Kraus v. Riley

80 P.2d 864, 107 Mont. 116, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 62
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1938
DocketNo. 7,841.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 864 (Kraus v. Riley) 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
Kraus v. Riley, 80 P.2d 864, 107 Mont. 116, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 62 (Mo. 1938).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an original proceeding for an injunction. Plaintiff seeks to enjoin threatened action of the defendants under Chapter 85, Laws of 1937, and other related Acts hereinafter more particularly referred to.

The complaint, after alleging the official character of the several defendants, alleges that during the years 1936 and 1937 resident taxpayers of Sanders county organized a water users’ association for the purpose of constructing a dam, reservoir, appurtenant ditches and works for the purpose of furnishing and distributing water to lands owned by stockholders of the *119 association for irrigation purposes; that such a project is of public interest to the people of that county in order to bring arid lands into productivity, and additionally that such a project will furnish employment to many otherwise indigent citizens; that on application of the county the Works Progress Administration has approved the project and is ready and willing to pay the wages of the laborers, provided that the sponsors will furnish the materials, equipment and supplies and supervise the work; that the amount of money required to be expended by the county will be approximately $10,000, and the amount which will be expended by the Works Progress Administration in labor will be many times that amount; that the county is without available funds with which to pay for materials, equipment, rentals, supplies and supervision; that the only means of providing the necessary revenue is for the county to issue relief warrants bearing 6 per cent, interest under Chapter 85, Laws of 1937, which the defendant county commissioners threaten to do; and that in consequence it will be necessary for the county commissioners to levy a tax of not to exceed one-half of one per cent, on the taxable property of the county with which to raise money to pay the warrants.

It is alleged that the project will be completed in 1938 and the warrants will be issued prior to March 15, 1939, the expiration date of Chapter 85, but that the levy of the tax cannot be made until after March 15, 1939; that since the levy cannot be made until after the expiration of that chapter, the levy would be illegal, and that the issuance of warrants payable after the expiration date of Chapter 85 is unauthorized.

It is further alleged that the Retirement Board in charge of Teachers Retirement Funds is authorized by Chapter 87, Laws of 1937, to invest its funds in county warrants and, unless restrained, will in conjunction with the State Treasurer invest its funds in such warrants, and that the State Board of Land Commissioners will also, unless restrained, invest school funds in such warrants.

It is further alleged that the Water Conservation Board, acting under sections 349.1 to 349.38, Revised Codes, plans to *120 enter into a contract with the county commissioners of Sanders county whereby that board will issue revenue bonds of the state; that if it does so and will take up the emergency warrants of the county, the county will not be required to pay the warrants, as the bonds so issued will be paid by funds procured from water users by the water users ’ association; that unless restrained the Water Conservation Board will issue bonds for such purpose, and that such bonds will be void as in conflict with section 4, Article XIII of the Constitution; that the warrants and the bonds will be void as in conflict with section 1 of Article XIII of the Constitution; and that Chapter 85, so far as it fixes and determines the amount of the tax levy to be made by the county commissioners, violates section 4, Article XII of the Constitution.

The answer admits all of the allegations of facts set forth in the complaint, but denies the legal conclusions drawn from the facts.

Section 2 of Chapter 85 plainly authorizes counties, school districts and cities to issue warrants which are denominated “relief warrants” in payment of materials, equipment, rentals, supplies or supervision when other sufficient funds are not available. These are made payable from a fund known as the “Emergency Relief Fund.” (Sec. 3.) Section 4 authorizes the levy of a tax of not to exceed one-half of one per cent, on the taxable property of the political subdivision levying the tax, and contains this provision: “If and when all outstanding warrants issued and payable out of the emergency relief fund have been paid then the authority to levy the tax herein provided for shall cease to exist.” Section 7 of the Act provides that it “shall continue in effect until March 15, 1939, and thereafter shall be of no force or effect.”

The question here presented is whether taxes may be levied and collected after March 15, 1939, in order to raise money with which to pay warrants issued prior to that date and for a project completed before that date.

When relief warrants are issued they become an obligation of the political subdivision issuing the same, and it cannot be said that the legislature intended by the Act limiting its *121 effective date to March 15, 1939, to impair the obligation of the political subdivision to pay them, contrary to the express mandate of the Constitution. (Art. Ill, sec. 11.) Reasonable construction of Chapter 85 impels the conclusion that it should not exist after March 15, 1939, as authority for the creation of further obligations, but that any obligations already incurred and for which warrants had been issued would still remain as obligations of the political subdivision and that there still would be authority in such subdivision to levy taxes in order to discharge the obligation.

A similar question was before the court in State ex rel. Dragstedt v. State Board of Education, 103 Mont. 336, 62 Pac. (2d) 330, where a statute akin to the one before us was under consideration, and this court said: “As to whether a project could be validly initiated just prior to June 1,-1937, when Chapter 24, as extended, ceases to be a law, we express no opinion. The instant project was initiated by resolution of the board, in conjunction with that for the construction of the Journalism building, on July 6, 1933, followed by the formal resolution here considered on July 8, 1935, nearly two years prior to the expiration date of the Act, and application to the proper federal authorities for the grant and loan on July 10, 1935. The board has caused plans and specifications to be prepared for the construction of the building in question and has submitted them and has entered into negotiations with the federal authorities. It is evident that the project has been approved, as it is alleged in the petition that, ‘in the event necessary money becomes available,’ the grant will be made and bonds purchased by the Public Works Administration. The board seems to have moved with due expedition, and all preliminary steps should be taken and the building well on its way to erection by June 1, 1937. The fact that the building may not be completed until long after the expiration date of the law under which the project is initiated, contract let, and the erection of the building commenced cannot vitiate the authority under which the board is proceeding-in compliance with the law.”

*122

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Related

State Ex Rel. Ward v. Anderson
491 P.2d 868 (Montana Supreme Court, 1971)
Fickes v. Missoula County
470 P.2d 287 (Montana Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 864, 107 Mont. 116, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraus-v-riley-mont-1938.