that the judgment is excessive in that the trial court allowed plaintiff to recover 15 cents for each town lot description. It being the contention of the defendants that the maximum rate allowed by law is ten cents for each town lot description.

Section 9731, Comp. Stat. 1921, provides:

“The treasurer shall give notice of the sale of real property for delinquent taxes by publication thereof once a week for three consecutive weeks, commencing after the first day of October, preceding the sale, in some newspaper in the county, to be designated by the board of county commissioners, and if the board of county commissioners shall fail to designate such paper, then in a paper to be selected by the treasurer. Such ■notice shall contain a notificath n that all lands on which the) taxes of-such fiscal year remain due and unpaid will be sold, and of the time and place of the sale, and shall contain a list of the lands to be sold and the amount of taxes due. The county treasurer shall charge and collect in addition to the taxes, interest, and penalty the sum of 25 cents on each tract of real property other than town lots, and ten cents on each town lot advertised for sale, which sum shall be paid into the county treasury, and the county shall pay the c< st of the publication of such notice. But in no case shall the county be liable for more than the amount charged to the delinquent lands lor advertising.”

Under this section, the county treasurer is to give the notice after the first day of October. To do so, he must furnish the list. The county commissioners shall designate the paper, but if they fail or neglect so to do, impliedly and necessarily by the 1st of October, then it becomes not only the privilege but the duty of the county treasurer to select the paper. Cherokee County Pub. Co. v. Cherokee County, 48 Okla. 722, 151 Pac. 187.

The agreed statement of facts upon which the case was presented to the trial court contains' the following paragraph:

“That on the 2nd day of July, 1923, the c< unty commissioners of Creek county, in regular session, adopted the following motion which appears duly recorded in the minutes of the proceedings' of said meeting', as follows: ‘On motion of Commissioner Doo-lin. seconded by Commissioner Foster, the Oilton Gusher is hereby designated as the legal paper to publish all legal proceedings for six (6) months from date. Motion carried.’ ”

Plaintiffs in error contend that this action of the board designated the Oilton Gusher as the paper in which to publish all legal proceedings, and that such action necessarily included the printing of said tax list, and that'therefore the county treasurer was without authority to designate the paper of the plaintiff.

A question very similar to this was before this court in Cherokee County Pub. Co. v. Cherokee County, supra; and in Allen & Rixse v. Board of County Commissioners, 12 Okla. 603, 73 Pac. 286, and in the former case the court in referring to the latter case used the following language:

“It appears from that case that prior to 1895 (Btat. 1893, sec. 9, art. 10, c. 70, entitled ‘Revenue’) the law required the county treasurer to publish the tax list ‘in the official newspaper of the county,’ which was to be selected by the county commissioners, but the act of that year (section 5, art. 3, c. 43, Session Laws 1895) changed the law in *165 that respect, and provided, ‘The treasurer shall give notice * * * in some' newspaper of the county,’ and that is the language of the law today. The county commissioners shall designate ‘some newspaper of the county.’ and if the board of county commissioners fail to do so up to October 1st, ‘the county treasurer shall designate some newspaper of the county.’ So it will be seen that when it became the duty of the county treasurer to select the paper, he was not bound to select the official paper of the county, even if there was one; his only limitation is ‘some newspaper in the county,’ of course, having the necessary legal requirements as to time, for publishing legal notices.”

The court then quotes from Allen & Rixse v. County Commissioners, Cleveland County, supra, as follows :

“This section makes it the duty of the county treasurer to publish this list, and the natural inference would be that the party upon whom the law cast the duty should be the proper person to select the medium through which this publication was to be made, and, it being the duty of the treasurer to cause this publication to be made, it would seem to be his right to select the newspaper, unless a contrary intention of the Legislature was manifest in the statute. This duty of publishing the delinquent tax list is only imposed by statute, and, if the statute does not in express terms or by reasonable implication indicate a different intention, then the person whose duty it was to have the same published would be considered the proper person to select- the agency by which this notice was given, and the legislative will carried out. * * * If the question were as to who should have the right to select an official newspaper for the county, it might reasonably be contended that, as the county commissioners had control and management generally of the fiscal affairs of the county, they would be the proper authority to determine t-his question, and if they had made a choice of a newspaper which should do the county printing, and to be generally recognized as the official newspaper of the county, then, as the law stood pric r to the amendment of 1895, it might be reasonable to suppose that it would be the duty of the county treasurer to recognize such paper as the of-fical paper of the county, and.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 229, 245 P. 584, 114 Okla. 163, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creek-county-v-robinson-okla-1925.