Grand Island & Northern Wyoming Railroad v. Baker

34 L.R.A. 835, 45 P. 494, 6 Wyo. 369, 1896 Wyo. LEXIS 21
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 34 L.R.A. 835 (Grand Island & Northern Wyoming Railroad v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Island & Northern Wyoming Railroad v. Baker, 34 L.R.A. 835, 45 P. 494, 6 Wyo. 369, 1896 Wyo. LEXIS 21 (Wyo. 1896).

Opinion

Potter, Justice.

Plaintiff filed its petition in the district court for Crook County, praying for an injunction against the collection of a portion of the taxes levied in that county for the year 1895. A demurrer was interposed,, and upon the hearing thereof the court ordered the cause to be reserved to this court for its opinion upon certain questions certified to be important and difficult.

In the year 1895 the board of county commissioners of the county of Crook levied the following taxes :

General Ee venue.10 mills.
General County School. 2 “
Judgment Tax. 3J “
Court House and Jail Bonds.... 2 “
Funding Bonds. 2-J “

amounting in the aggregate to 19f mills on the dollar. The only part of the levy complained of in this action, is the judgment tax of 3J mills, which is assumed to have been levied to pay certain judgments rendered against the county. The facts connected with the judgments are not, as the pleadings now stand, sufficiently disclosed to definitely indicate the precise nature of the claims entering into them. We are not informed by the pleadings, either as to the time when, or the court wherein, such judgments were secured. Inferentially it may appear that they were obtained since the admission of the State, and largely upon warrants issued in payment for current expenses of the county, since the adoption of the constitution. In-. deed, the argument in this court was largely confined to the effect of judgments rendered upon warrants so issued, and the taxing power associated therewith, although the suggestion was advanced by counsel that for all which *376 appeared in the pleadings; funding bonds might have constituted the source of the judgments.

It would seem that no necessity exists for dispute upon the essential facts. It would have been more satisfactory, therefore, and would perhaps have narrowed the scope of our investigation, had the issues been fully made up, prior to the reservation to this court, so as to clearly and without cavil present the questions submitted by the learned court for our consideration.

It is not our duty, however, to pass upon the demurrer. Our jurisdiction is limited to a decision upon the certified questions, and we are not requested thereby to direct the ruling which should be made upon the present condition of the pleadings.

The judgment tax is charged to have been illegal and void, and levied without authority; that the same was not levied for the payment of the public debt of the county or the interest thereon; and the county had exhausted its power to levy taxes for general revenue purposes by a levy of the constitutional limit of twelve mills for such purposes in the year 1895, and each year theretofore since the organization of the State. It is attempted, also, to attack the judgments upon two grounds : First, that the alleged debts upon which they were obtained were void, as having been contracted, or the evidences of such indebtedness having been issued in excess of the limit upon county indebtedness established by the constitution ; second, that the said judgments were procured through the consent and confession of the board of county commissioners contrary to law.

The questions certified for our decision are as follows:

1. Is the levy of The Board of County Commissioners of the county of Crook of three and one fourth mills of judgment tax as set forth in plaintiff’s petition, and; the agreement of parties thereto attached, in excess of the limitation as fixed by the constitution and laws of the State of Wyoming ?

*377 2. Separate and apart from each of the propositions herein made, is or is not the defendant entitled to judgment on its agreement with the plaintiff (Exhibit 1 ‘ A ” plaintiff’s petition), for the siim'of $927.66?

3. For what purposes can a tax be levied by the board of the county commissioners in excess of the twelve mills limitation and under the term £ ‘ Public Indebtedness and Interest thereon,” as the term is used in Section 5 of Article 15 of the constitution ?

4. Can a tax in excess of twelve mills be levied by the board of the county commissioners for the payment of an indebtedness growing out of and by reason of the provisions of chapter 6 of the laws of 1893, entitled “An Act to Encourage the Destruction of Predatory Wild Animals”?

5. Can a tax in excess of twelve mills be levied by the board of the county commissioners for the purpose of paying warrants issued for salaries of- county officers when the revenue of the county derived from taxation in previous years has not proved sufficient to defray its expenses, and such warrants are outstanding and unpaid for the want of sufficient funds?

6. Does the placing of warrants, issued for legitimate county expenses, into judgment, justify the board of the county commissioners in levying a tax in excess of twelve mills with which to pay the same?

7. In case judgment has been rendered in favor of a land owner for damages caused by the location, construction, and opening of a public road through his land, can a tax be levied to pay such judgment in excess of twelve mills provided by law to be levied for all county purposes, the revenue raised by the twelve-mill tax being all required and used for county purposes?

8. Has the board of the county commissioners authority and power under the constitution and laws of the State, to confess and authorize a confession of judgments against the county?

*378 9. Can a judgment, rendered by the district court of Crook County having jurisdiction over the person and .subject-matter, be attacked collaterally in this case?

10. Can not the board of the county commissioners levy the district court tax, for the maintenance of the court, in addition to the levy of twelve mills for county revenue?

The second question, viz., “Separate and apart from each of the propositions herein made, is or is not the defendant entitled to judgment on its agreement with the plaintiff (Exhibit ‘ £A, ” plaintiff’s petition) for the sum of $927.66?” can not receive our consideration, for the reason that the facts do not sufficiently appear in the pleadings before us, to authorize a complete determination thereof upon the merits of the cause.

For the purpose of convenience, we propose to discuss the legal questions involved in the various questions, without, in general, a specific reference to any particular question, or the order in which they are presented. A majority of the certified questions do not admit of categorical answers. A careful elucidation of the views entertained by the court covering the subject-matters of the questions, ought to, and, we conceive, will, be sufficiently indicative of our opinion upon the questions themselves.

Involved in the questions thus submitted is the construction of the various constitutional provisions affecting the power of counties to incur indebtedness and levy taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
34 L.R.A. 835, 45 P. 494, 6 Wyo. 369, 1896 Wyo. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-island-northern-wyoming-railroad-v-baker-wyo-1896.