State ex rel. Attorney General v. County Commissioners

18 Neb. 601
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 Neb. 601 (State ex rel. Attorney General v. County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Attorney General v. County Commissioners, 18 Neb. 601 (Neb. 1886).

Opinions

Reese, J.

The questions involved in this case are of great importance to the state and to the people of the several counties, as they involve, among others, the question of the power of the legislature to impose upon the people of the several counties the expense of the maintenance' of insane persons at the state hospital, in addition to the general state tax levied for the purpose of maintaining this institution.

While we have carefully investigated all the questions presented, yet, for want of sufficient time at our disposal to discuss each one with that degree of care to which it seems to merit, we must be content with a very brief statement of our conclusions, without any elaboration.

From the agreed and stipulated facts it appears that the amount of tax levied by the state authorities has been sufficient to maintain the -hospital, paying all the expense of board, etc., of all the patients, so that it has not been a matter of absolute necessity for its maintenance that any further burdens should be imposed upon counties having patients there under the provisions of section 47 of chapter 40 of the Compiled Statutes of 1885. It must be borne in mind that ‘the question here is simply one of the power of the legislature to impose this tax. All suggestions as to its -expediency must be banished from the case. The legislative department, being one of the co-ordinate branches of the government of the state, cannot be controlled by the courts so long as it acts within its jurisdiction and the limitations of the constitution. In fact, within those limits it is the supreme and controlling power of the state, and both the executive and judicial must yield a willing obedience to its mandates.

It is insisted that as a levy of tax has been regularly made for the maintenance of the hospital, it is not within the power of the legislature to again tax the people of the several counties for the maintenance of the insane sent to [608]*608it from such counties; that it is double taxation, and in effect a confiscation of the property of the citizen, and that all such taxation must necessarily be void. It must be conceded that if the tax is in excess of the power of- the-legislature it is void, and if it is a double tax for the same-purpose it is in excess of the legislative power, and therefore void. "While our judgment may not, and does not, approve the method adopted for the support of the hospital for the insane, and while it would seem that the burden is-made unnecessarily heavy, yet, as we have suggested, the-question of propriety is for the legislature.

By the statement of facts agreed upon, it appears that the taxes imposed by the state at large are, and have been,, sufficient for the support 'and maintenance of the hospital,, and that in addition thereto each county is required to impose a tax sufficient to pay the expense of its patients-who are there confined.

It is clearly within the power of the legislature to provide for the maintenance of the insane by general taxation of the state, and to relieve the several counties from the burden, except as they bear their proportion with the other counties of the state; or to require each county to maintain its own insane in hospitals provided by them; or to pay the expense of the maintenance of their insane in a hospital provided by the state. In this each state has adopted the course which to its legislature has seemed most judicious. And we think it is clearly within the legislative power to provide by law and taxation, in the first instance, for the support of the insane by the state, and then require the counties, which otherwise would have to support the insane having a residence within their borders, to repay the-state the amount thus expended. Any other view would leave the care of this, the most unfortunate class of our citizens, to the will and caprice of the county boards of the several counties in the state, which would result in anything but a harmonious system of caring for them. We [609]*609have carefully examined all the authorities cited by the respondent, and are unable to arrive at any other conclusion. This seems to be the policy of our state, and we think the right to adopt such a policy cannot be successfully questioned. The wrong, if any exists, seems to be an error of judgment in the amount of tax necessary to be levied by the state to insure the carrying out of the purpose of the law. This may be in part the result of oversight, or it may have become necessary by the failure of the several counties .to collect and pay over the amounts required by the section (47) above referred to. Perhaps the latter. Again, there, are many patients whose residence cannot be ascertained, and for whom- provision must be made. It would be clearly unjust to require the county in which the insane person is apprehended to pay the ' expense of his maintenance; this must be done, if at all, by state taxation. It is very properly provided by section 48, Id., that the estates and relatives of insane persons, when able to do so, shall reimburse the county for the money paid, thereby making the counties the losers only to the extent of money paid out for those who are unable to support themselves.

Other questions are presented»by the very able brief of counsel for the respondent which require attention, and will be briefly noticed.

■ It is claimed that the tax required to be levied by section 47 is a state tax, and therefore the county has no authority to make the levy, and further, that such levy would be a violation of the fundamental requirement that taxation shall be uniform throughout the state. While it is true that the hospital for the insane is, as argued by the respondents, a state institution, yet, as we have seen, the maintenance of the insane is not necessarily a state burden, and therefore it is within the power of the legislature to require that the tax may be levied and collected by each county for the purpose of reimbursing the [610]*610state, and we think it is also within the power of the legislature to require the tax so levied to be placed with other taxes going to the state in order that it may be withdrawn from the control of the county officers, and set apart at the outset to the use for which it is levied. This being true, the requirement of uniformity is not violated, as the tax is uniform throughout the taxing district in which it is levied. This is all that is required.

Again, it is claimed that if the tax is a county tax, it is not competent for the legislature to make the levy, that such tax can only be imposed by county authority. This is true, but by an examination of the law it will appear that the tax is not levied by the state or its officers. The state auditor is required to notify the county clerk of each county the amount due from it to the state. The county is charged with the amount in gross. The proper estimates of the amount of tax necessary to pay the indebtedness are made by the county officers, and when the percentage of levy is ascertained by them, it is their duty to levy the tax and place it against the property in the county. The tax is not levied by the state but by the county, for the purpose of paying an indebtedness due the state and ascertained by its officers.

The suggestion that the imposition of the tax provided for in section 47 is in violation of the fourteenth aniendment of the constitution of the United States has, we think, been sufficiently noticed by the foregoing. There are no unequal exactions or burdens imposed by the section.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rock County v. Spire
455 N.W.2d 763 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1990)
Craig v. Board of Equalization of Douglas County
164 N.W.2d 445 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1969)
State v. Pierce County
231 P. 801 (Washington Supreme Court, 1925)
State v. Stanton County
161 N.W. 264 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1917)
Kaiser v. State
102 P. 454 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1909)
State ex rel. McCue v. Lewis
119 N.W. 1037 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1909)
Bon Homme County v. Berndt
90 N.W. 147 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1902)
Baldwin v. Douglas County
20 L.R.A. 850 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1893)
County of Richardson v. Frederick
24 Neb. 596 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Neb. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-attorney-general-v-county-commissioners-neb-1886.