Oneida County v. Evans

138 P. 337, 25 Idaho 456, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 6
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 138 P. 337 (Oneida County v. Evans) 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
Oneida County v. Evans, 138 P. 337, 25 Idaho 456, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 6 (Idaho 1914).

Opinion

AILSHIE, C. J.

This is an original application made in this court for a writ of review to review the action of the appraisers appointed under the provisions of chap. 6 of the 1913 Session Laws creating the county of Power, whereby the appraisers sought to adjust the bonded indebtedness between the counties of Power and the parent county of Oneida. The ,only question to be determined is the proper construction to place on said sec. 7 of the act. That section provides for the apportionment and adjustment between the two counties of the bonded indebtedness of the old county, and reads as follows:

‘ ‘ The bonded indebtedness of the county of Oneida, state of Idaho, existing and owing at the time this act takes effect, shall be paid by the counties of Oneida and Power in the manner and proportion as follows, to wit: that the county of Power shall pay such proportion of said indebtedness as the total assessed value, as shown by the assessment-rolls of 1912, of that part of Oneida county hereby taken and declared to be a part of Power, bears to the total assessed value of Oneida •county as it now exists; and upon the creation of said Power county and the apportionment of the indebtedness aforesaid, upon the basis aforesaid, the said Oneida county shall own and retain the courthouse, furniture, fixtures and appurtenances and the real estate upon which the same is situated. ’

The same session of the legislature enacted chap. 5 creating the county of Franklin, and the two acts, being chapters 5 and 6 of the 1913 Sess. Laws, were approved by the governor on the same day, and both became laws on the same day. Chap. 5, which created the county of Franklin out of the territory which formerly belonged to Oneida county, provided that the new county of Franklin should assume the sum of [459]*459$30,000 of the bonded indebtedness of Oneida county, without reference to the proportion the total assessed valuation of the new county might sustain to the assessed valuation of the old county or the remaining county.

It appears that at the time of the passage of these acts the county of Oneida had a bonded indebtedness of $59,000. When it came to adjusting the bonded indebtedness between Power and Oneida counties the commissioners disagreed as to the basis of apportionment of the remaining bonded indebtedness of $29,000 between these two counties. The Oneida county commissioner contended that Power county should assume a sum of the entire $59,000 indebtedness of the old county equal to the percentage of assessable property of the old county that was taken and included within the boundaries of the new county, which was twenty-seven per cent. On the other hand, the Power county commissioner contended, and the third commissioner appointed by the governor agreed with him, that Power county should only pay 22.8 per cent of the 'total outstanding bonded indebtedness of $59,000. This made a difference of some $2,430 between the two counties. This difference in computation arises out of the fact that $30,000 assumed by Franklin county was $5,220 more than would have fallen to it to pay had it been computed on the basis of the percentage which the territory cut off and organized into Franklin county bore to the whole territory which comprised the parent county. Power county, therefore, contended that it was entitled to a credit out of this concession of $5,220 equal to the percentage that the assessed valuation of the county of Power would sustain to the assessed valuation of the property left in the old county of Oneida after the segregation of the two new counties. In other words, the contention reduces itself down to this: That whereas Franklin county, in order to gain the consent of the old county to its creation, made the parent county an inducement of $5,220 to apply on its bonded 'indebtedness over and above the equitable share which would have fallen to that territory, Power county, on the other hand, now contends that this concession made by Franklin county was made [460]*460as well to Power as to Oneida, and that Power should share in the benefits. Oneida county, however, contends that it was a concession made solely to the parent county, and that no other county created from territory of the parent county is or would be entitled to claim any benefit from this concession.

It seems to us that it is only necessary to turn to the legislative act and consider for a moment the language of the statute, the time and conditions under which the two statutes passed the legislature, and the evident purpose of the respective measures, in order to determine the construction to be placed on the language of sec. 7, above quoted.

The two bills now embodied in chapters 5 and 6 were introduced in the legislature on the same day. The bill creating Power county was introduced in the Senate on the 10th day of January. The bill creating Franklin county was introduced in the House of Representatives on the same date. Each bill took its due course through the legislature, and no one could foresee whether either one would pass, or if it should pass, when it would finally become a law. The Power county bill, which finally passed the legislature on the 27th day of January, was received in the governor’s office on the 29th. The Franklin county bill passed the legislature on January 28th and was received in the governor’s office on the 29th,' and both bills were approved by the governor on the’ 30th. It is claimed that the Franklin county bill was signed and approved by the governor fifteen minutes prior to his approval of the Power county bill, but we do not consider this a matter of much significance in the determination of this question.

It is clear, and indeed seems apparent, that each bill was drawn and had reference to the creation of the particular county which it proposed to create and organize, and that it was directed against the whole territory of the parent county without reference to any other county either then in existence or that might be subsequently created from the territory of the parent county. It is equally clear that when the Franklin county bill referred to the bonded indebtedness of Oneida county, the parent county, it had reference to the whole in[461]*461debtedness of the parent county; and it is likewise equally clear that when the Power county bill referred to the bonded indebtedness of Oneida county, the parent county, it had reference to the entire indebtedness of the parent county.

The legislature in considering the Power county bill could not foresee, and we would not be justified in assuming that they even contemplated, that the Franklin county bill would pass first and become a law prior to the passage and enactment of the Power county bill. When they provided by sec. 7 of the Power county act that, “The bonded indebtedness of the county of Oneida ....

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Bluebook (online)
138 P. 337, 25 Idaho 456, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneida-county-v-evans-idaho-1914.