Crutcher v. Sterling

1 Idaho 306
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Idaho 306 (Crutcher v. Sterling) 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
Crutcher v. Sterling, 1 Idaho 306 (Idaho 1869).

Opinion

Noggle, O. J.,

delivered the opinion,

Lewis, J., concurring.

This action comes into this court under the provisions of that singular statute found in the laws of the first session of the legislature of this territory, section 336, on page 153. Th© facts are agreed upon, and the case was submitted to the district court for Boise county on the second day of [307]*307November, 1868. From some cause wbicb we do not understand, the district court did not decide the case; but under a still more remarkable statute of the same session, section 326, p. 150, adjourned the cause into this court for decision. Notwithstanding there seemes to be law for submitting and adjourning cases into this court, justice requires a suggestion, that all matters submitted to any of the district courts hereafter had better be determined by that court, and if parties desire to have such decisions reviewed by this court, they can reach that end under the law as it now stands, without compulsion or dictation on the part of the district judge. This case, upon which the opinion of the supreme court is required, is contained in an agreed statement of facts, filed with the clerk of the district court in Boise county November 2, 1868, and now on file in this court, the matter having been adjourned by the district court into this court, under said section 326 of the laws of the first session aforesaid, for decision.

All there is of the case upon which this court can act is the statement of facts on file with the clerk of this court, as «before stated, and which has been read upon the argument. From this it sufficiently appears that the plaintiff was the sheriff of the county of Boise, and keeper of the prison as therein stated; that as lawful holder and owner of territorial warrant No. 52, drawn upon the prison fund, for the sum of five hundred dollars and interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum until paid, the plaintiff did, on the third day of September, 1867, present said warrant to the defendant as territorial treasurer for registration, and that the same was on that day duly registered by him as such territorial treasurer. The plaintiff claims payment of said warrant in the legal coin of the United States, or in foreign coin at the value fixed for each coin by the United States, or in bullion at its coin value, or in legal-tender treasury notes at two per cent, above San Francisco quotations, as provided by section 2 of the revenue law of this territory, passed at the fourth session of the legislature. and approved January 11, 1867, requiring the revenue^! [308]*308this territory to be so collected, and that the territorial proportion thereof be passed to the various funds as collected.

It is further claimed by the plaintiff that before the commencement of the proceedings aforesaid, he duly presented the said warrant, for payment, to the defendant as treasurer as aforesaid, and demanded payment thereof out of said prison fund, in legal coin of the United States, or in foreign coin at the value fixed for such coin by the laws of the United States, or bullion at its coin value, or in legal-tender treasury notes at two per cent, above San Francisco quotations, and that payment thereof in such funds was then and there by him refused; that he still refuses to redeem or pay the same, except in the legal-tender notes of the United States at their par value.

It is further claimed by the plaintiff that if he is compelled to take legal-tender treasury notes of the United States at their par value in payment of said warrant,' principal and interest, instead and in place of the gold coin of the United States, at its standard value, he will sustain a loss, and will be damaged in the sum of one hundred and forty dollars, the difference in the actual value of such notes and coin, as before stated.

The plaintiff also claims that by chapter 25 of the laivs of the third session, the county jail of Boise county is made a temporary territorial prison, and that the sheriff of said county is thereby made the keeper thereof (section 2, page 161), and that by section 14 on page 163, of the same act, his compensation is fixed; that he is entitled to receive his compensation from the territorial prison fund, as provided in section 5 on page 161, of said laws, at the rates allowed by section 14 of said act, on page 163.

We do not feel called upon in this case to pass upon the point made on the part of the plaintiff, “that the law requiring taxes to be paid in coin is not in conflict with the act of congress making greenbacks a legal tender for all debts.” Neither is it necessary for us in this case to de-dare that chapter 21 of the laws of the second session, page J|9, is in conflict with the laws of congress.

Ag-the case is presented, and as the facts are conceded to [309]*309be upon the argument, the treasurer of the territory is bound to pay out, upon all such warrants, and upon all warrants, the same kind of funds which he receives for taxes. This being the case, it becomes his duty to require such funds as may legally be received in payment of taxes, and then he is bound to pay out the same, or sufficient thereof to discharge the legal demands against the territory. For the purpose of this case it is immaterial whether the law requiring taxes to be collected in coin was in conflict with the law of congress or not, or whether a tax is a debt. The plaintiff is entitled to have his warrant paid in the same kind of funds that have been paid into the treasury from the collections of the revenue.

The most important question remaining to be disposed of by the court is the one relating to the character of the funds which are now in the hands of the defendant, as treasurer, or which may hereafter be collected by him under the laws now in force, and as the same was in force at the time this action was commenced.

This court, therefore, may safely admit that the plaintiff is correct in claiming that a tax is not a debt, and that the laws of Idaho territory requiring the payment of taxes in gold, or its equivalent, are not in conflict with the law of congress making greenbacks a legal tender for all debts.

The plaintiff’s counsel admit that by the laws of this territory now in force, the collection of taxes in coin can not be enforced, and that the revenue of the territory can only be collected in the legal currency of the United States, at its par value. (See the laws of the fifth session, chap. 1, sec. 2.) This law enacted at the last session of the legislature of the territory is now and must continue in force until changed or repealed by the power that enacted it.

The counsel for the plaintiff further admits that at the August term of this court, in 1867, it was decided by the highest legal tribunal in this territory, that the laws requiring the payment of taxes in coin, or its equivalent, are in conflict with the law of congress making greenbacks a legal tender for all debts, and therefore void. See the opinion of Justice Cummins, delivered at the January term of this [310]*310court in 1868, in tbe case of Haas v. Lamkin, as evidence of the fact admitted as above.

This court is of the opinion that from the time of making the decision in the case of Haas v. Lamkin, it so far became the law of this territory that the defendant, as treasurer, was bound by it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gray v. County of Boundary
290 P. 399 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Idaho 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crutcher-v-sterling-idaho-1869.