Robertson v. Blaine County

90 F. 63, 47 L.R.A. 459, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1671
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 3, 1898
DocketNo. 441
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 90 F. 63 (Robertson v. Blaine County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Blaine County, 90 F. 63, 47 L.R.A. 459, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1671 (9th Cir. 1898).

Opinion

HAWLEY, District Judge

(after stating the facts). Did the court err in sustaining defendant’s demurrer? Is this action barred by the statute of limitations? The entire argument on behalf of the defendant clusters around the proposition that this is an action upon the original bonds, and not upon a debt growing out of them created at a subsequent date; that the act creating the county of Blaine simply provided that Blaine county should assume the payment of the bonded indebtedness of Alturas county; that it did not in terms create any new debt or obligation, but simply recognized the validity of the obligation created by Alturas; that there was no change as to the time when said bonds should become due; that Blaine county agreed to pay the bonds, stepped into the shoes of Alturas county, and was to pay just as Alturas would have paid them had it lived; that it' assumed all the burdens and became invested with all the rights and privileges that Alturas would have possessed if Blaine county had not been created; that, if Alturas had continued to exist in the same condition it was when the bonds were issued, it could have successfully pleaded the statute of limitations. The proposition contended for is tersely stated in its brief as follows:

“If plaintiff bas an action at all, it is not upon a new debt, nor a legislative debt, nor a new obligation, nor upon a specialty, nor a novation; it is the old debt of Alturas county. That county being dissolved, a new payor is created to discharge the obligation just as Alturas had it and left it.”

If this contention is sustained, it necessarily follows that as the bonds became due November 1, 1891, and more than five years elapsed from that date before the action was commenced, the statute of limitations would apply. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that the statute does not apply for various reasons, which are specifically stated by counsel as follows:

“(1) Because the duty of providing for and paying this debt was so imposed and assumed as to make the debtor county the donee of a power, and a [65]*65trustee of a direct, express, and conlintimg trust, unaffected by tlie statute of limita lions.
“t-1 Because the a,ct authorizing and requiring the creation of this debt provided for ihe levy of a special tax, and created a special fund, which tax was never levied, and which fund never contained any moneys; nor was any money ever in the treasury of the debtor county applicable to the payment qf this debt.
■'(.”) Because of new promises; of renewal of the indebtedness; of many subsequent acknowledgments of tlie debt; and because of tlie creation of a new' legislative obligation and debt upon the defendant county, based upon tlie original debt, and into which the original debt is merged.
"(4) Because of the new promises and acknowledgments embraced in and implied in legislative acts and legal proceedings thereunder; of the making provision for the iiayment of said indebtedness; of the apportioning of the samp, and creating legislative debts upon other comities than the debtor county, to aid the debtor county in the. iiayment of the same.
••(.j.l Because of statutory provisions requiring a new county to pay its proportionate share of any bonded indebtedness outstanding against the parent county, and requiring such payments to be used only in aid of paying such bonded indebtedness; and because of various acts, suits, and proceedings done', instituted, and undertaken by the debtor county to secure aid from oilier comities in obtaining funds on account of and for iiayment of this indebtedness.
"(ti) Because of the various acts of the legislature regarding said indebtedness, regarding the county which created the same, regarding other counties created out of said county, regarding the funding of the indebtedness, regarding the apportionment of the indebtedness; and because of acknowledgments and promises made and necessarily implied in various suits, actions. mid legal proceedings bad and taken concerning said indebtedness by the defendant county, and the result of the same.”

What la ihe character of this action? How should it be classified? Is il an action upon a contract, obligation, or liability founded upon an instrument in writing? No action could be maintained against Pdaiue county ujion the bonds and coupons issued by Altaras county except by force of the act of the legislature approved March 5, 3895. It is by virtue of the provisions of this act that plain tilt seeks to maintain this action against defendant. The liability or obligation of Blaine county to pay the bonds and coupons issued by Alturas county did not, and could not, arise except by legislative action. Under the provision of the act organizing and creating the county of Blaine, it assumed and agreed to pay “all valid and legal indebtedness of Alturas” county; and in said act it was provided “that all rights of action now existing in favor of or against said Alturas ® * * county may be maintained in favor of or against Blaine county.” The bonds and coupons at that time were a parr of the “valid and legal indebtedness” oí Alturas county, which Blaine agreed to pay. Its liability was then fixed and determined. The bonds and coupons issued by Alturas county constitute an important ingredient in the action," but they are not all of the case. As against Blaine county, they are but matters of inducement to tbe action. All these things must be taken into consideration in determining the character, cause, and nature of this action. It is not simply an action upon a contract made with, or au obligation or liability created by, Alturas county. The act abolishing Alturas county, and creating the county of Blaine, is as essential to the plaintiff’s right of action as is the fact of the [66]*66issuance of the bonds in the first instance by the county of Alturas. The cause of action is the bonds issued by Alturas, and the statute which fixes the liability of the county of Blaine for their payment. In order to state his cause of action, the plaintiff was required to plead, and, if the case was tried, would be compelled to prove, both the issuance of the bonds and the statute whereby Blaine county agreed to pay them. Neither pleaded alone would constitute a cause of action in favor of plaintiff against defendant. It is the nature of the whole cause of action which determines the applicability of the statute of limitations.

So far as Blaine county is concerned, the bonds are but the evidence of the valid and legal indebtedness of Alturas, which it agreed to pay. The debt was originally to be paid by Alturas county. Blaine county, except for the provisions of the statute referred to, could not be held answerable for the debt; but, by the act, new obligations were created, and the manner of payment was changed. To recapitulate: The statute created a debt, duty, or obligation against Blaine county, to recover a portion of which this action is brought; but, in order to show a cause of action against Blaine county, it devolved upon the plaintiff to allege the issuance of the bonds by Alturas county, and their nonpayment, because the existence of such facts was necessary in order to show that they constituted a part of the valid and legal indebtedness of Alturas county, which Blaine county, by virtue of the provisions of the statute, became liable to pay.

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Bluebook (online)
90 F. 63, 47 L.R.A. 459, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-blaine-county-ca9-1898.