State Ex Rel. Conrad v. Langer

277 N.W. 504, 68 N.D. 167, 1937 N.D. LEXIS 135
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1937
DocketFile No. 6514.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 277 N.W. 504 (State Ex Rel. Conrad v. Langer) 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. Conrad v. Langer, 277 N.W. 504, 68 N.D. 167, 1937 N.D. LEXIS 135 (N.D. 1937).

Opinions

Christianson, Ch. J.

Application is made to this court by private relators, as citizens and taxpayers of the state, for a prerogative writ of mandamus to compel the respondents, as members of the State Board of Equalization, “to convene and correct the 1937 state levy by eliminating the levies made for the mill and elevator bond payment fund, milling bond payment fund and real estate bond payment fund;” and to compel the respondent, Owen T. Owen, as State Tax Commissioner, “to certify to the county auditors the 1937 state tax levy at 4 mills instead of 6.1 mills.”

*172 In the petition for the writ it is alleged:

“That under the provisions of Chapter 235 of the Session Laws of 1929, the state property tax is required to be levied at the annual meeting of the State Board of Equalization, in August of each year; that the rate of such tax is required to be certified by the State Tax Commissioner, to each county auditor on or before the 15th day of September, annually; that the levy is required to be made in specific amounts, the rate to be determined by the State Board of Equalization.”
“That under the provisions of § 174 of the Constitution of the State of North Dakota, and § 3 of Chapter 235 of the Session Laws of 1929, the aggregate rate of levy for all state purposes, exclusive of interest on the public debt of the state, may not exceed 4 mills on the dollar of the net taxable assessed valuation of all property in the •state, as equalized by the State Board for the current year.”

It is further alleged that the net taxable assessed valuation of all property' in the state subject to taxation during the year 1937 as equalized and determined by the State Board of Equalization is $471,863,495.00.

It is further alleged that the maximum amount that may be levied for all state purposes during the year 1937, under § 174 of the state constitution and § 3, chap. 235, Laws 1929, is $1,887,453.98, “with such additional amount as may be levied for interest on the public debt.”

It is further alleged that the respondents, the State Board of Equalization, made the following levy for state purposes for the year 1937:

General Eund ............................. $1,793,081.28
Capitol Building Fund...................... 94,372.69
Mill and Elevator Construction Bond Payment Fund ................................ 401,087.97
Eeal Estate Bond Payment Eund ............ 235,971.74
Milling Bond Payment Fund .......... 254,806.78
Beal Estate Bond Payment Fund ............ 99,091.00
$2,878,411.46

*173 It is also alleged that such state levy was certified to the county auditors by the state tax commissioner as follows:

Mills
General Fund Levy ................................ 3.80
State Bond Interest:
Mill & Elevator Bond Payment Fund........... 0.85
Milling Bond Payment Fund.................. 0.54
Beal Estate Bond Payment Fund .............. 0.21
Total State Board Levies............................ 5.40
Legislative Levies:
State Capitol Building Fund ...................... 0.20
Beal Estate Bond Payment Fund .................. 0.50
Total State Bate of Levy..............■.............. 6.10

The relators have invoked the original jurisdiction of this court. It is well settled that this jurisdiction will not be exercised to vindicate private rights regardless of their importance; it is reserved for the use of the state itself when it appears to be necessary to vindicate or protect its prerogatives or franchises or the liberties of its people.

“The jurisdiction,” said Morgan, Ch. L, (State ex rel. Steel v. Fabrick, 17 N. D. 532, 536, 117 N. W. 860), “is not to be exercised unless the interests of the state are directly affected. Merely private rights are not enough on which to base an application for the issuance of original writs by this court. The rights of the public must appear to be directly affected. The matters to be litigated must not only, be publici juris, but the sovereignty of the state, or its franchises or prerogatives, or the liberties of its people, must be affected. Before the court will, in-the exercise of its original jurisdiction, issue prerogative writs, there must be presented matters of such strictly public concern as involve the sovereign rights of the state, or its franchises or privileges. The often-quoted statement of the rule as to the original jurisdiction of the supreme court to issue writs of a prerogative character, as given in Atty. Gen. v. Eau Claire, 37 Wis. 400, is well expressed and clear: ‘To warrant the assertion of original jurisdiction here, the interest of the state should be primary and proximate, not indirect or remote; peculiar, perhaps, to some subdivision of the state, but *174 affecting the state at large in some of its prerogatives, raising a contingency requiring the interposition of this court to preserve the prerogatives and franchises of the state in its sovereign character.’ This statement of the rule has been approved in many cases in this court.”

It is true that a private relator, as a citizen and taxpayer, ordinarily has sufficient interest to invoke this court’s prerogative jurisdiction. Still the relator’s relation to the proceeding is in a sense nominal, and the real plaintiff is the state. The private relator, in his capacity as a citizen and taxpayer, merely informs the court of the infringement which has been or is about to be made upon the sovereignty of the state, or its franchises or prerogatives, or the liberties of its people, and the court by virtue of' the power granted by the Constitution commands that the suit be brought by and for the state, even though the Attorney General may refuse to bring the action, or consent to its institution. State ex rel. Linde v. Taylor, 33 N. D. 76, 156 N. W. 561.

This proceeding is predicated fundamentally upon the premise that the members of the State Board of Equalization have failed to perform, and have disregarded, the duties enjoined upon them by law by levying taxes in an amount which they are forbidden by the constitution to levy. If the contention of the relators is well founded then it would seem that the state itself in some of its prerogatives, is affected in a very real sense. If the contention of the relators is well founded, then there has been extended a tax levy for state purposes exceeding by more than fifty per cent the constitutional limit. If this is true then serious consequences may and probably will result in carrying on the operation of some of the departments of government and institutions of the state.

The court’s jurisdiction has not been challenged.

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Bluebook (online)
277 N.W. 504, 68 N.D. 167, 1937 N.D. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-conrad-v-langer-nd-1937.