Inlow v. Board of County Commissioners

51 P. 65, 6 Kan. App. 391, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 5, 1897
DocketNo. 129
StatusPublished

This text of 51 P. 65 (Inlow v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inlow v. Board of County Commissioners, 51 P. 65, 6 Kan. App. 391, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 341 (kanctapp 1897).

Opinion

Mahan, P. J.

The plaintiffs in error, publishers of a paper in Graham County, published a notice of delinquent tax sales for 1893. The last publication was in the issue of September 1, 1893. They failed to file the proof of publication, as required by paragraph 6957 of the General Statutes of 1889, within fourteen days thereafter, but did file the proper affidavit on the nineteenth day of September. By this failure they forfeited all right to pay for the publication of the notice, under the provisions of the paragraph referred to.

The Legislature of 1895 passed a special act making this claim for the printer’s fees a legal and valid claim against Graham County in favor of the plaintiffs. Ch. 271, Laws 1895. . The plaintiffs presented to the Board of County Commissioners of Graham County a duly verified claim for said fees. The claim was rejected, and the plaintiffs appealed to the District Court of Graham County. Judgment was for the defendant.

There is no objection made to the character of the work done, but it is insisted that the plaintiffs forfeited all. right to payment, and that the Act of the Legislature of 1895 attempting to impose an obligation for the payment of this claim upon the County is unconstitutional, because it suspends the operation of a general law of the State, because it attempts to create an obligation against the County which it was prohibited from paying by the general law, and because it violates the provisions of section 16, article 2, of the Constitution, as the bill contains more than one [393]*393subject and the subjects or objects of the bill are not clearly expressed in its title. The contention that the right to compensation was forfeited is without doubt correct. Plaintiff’s counsel contends that the fourteen days provided by the statute did not begin to run until the end of the week after September 1, that is, that the publication was not completed until a week had elapsed after the issue of the paper. The statute seems clearly to indicate that the Legislature intended otherwise — that the fourteen days was intended to begin to run from the date of the last issue containing the publication. The County and State received the full benefit of the services of the plaintiff, except that they were not authorized under the law to sell the land for an amount including the printer’s fees provided by the statute. If they should include these statutory fees in the amount for which the land was sold, under the decisions of the Supreme Court, the sale would be voidable. However, neither the State nor the County suffered any disadvantage from this.

The next question is not free from difficulty. It is true that this special Act annuls the operation of the general law so far as it applied to the plaintiffs. Our Supreme Court has, however, upheld laws of a similar character where it was admitted that they had the effect of suspending the operation of a general law of the State. Comm’rs of Norton Co. v. Shoemaker, 27 Kan. 77. The special Act, the validity of which was sustained in that case, fixed the salaries of county clerk and treasurer in certain counties, including Norton County. There was, at the time, a general statute fixing salaries of all county officers, and, so far as the general statute applied to the counties named in the special Act under consideration in that case, its operation was suspended — annulled. Yet the court [394]*394held that it did not violate the provisions of section 17 of article 2 of the Constitution. The court held that it came within the decision of Beach v. Leahy, Treas. (11 Kan. 23). In the last-mentioned case the special Act under consideration was one authorizing a single school district in Neosho County to issue bonds to build a schoolhouse. The court sustained the validity of the law. The opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice Brewer, who held that the Legislature had a discretion, and it was for it to determine whether the purpose of the Act could or could not be expediently accomplished by a general law; and if, in the judgment of the Legislature, it could not, that it had a .discretion to pass a special act, notwithstanding, so far as that school district was concerned, it interfered with the general statute in relation to the same subject-matter. Chief Justice Horton, in Comm’rs of Norton Co. v. Shoemaker, supra, refers to the case of The State, ex rel., v. Hitchcock (1 Kan. 178), which is to the same effect.

Counsel, in his brief upon this branch of the case, refers us to Darling v. Rodgers ( 7 Kan. 592) and Robinson v. Perry (17 id. 248), as decisive of the question. These cases were also relied upon in the case of Comm’rs of Norton Co. v. Shoemaker, supra, as conclusive authority against the statute under consideration in that case; but there is a wide diffei’ence between those cases and the one under consideration.

In the case of Darling v. Rodgers, supra, the court had under consideration the Herd Law of 1870, which was confined in its operation to six counties of the State. There was in force at that time a law of a general nature, entitled “An act in relation to fences ” (Gen. Stat. 1868, p. 486), providing what should constitute a legal and sufficient fence and requiring [395]*395fields to be inclosed therewith, under which a landowner could not recover damages for the trespass of cattle unless his land was so fenced. The law of 1870, called the Herd Law, so far as six counties were concerned, established an entirely different rule for those counties. It established an entirely different ■rule in those counties from that in the other counties where the general law in relation to the same subject was in force. It was an attempt to cr.eate a general law not having a uniform operation throughout the ■State ; and it likewise attempted to interfere with the •operation of the general law of the State in relation to the same subject-matter, and was clearly in violation of the first clause of section 17, article 2, of the Constitution. It was not intended to supply a defect ■or cure an informality in the proceedings of a court ■or of a public officer acting within the scope of his authority ; nor was it intended to give effect to acts to which there was an express assent of the parties ■interested, as in the case under consideration. That Act was not like the one now under consideration ; it ■was intended to have paramount operation, while the purpose of this was to waive a forfeiture, and it was .applicable to but one particular fact.

In the case of Robinson v. Perry, supra, the court had under consideration chapter 116 of the Laws of 1870, purporting to amend section 1 of chapter 115 of the Laws of 1869, prohibiting sheep from running at large in Doniphan County. The law of 1869, which the Legislature attempted to amend, was a law of a general nature, the operation of which the Legislature attempted to restrict to a few counties. The amendment was a general law in effect, but limited in its operation by excluding the county of Doniphan. Both of these acts were in direct conflict with the first [396]*396clause of section 17, above cited, and were so held by the Supreme Court.

This case comes within the rule laid down in Comm’rs of Norton Co. v. Shoemaker, supra; Beach v. Leahy, Treas., supra; State of Kansas, ex rel., v. Hitchcock, supra; City of Wichita v. Burleigh, 36 Kan. 34; Knowles v. Board of Education, 33 id. 692.

In the case of City of Wichita v. Burleigh,

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Related

State ex rel. Johnson v. Hitchcock
1 Kan. 178 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1862)
Darling v. Rodgers
7 Kan. 592 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1871)
Beach v. Leahy
11 Kan. 23 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1873)
Board of Commissioners v. Shoemaker
27 Kan. 77 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1882)
Craft v. Lofinck
34 Kan. 365 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1885)
City of Wichita v. Burleigh
36 Kan. 34 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1886)
Fox v. Cross
39 Kan. 350 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1888)
State ex rel. Kellogg v. Sanders
42 Kan. 228 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
51 P. 65, 6 Kan. App. 391, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inlow-v-board-of-county-commissioners-kanctapp-1897.