Oliver v. Wendell Highway District

224 P. 81, 38 Idaho 635, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 148
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 224 P. 81 (Oliver v. Wendell Highway 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
Oliver v. Wendell Highway District, 224 P. 81, 38 Idaho 635, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 148 (Idaho 1924).

Opinion

BRYAN, Commissioner.

— On January 15, 1915, the Appleton Highway District was organized, embracing territory [639]*639wholly within the boundaries of Gooding county. Later in the year 1915, the board of commissioners thereof floated bonds of said district in the sum of $25,000 for the purpose of constructing and repairing highways and bridges therein. Appellant Wendell Highway District was organized on January 7, 1916, of territory which is also entirely within Gooding county. During the month of May, 1919, said appellant district issued for road and bridge purposes bonds in the sum of $120,000. In the month of February, 1919, there was enacted by the legislature chapter 4, 1919 Session Laws, by the terms of which the county of Jeróme was created, taking from Gooding county a portion of the territory constituting the Appleton District, disorganizing said district, and leaving a portion thereof in Gooding county. Pursuant to authority conferred by the enactment of the legislature creating Jerome county, and subsequent to the floating of the said bonds of the Wendell District, the board of commissioners of Gooding county did, by proper action, during the month of May, 1919, duly declare attached to and a part of appellant Wendell Highway District all that portion of the Appleton District remaining within Good-ing county. As required by said act, and in adjusting the respective claims and rights of Jerome and Gooding counties, there was apportioned to the territory formerly included within the Appleton District, and which was thereafter attached to Wendell District, the sum of $12,500 of the then outstanding bonded indebtedness of the defunct Appleton District. For the purpose of raising funds to pay interest on the $12,500 of the bonded indebtedness of that portion of the Appleton District remaining in Gooding county, and which had theretofore been attached to the Wendell District, the commissioners of the Wendell District, during the month of October, 1920, levied a tax of twenty-seven cents on each $100 of assessed valuation on all lands lying within the last-mentioned territory, which tax was not applied to any other lands of the district as the same was at that time constituted. The said tax was duly cer-[640]*640tided to the auditor of Gooding county, and was, by said officer, extended upon the rolls against the lands included within the levy.

Plaintiff and respondent is the owner of lands embraced within the said territory. During the month of December, 1920, he, under protest,. paid to the appellant district one-half of the tax charged against his said lands, which payment has been retained by appellant.

A second cause of action is based upon taxes paid by other persons similarly situated, the right to recover which has been assigned to respondent.

From the judgment of the district court holding the said levy of taxes invalid, void and uncollectible, and directing that respondent recover from appellants the amount of money paid, this appeal is prosecuted.

By appellants it is contended that under constitutional and statutory provisions, and particularly under the act creating Jerome county, and disorganizing the Appleton District, the $12,500 apportioned to that part of the Appleton District which later was attached to the Wendell District should be charged only against the lands lying within the said territory. By respondent it is contended that under the constitution and laws, assessments to pay these bonds should be spread over the entire Wendell District.

It seems conceded that upon the annexation to one municipality of the territory of another, the legislature has ample power to declare how and by whom the indebtedness of the respective municipalities shall be paid, providing that such direction does not violate the constitutional provision that all taxes shall be uniform within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax. In the absence of such statutory provision, the general rule is that the contracts and indebtedness of the old corporation become the contracts and indebtedness of the consolidated or annexing corporation. (28 Oyc. 220.)

This brings us to an examination of the act of the legislature above mentioned, section 14 of which is as follows:

[641]*641“All money and property which belongs to any road and highway district divided by the boundary line of Jerome County, as well as the bonded and floating indebtedness of such district, shall be divided and apportioned between the different parts thereof in the proportion that the assessed valuation of the respective parts of such district, as shown by the assessment roll of 1918, bears to the total assessed valuation of the undivided district.”

It will be noted that this section merely defines the manner in which the bonded indebtedness of the Appleton District, which was being legislated out of existence, should be divided as between the portion of said district remaining in Gooding county, and the portion which should thereafter become a part of Jerome county. There is nothing in the language employed which suggests that the amount of the indebtedness in the remaining portion of the Appleton District should be paid entirely by the owners of land within such portion, without contribution from the land owners in the original Wendell District. After the board of commissioners of Gooding county discharged the duty enjoined upon it by the legislature by annexing to the Wendell District territory formerly constituting a part of the Appleton District, the newly acquired territory became and remained an integral part of the Wendell District, and was subject to all charges thereafter levied, and entitled to all immunities of the said district to the same extent as though it had been a component part thereof from the time of its inception.

Inasmuch as the legislature made no expression as to how or by whom such indebtedness should ultimately be paid, it must be assumed that the act was passed with full knowledge by the legislature of the existence of section 5, article 7, of the constitution, which section is in part as follows:

“All taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits, of the authority levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws, which shall prescribe such regulations as shall secure a just valuation for taxation of all property, real and personal.”

[642]*642We are not able to read into section 14 of this act a provision which would require the owners of land in this acquired territory to pay the entire amount of its indebtedness, and at the same time contribute to the indebtedness of the Wendell District incurred before this territory became a part thereof.

Appellants further contend that O. S., see. 1496, applies to this controversy, and that by reason thereof the trial court erred in holding that this assessment should be spread over all lands in the appellant district. 0. S., see. 1496, so far as the same can be construed to apply to this controversy, reads as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 P. 81, 38 Idaho 635, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-wendell-highway-district-idaho-1924.