First National Bank v. County of Dawson

240 P. 981, 74 Mont. 439, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 174
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1925
DocketNo. 5,764.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 240 P. 981 (First National Bank v. County of Dawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. County of Dawson, 240 P. 981, 74 Mont. 439, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 174 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*442 MR. JUSTICE GALEN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover from the defendants taxes paid under protest for the year 1923, in the aggregate amount of $282.40, together with interest on the sum of $141.40 from the thirtieth day of November, 1923, and interest on a like amount from the twenty-eighth day of January, 1924, at the rate of- eight per cent per annum. A demurrer to the complaint was filed and overruled, and thereafter, » the defendants having failed to answer, the cause was brought on for hearing before the court without a jury upon an agreed statement of facts and oral evidence. Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $141.40, together with interest and costs. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.

The only question presented by the plaintiff’s assignment of errors is whether it was entitled to recover judgment for the full amount claimed in its complaint. The suit involves the legality of certain items of a tax levy made by the city of Glendive for the year 1923. It appears that for that year the plaintiff was assessed on a property valuation of $91,950, which for the levy of taxes was fixed at $35,351. The contention of the plaintiff is that certain of the taxes levied for the year 1923 against its property, and by it paid under protest, are unlawful and void, and that it is entitled to judgment for the full amount as prayed in its complaint.

On August 20, 1923, the city council, for the purpose of determining the tax to be levied upon the taxable property within *443 the city limits, passed and approved a resolution, numbered 131, which was thereupon duly certified to the board of county commissioners of Dawson county, and by it made the basis of a levy of 21.6 mills upon all taxable property in the city of Glendive for city purposes. .Some of the items of tax levy are admitted by the plaintiff to be legal, while others are conceded by the defendants to be illegal. Those specifically involved on this appeal are as follows: “Sinking fund for the payment of bonds and interest on city water supply bonds of 1905 as provided for by Ordinance No. 371 of the city of Glen-dive, Montana,' one and one-half mills; sinking fund for the payment of bonds and interest on city water supply bonds as provided for by Ordinance No. 372 of the city of Glendive, Montana, one-half (%) mills; sinking fund for the payment of bonds and interest on second additional coupon water supply bonds as provided for by Ordinance No. 373 of the city of Glendive, Montana, two (2) mills.”

These items of tax levy relate to three separate bond issues of the city of Glendive, the last mentioned of which, for $65,000, was in excess of the three per cent constitutional limit of indebtedness. Each of these bond issues was executed after submitting the question of whether they should be issued to a vote of the electors, upon the stipulated condition, submitted and voted upon, that the money derived should be used for a city water supply, and the revenues therefrom devoted to the payment of the indebtedness. The judgment entered in plaintiff’s favor is for the amount of taxes paid by it, admitted to be illegal.

It is contended by the plaintiff that the indebtedness for which these taxes were levied was incurred with express understanding, had between the city of Glendive and its electors, that it should be paid from the earnings of the city water plant, and that the city has no right to resort to taxation in order to pay the bonds or the interest thereon, unless the revenue from the water plant is wholly inadequate. In relation *444 thereto it is alleged in plaintiff’s complaint: “That at all times since the year 1906 the net revenues derived from the waterworks system in the city of Glendive has been sufficient for the purpose of paying interest on each and all of said bond issues and providing a sinking fund as provided by law; that the city of Glendive has unlawfully diverted large sums of money from the water funds and from the earnings of said waterworks system, and used the same for other municipal purposes; that the earnings from the said waterworks system of 1923 were adequate to pay the interest on the indebtedness and providing a sinking fund as provided by law, and the city of Glendive would now have adequate funds in the water fund of the city to pay interest on the said bonded indebtedness, and to provide a sinking fund as provided by law, had not such earnings of the said waterworks system been unlawfully diverted from the waterworks system and used for other municipal purposes.”

The only issue presented was whether the earnings of the water department had been wrongfully diverted, and, if so, whether the amount misapplied was sufficient to meet the interest due on the bonds and provide a sinking fund for their retirement, without resort to taxation. There were but two witnesses, one for the plaintiff, and one for the defendants. The city clerk gave testimony for the plaintiff, and the superintendent of the water department for the defendants. There is no material difference in their testimony, save that plaintiff’s witness gave evidence as to the condition of the water funds for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1923', while the witness for the defendants testified as to the calendar year from January 1 to December 31, 1923.

The record is not clear as to the dates of the bond issues involved, nor is the interest rate thereof shown. The first issue, referred to in Ordinance No. 371, appears to have been for the sum of $45,000, redeemable after three years at the rate of $3,000 per year, and payable in twenty years; the sec *445 ond, mentioned in Ordinance No. 372, appears to have been for the sum of $15,000, redeemable at the rate of $1,000' per year after November 1, 1911, and payable in twenty years; and the third, adverted to in Ordinance No. 373, appears to have been for the sum of $65,000, redeemable at the rate of $6,500 in any year after the expiration of ten years, and payable in twenty years.

The proof discloses that the gross earnings from the water department for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1923, was the sum of $41,231.51, and that the operating expenses for the same period amounted to $31,009.63, leaving a profit of $10,-221.68; that the city derived other revenue, designated as “nonoperating,” amounting to the sum of $12,606.89, making a total net income of $22,828.77. Among the items going to make up “nonoperating revenue,” the sum of $8,849.64 was derived from taxes levied to meet the three items involved herein, and, deducting that amount, the city would have a net revenue of $13,979.13. In this sum there is included a premium of $800 derived from the sale of bonds, deducting which, a net revenue of $13',179.13 is shown. Interest charges for the fiscal year on the city’s bonded indebtedness amounted to $7,150, and during that period there was $1,399.18 put into the sinking fund, so that the total amount paid for interest and set aside for the redemption of the bonds amounted to $8,549.18. Deducting this amount from the net revenue of $13,179.18, there would still remain to the credit of revenues available for the payment of the bonds the sum of $4,629.25.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 P. 981, 74 Mont. 439, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-county-of-dawson-mont-1925.