People v. Morse

43 Cal. 534
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1872
DocketNo. 3,129
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 43 Cal. 534 (People v. Morse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Morse, 43 Cal. 534 (Cal. 1872).

Opinion

By the Court,

Belcher, J.:

This is an action for the collection of delinquent taxes for the year 1871.

By the Act of the 18th of March, 1868, to provide for the government of the County of San Diego, the Board of Supervisors was required on the first Monday of April in each year to levy an annual tax of two dollars on every one hundred dollars valuation of real and personal property within the county, “which shall be collected in the manner prescribed by law, and when paid into the County Treasury shall be distributed as follows: * * * Seventeen and one half per cent into an Interest Tax Fund to be used in the payment of the interest on the funded debt of the county; * * * seventeen and one half per cent into a Floating Debt Redemption Fund, to be used in the payment of the unfunded indebtedness of the county outstanding on the 1st day of April, A. D. 1868; and twelve and one half per cent into a Funded Debt Redemption Fund, which shall be used for the redemption of the funded debt of the county in the manner in this Act provided.”

By the same Act a Board of Commissioners was appointed whose duty it was to carefully examine into the legality or illegality of all the unfunded indebtedness of the county [537]*537which might remain outstanding on the 1st day of April, 1868, and to allow or reject, in whole or in part, any or all of such indebtedness, as might appear in the judgment of the Board a legal and just claim against the county or otherwise. Upon the allowance of any such indebtedness the Board was directed to issue to the rightful owner and holder thereof a warrant for the amount found to be a legal and just claim against the county, which was made payable without interest, in the manner, and out of the Floating Debt Redemption Fund, provided for in the Act.

It was also provided that whenever the Floating Debt Redemption Fund should contain the sum of two hundred dollars or more, and whenever th'e Funded Debt Redemption Fund should contain the sum of five hundred dollars or more, the County Treasurer should give notice that he would at a time named receive sealed bids for the surrender of warrants drawn by the Board of Commissioners, and to be paid out of the first named Fund, and of county bonds which were to be paid out of the last named Fund; that at the time named he should, in public and in the presence of the President of the Board of Supervisors, open the proposals and accept the lowest bid or bids for the surrender of such warrants or bonds, provided that no bid for the surrender of warrants should be accepted for more than thirty-five cents upon the dollar, and no bid for the surrender of bonds should be accepted for more than fifty cents upon the dollar of the face value thereof, exclusive of interest.

It was provided that the Treasurer should pay out no moneys placed in these Funds except in the manner and for the purposes named in the-Act. At the trial in the Court below it was admitted that a county tax of two dollars upon every one hundred dollars valuation of real and personal property within the County of San Diego was levied by the [538]*538Board of Supervisors of said county on the first Monday of April, 1870, pursuant to the requirements of the Act before referred to; that all the indebtedness of said county of every nature and kind which was outstanding on the first day of April, and which had been surrendered to the Board of Commissioners created by the above named Act, for the action of said Board, had been acted upon by it, warrants drawn and the same fully paid, prior to the levy of said county tax in controversy in this action; and that there was in each of the Funds designated in said Act as “ Interest Tax Fund,” “Floating Debt Redemption Fund,” and “Funded Debt Redemption Fund,” a large sum of money; that there was still outstanding and unpaid a large amount of the indebtedness of said county, both funded and unfunded, which was outstanding on the 1st day of April, 1868, but that the same was held by parties who refused to accept the terms and conditions of payment provided in the said Act.

In Bose v. Estudillo, 39 Cal. 270, the constitutionality of this Act was called in question, in so far as it required warrants drawn by the Auditor of the county, and which had been duly presented to the Treasurer for payment, and indorsed “not paid for want of funds,” to be presented and passed upon by the Board of Commissioners appointed for that purpose by the Act. It was held that the claim of the petitioner in that case, who held certain warrants of the kind named, was a part of the recognized indebtedness of the county, authenticated and allowed as provided by law, and that it was not competent for the Legislature to pass an Act which would declare such claims invalid, nor could it authorize a commission to do so; that the creditor could not be compelled to accept another and essentially different mode of payment from that provided by his contract—that is to say, by the laws existing at the time he became a creditor of the county. But it was added that as no moneys were provided for the payment of that class of indebtedness to [539]*539which the claim of the petitioner belonged, except what was called the “funding provisions” of the Act, the petitioner was without remedy except to apply to the Legislature to provide the means of paying his debt, unless there were funds in the treasury, which were raised under the provisions of the old law, and by that law were designated to pay his claim.

At the trial in the Court below, it was insisted by the defendant—and his views were adopted by the Court—that so much of the taxes levied against his property in 1870 as were to go into the three Funds named, were illegally levied and could not be collected. This was placed upon two grounds: First—It was said that the object of the levy of the tax for said Funds had ceased to exist prior to the levy, because all of the indebtedness of the county which had been acted upon by the Board of Commissioners and allowed, had been fully paid, leaving a large amount of money in each of the Funds, and because the other creditors of the county refused to accept the terms and conditions of payment provided for in the Act. Second—That so much of the said Act as requires the Supervisors of said county to levy the tax for the several Funds aforesaid is unconstitutional and void.

We cannot accept these views as sound. The Interest Tax Fund is provided for the purpose of paying the interest on the outstanding bonds of the county. It is made to take the place of the “interest tax” required to be levied by the Act of May 4th, 1855, to fund the debt of the County of San Biego and provide for the payment of the same. It was evidently provided by the Legislature to pay the interest on the bonds of the county in case the holders should not choose to accept the terms of payment offered them by the Act of 1868; for if they accept those terms, -both principal and interest are made payable out of the Funded Bebt Bedernption Fund.

[540]*540We do not see how it can he said that the occasion for the Floating Debt Redemption Fund has ceased to exist, or that the law providing for it is unconstitutional. It is true the Legislature cannot require the creditors of the county to accept the terms of payment proposed, but it may refuse, as it has refused, to provide funds to pay them in any other way. It might even refuse to provide funds to pay any portion of the indebtedness. This is well settled by the decisions of this Court, and is so declared in Rose v. Estudillo.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Cal. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-morse-cal-1872.