State ex rel Board of University v. McMillan

96 N.W. 310, 12 N.D. 280, 1903 N.D. LEXIS 31
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 96 N.W. 310 (State ex rel Board of University v. McMillan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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 Board of University v. McMillan, 96 N.W. 310, 12 N.D. 280, 1903 N.D. LEXIS 31 (N.D. 1903).

Opinion

Young, C. J.

Upon the petition of the members of the board of university and school lands an alternative writ of mandamus was issued by this court directed to D. H. McMillan, as state treasurer, and commanding him to pay a certain warrant for .$60,000 drawn upon him by the state auditor, and payable to the treasurer of the Valley City normal school or show cause why he has not done so. The warrant is payable out of that ^portion of [287]*287the permanent school fund dedicated by the enabling act and the state constitution to the support of the common schools, and was drawn to pay the purchase price of certain “bonds of the state Normal School at Valley City,” purchased by said board as an ■investment for the fund upon which the warrant was drawn. The bonds were authorized by and issued under chapter 49, p. 54, Laws 1903. It it not questioned that there was and is a sufficient sum of money in the treasurer’s hands belonging to said fund to cover the warrant. The treasurer’s refusal to p'ay is based entirely upon the contention that the board is without legal authority to invest this fund in the kind of obligations proposed as an investment, and, as a consequence, he cannot, as the constitutional custodian of the fund, legally pay the warrant. The allegations of the petition embodied in the writ are as follows:

“Thet petition of the superintendent of public instruction, the governor, attorney general, secretary of state, and state auditor of the state of North Dakota, constituting, under section 156 of the state constitution, the board of university and school lands, respectfully shows to the court: (1) That the defendant is the duly elected, qualified, and acting treasurer of this state. (2) That under the provisions of chapter 49, p. 54, Laws of 1903, entitled ‘An act authorizing the board of trustees of the state normal schools to issue bonds to provide a fund for the erection and equipment of necessary additional buildings and for other improvements for the normal schools at Valley City and Mayville,’ the board of trustees of the State Normal School at Valley City issued bonds to the amount of sixty thousand dollars, which bonds were issued under'the seal of the board of trustees of the said State Normal School, and were signed by its president and secretary. That they were in denominations of two thousand dollars each, and were to draw interest at the rate of four per cent per annum, payable annually. (3) That said bonds were offered for sale to the board of university and school lands at par, and that the said board of university and school lands decided to purchase the said bonds as an investment for that portion of the permanent school fund dedicated by the enabling act and Constitution to the -support of the common schools. That there was then on hand belonging to the said fund, in the hands of this defendant, as state treasurer, the sum of $322,-413.44. (4) That in pursuance of said resolution to purchase said .bonds, and for the purpose of consummating said purchase, the [288]*288board of university and school lands duly authorized the state-auditor to draw his warrant on the defendant, as such state treasurer, payable out of the said fund, and that said warrant was, by the state auditor, drawn on the defendant, as such state treasurer,, payable out of the said fund for the purchase of the said bonds, and was, previous to delivery thereof, duly registered by the state-treasurer in a book provided for that purpose. That the said warrant on this defendant, as such -state treasurer, was payable to the-treasurer of said State Normal School at said Valley City, N. D., and was duly presented to the defendant, as such state treasurer,, for payment, but that defendant refused to honor said warrant,, or to pay out any moneys thereon, assigning as the sole and only-reason for such refusal that the said contemplated investment of' said fund in said bonds is not authorized by the Constitution of the-state of North Dakota, but is unlawful. (5) That at the time of the sale of the said bonds, and'at all times subsequent to January 1, 1903, the interest and income accumulating from the sale, rental,, or lease of, the lands granted to the said normal school were sufficient to pay the interest upon the said bonds for sixty thousand dollars, and also for the creation, in addition thereto, of a sinking’ fund with which to pay said bonds at maturity, and that the interest, and income accumulating from the sale, rental, or lease of the said, lands will continually increase for some years to come, so that not only will the said interest and income be adequate to the payment of the interest on said bonds at all times, but that the surplus of said interest and income, which must be used for the purpose of creating said sinking fund, will be larger each year for some years-to come, and that from said surplus a sinking fund more than sufficient to discharge the said bonds at maturity will be created. (6) That ever since January 1, 1903, the debts of the state of North Dakota (within the meaning of section 182 of the Constitu- • tion) have been equal in the aggregate to the sum of two hundred thousand dollars, exclusive of the indebtedness of the-state of North Dakota at the time of the adoption of the said Constitution ; and that, if the said bonds for sixty thousand dollars, so sold by the board of trustees of the said normal school to the board of university and school lands, create a state indebtedness, within the meaning of said section 182 of the Constitution,, they would exceed the debt limit fixed by said section, and would be void. (7) That said bonds so issued as aforesaid are ready-[289]*289for delivery. That said,proposed investment is authorized by the Constitution.

The defendant, in his return, admits that there is in his hands the sum of $322,413.44, belonging to that part of the permanent school fund dedicated to the support of the common schools, and subject to investment as alleged by the relators.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.W. 310, 12 N.D. 280, 1903 N.D. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-board-of-university-v-mcmillan-nd-1903.