Douglas County v. Grant County

167 P. 928, 98 Wash. 355, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 946
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1917
DocketNo. 14150
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 167 P. 928 (Douglas County v. Grant County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas County v. Grant County, 167 P. 928, 98 Wash. 355, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 946 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

At its session in the year 1909, the legislature created the county of Grant out of territory then forming a part of the county of Douglas. The act provided that:

“The county of Grant shall assume and pay to the county of Douglas its proportion of the bonded and warrant indebtedness of Douglas county, in the proportion that the assessed valuation of that part of Grant county, lying within the present boundary of Douglas county, bears to the assessed .valúá[356]*356tion of the whole of Douglas county. The adjustment of said indebtedness shall be based on the assessment for the year 1908: Provided, that in the accounting between the said counties neither county shall be charged with any debt or liability incurred in the purchase of any county property or the purchase of any county building which shall fall within or be retained by the other county.” Laws 1909, p. 21, § 2.

The act went into effect on the date of its approval by the governor, namely, February 24, 1909.

The present action was brought by the county of Douglas to recover upon the liability created by the act. It was brought on June 27, 1913. In the complaint it is alleged that, at the time of the creation of the county of Grant, the bonded and warrant indebtedness of Douglas county was $25,000, no part of which was incurred in the purchase of any county building or in the purchase of any county property which fell within or was retained by Douglas county; that the assessed valuation of that part of the county of Grant lying within the whole county of Douglas, according to the assessment for the year 1908, was 61% per cent, and that the amount justly due and owing from the county of Grant to the county of Douglas by reason thereof was $15,575; that a sworn claim had been presented therefor on May 26, 1913, which was rejected in toto by the county commissioners of the county of Grant. It was further alleged:

“That on the 26th day of April, 1909, one T. Claud Bennett, then auditor of Douglas county, and one J. H. Hill, then auditor of Grant county, made and entered into a purported agreement in which said agreement it was attempted, on the part of said auditors, to adjust the property rights between plaintiff and defendant but that such agreement was null and void and wholly without authority of law, and in violation of the rights of plaintiff herein and was so determined to be by the superior court of the state of Washington for Douglas county, and thereafter by the supreme court of the state of Washington on appeal by judgment made and entered by said supreme court on the 10th day of April, 1913.” @

[357]*357The complaint concluded with an allegation that the sum of $15,375, with lawful interest, was justly due and owing from the county of Grant to the county of Douglas, and judgment was demanded for that sum.

A demurrer was interposed to the complaint by the county of Grant, on the ground, among others, that the action was barred by the statute of limitations. The demurrer was overruled, whereupon the county answered, setting up as one of its affirmative defenses a plea of the statute of limitations. A demurrer was interposed and sustained to the plea, and the action subsequently tried on the issues made by the other defenses, resulting in a judgment in favor of Douglas county for the amount demanded. The county of Grant appeals.

In its answer to the complaint, the county of Grant set forth a number of defenses in addition to the defense of the statute of limitations. These defenses we have not laid stress upon in our statement of the issues, for the reason that we have felt constrained to conclude that the latter defense is controlling. It may not be improper to remark, however, that in passing them it is not because we deem them without merit. On the contrary, our examination of the record has convinced us that some of them are worthy of serious consideration; we pass them because they become immaterial when it is once concluded that the right to maintain the action is barred by the statute of limitations.

Turning to the question we have found controlling, it must be remembered when considering it that, by express statutory provision (Rem. Code, § 167), the limitations prescribed for the commencement of actions “apply to actions brought in the name or for the benefit of a county ... in the same manner as to actions brought by private parties,” so that, if the statute is applicable at all, it is applicable to the present controversy, notwithstanding it is an action brought by one county against another.

While the point is not presented in the brief of counsel, it was suggested in the argument at bar that the statute of [358]*358limitations was without application. The suggestion is founded in the fact that the action is upon an obligation in the nature of a specialty, that is, one created by a special enactment of the legislature, and while the statute limiting the time within which actions may be commenced enumerates various causes of action, it does not include within the enumeration actions of this sort. But the suggestion overlooks the general provision contained in § 165. That section follows the specific enumeration and provides:

“An action for relief not hereinbefore provided for shall be commenced within two years after the cause of action shall have accrued.”

This section was quoted by the late Judge Dunbar in the case of Citizens’ Nat. Bank of Crawfordsville v. Lucas, 26 Wash. 417, 67 Pac. 252, 90 Am. St. 748, 56 L. R. A. 812, with the comment that the legislature intended thereby “to provide a limitation for every kind of action that could be brought in the courts.” Prior thereto we had held that an action to foreclose a lien created by a special assessment for a public improvement was barred unless the action was brought within two years after the cause of action accrued. Spokane v. Stevens, 12 Wash. 667, 42 Pac. 123; Ballard v. West Coast Imp. Co., 15 Wash. 572, 46 Pac. 1055; Bowman v. Colfax, 17 Wash. 344, 49 Pac. 551; Seattle v. De Wolfe, 17 Wash. 349, 49 Pac. 553.

Obligations the nature here considered are the creatures of statute, and are as much specialties as is the obligation at bar. Clearly, therefore, a statute that will bar the one will bar the other.

From the dates given, it will be seen that the cause of action accrued on February 24, 1909, that demand for payment was made on May 26, 1913, and that the action was brought on June 27, 1913. More than four years elapsed between the date of the accrual of the obligation and the date proceedings were instituted looking to its enforcement. This [359]*359was too late under the rule stated, unless some special reason exists for taking the particular case from without the rule.

One such reason suggested is that a demand was necessary to perfect the cause of action, and that the action was commenced within the statutory period after demand was made. There are cases which maintain the principle here involved, but we think that, even among these cases, the weight and better reasoned authority is that the demand must be made within a reasonable time, and that a reasonable time, in the absence of circumstances justifying or excusing the delay, is the statutory period, and that a demand made after the statutory period is too late. (See note to Cook v. Carpenter, 4 Ann. Cas. 728).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 P. 928, 98 Wash. 355, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-county-v-grant-county-wash-1917.