Hurlebaus v. American Falls Reservoir District

286 P. 598, 49 Idaho 158, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 81
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1930
DocketNo. 5367.
StatusPublished

This text of 286 P. 598 (Hurlebaus v. American Falls Reservoir District) 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
Hurlebaus v. American Falls Reservoir District, 286 P. 598, 49 Idaho 158, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 81 (Idaho 1930).

Opinion

McNAUGHTON, J.

This is an action by Harvey W. Hurlebaus against the American Falls Eeservoir District and its directors to restrain the district and its directors from procuring official bonds for others than its own officers, and for restraining them from paying out moneys of the district to protect moneys in the hands of county treasurers, belonging to the district and received by the county treasurers under the laws of the state, also to restrain the district and its board of directors from paying out any moneys of the district for the purpose of paying premiums on bonds of the state treasurer for the protection of funds *162 collected by the county treasurers upon the district’s assessments which, by the laws of the state, the state treasurer is required to receive from the county treasurers of the several counties in which lands of the district are located, and disburse it in the payment of interest and principal upon the irrigation district’s bonds and obligations to the United States.

The questions presented here are purely questions of law. The complaint upon which the action is founded alleges the due organization of the district; that the district has issued and sold its bonds in the amount of $2,584,000, for construction purposes; and alleges that by resolution of the district board of directors, with the consent of the boards of county commissioners of the several counties in which the district- lies, the district has provided for the collection of its assessments by the county officers with other taxes. The complaint states that such assessments have heretofore been collected and are being collected with other taxes by the tax collectors of the counties in which the lands assessed by the district are located; that said collection is being made under the authority of chap. 178, Sess. Laws 1923.

The complaint also states that all certificates required of the district under the statute have been filed with the county auditors of the different counties. The said certificates show that for the current year the amount to be collected on account of said bond issue is $172,362, and for operation and maintenance the sum of $16,000. The complaint also states that the county officials of the respective counties in which the lands of the district lie have heretofore paid to the treasurer of the state of Idaho, in accordance with chap. 178, Sess. Laws 1923, the sums collected by them for said district on account of principal and interest on its bonds, and that the state treasurer now has in his hands, unexpended funds so collected and paid unto bim as such treasurer, approximately $200,000.

The allegations of the complaint are full and ample, and present the facts of the whole case. The defense relies entirely upon its demurrer. The district court in passing *163 upon the issues of law held that the funds of the district, while in the hands of the county treasurers, were and are fully protected by the official bonds of such county treasurers, and the acts of the board of directors in authorizing expenditure of money for the procurement of additional bonds for the protection of its funds while in their hands would be an idle act and the incurring of an unnecessary and unlawful expense. But on the other phase of the case the district court held that providing additional bonds for the state treasurer was an expense properly incurred by the directors of the district for the welfare of the district. In short, the ruling of the district judge was that the funds of the district coming into the hands of the county treasurers, pursuant to chap. 178, Sess. Laws 1923, were protected by the official bonds of the various county treasurers, but that the money so collected and transmitted to the state treasurer, was not protected by the official bond of the state treasurer. Judgment was entered accordingly, upholding the expenditure for additional bonds for the state treasurer, but restraining the expenditure for additional bonds for the county officials. Both parties appealed.

The issues of law presented upon this appeal, under the assignments of error set forth by the appellant and cross-appellant, require an examination of the law in the determination of two questions: (1) Do the official bonds of the state treasurer protect funds coming into his hands on account of irrigation district assessments made pursuant to chap. 178, Sess. Laws 1923? (2) Do the official bonds of the respective county treasurers, in which part of the lands of the district lie, protect funds coming into the hands of the different county treasurers on account of district assessments collected by them under chap. 178, Sess. Laws 1923?

We will first examine the law with reference to the official bonds of the state treasurer. If the duty of the state treasurer, imposed by chap. 178, Sess. Laws 192'3, is such an official duty that his acts are covered by the state treasurer’s official bond the expenditure of the district’s *164 money for protection would be an idle act, unauthorized and unlawful. On the other hand, if his duties in receiving, depositing and disbursing these moneys in paying the district’s bond and United States contract obligations and interest thereon, are not covered by the state treasurer’s bond then it would be the duty of the directors of the district, and lawful, to safeguard the funds by procuring bonds as contemplated by the resolution of the board of directors in question.

The duties of the state treasurer are fixed by the Constitution and legislative acts pursuant thereto. Article 4, sec. 11 of the Idaho Constitution provides:

“The executive department shall consist of a Governor . . . . State Treasurer . . . . , each of whom shall hold his office for two years, beginning on the first Monday in January next after his election.....They shall perforin such duties as are prescribed by this' constitution and as may be prescribed by law.”

C. S., sec. 157, provides:

“It is the duty of the treasurer: 1. To receive and keep all moneys belonging to the. state not required to be received and kept by some other person.....12. To discharge such other duties as may be imposed upon him by law.”

C. S., sec. 177, provides:

“The state treasurer must execute an official bond in the sum of $250,000.”

Now, turning to the conditions of the bond. C. S., see. 424, provides:

“The condition of an official bond must be that the principal will well, truly and faithfully perform all official duties then required of him by law, and also all such additional duties as may be imposed on him by any law of the state. Such bond must be signed by the principal and at least two sureties, to the full penalty of the bond. No person shall be accepted as surety on such bond unless he shall, during the year immediately preceding, have been assessed for and paid taxes, in his own right, upon properly to the amount for which he has become surety.”

*165 C. S., see. 430, provides:

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Bluebook (online)
286 P. 598, 49 Idaho 158, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurlebaus-v-american-falls-reservoir-district-idaho-1930.