State Ex Rel. Freeling v. Howard

1918 OK 93, 171 P. 41, 67 Okla. 296, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 12, 1918
Docket9613
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1918 OK 93 (State Ex Rel. Freeling v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Freeling v. Howard, 1918 OK 93, 171 P. 41, 67 Okla. 296, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 261 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

HARDY, J.

This is an agreed ease submitted pursuant 'to the provisions of sections 5303 and 5305, Rev. Daws 1910, filed in this court as an original proceeding after leave of court first had and obtained.

The state, upon the relation of the Attorney General, prays a writ of mandamus directed to the state auditor, commanding him to open accounts against the public building fund of the state for 'the payment therefrom of appropriations made in 1917, and to issue a warrant against said fund in favor of W. T. Emerich, and also to compel said auditor to sign certain unsold public building bonds. W. L. Alexander, who, as state treasurer, holds a large part of the public building bonds of the state which have *297 been deposited with him by various persons, intervened, and with defendant questions the right of the state to the relief prayed, and the controversy is submitted to the court to determine whether warrants may be lawfully issued against said public building fund to meet the appropriations made in 1917, and whether the receipts from the proceeds of the sale and rentals of lands known as section 33, and other lands granted in lieu thereof in excess of 'that required to pay maturing installments of bonds and accrued interest may be used to pay said appropriations, and whether certain unsold public building bonds, which have been signed by a former auditor, approved by a former Attorney General and registered by a former state treasurer, should be signed, approved, and registered by the respective persons now occupying those positions. The public building fund was created by chapter 89, Laws 1910-11, § 1 of which declares that all moneys received from the sale or rentals of section 33, and lands granted, in lieu thereof, should constitute and be known as the public building fund. Section 2 authorized the issuance-and sale'of $3,000,000 in bonds, payable out of the proceeds of said lands, and section 9 of said act is as follows:

“All bonds and interest thereon, when issued as provided for in this act. shall become payable out of the public building fund arising from the sale or rental of section 33, and lands granted to .the state in lieu thereof, until all of said bonds and interest thereon are fully paid. And the good faith of the state is solemnly pledged to administer the trust created by the 'terms of the Enabling Act and the Constitution of Oklahoma, to apportion and dispose of all lands granted to the state for charitable and penal institutions and public buildings, as the Legislature may prescribe, and safely keep and preserve the proceeds of 'the rental and sale thereof, and apply same to the payment of the bonds authorized by this act, and the interest thereon,_as the same falls due, and to use such funds, constituting the public building fund, for no other purpose or purposes. All bonds shall be paid in the order in which l hey are issued. The state treasurer, commissioner of school land department and county treasurers are authorized to receive public building bonds as collateral security' for the deposit of public funds in the various banks of th-e sítate.”

Pursuant to this chapter bonds were issued and sold in the amount of $2,541,000, of which amount there has since matured and been paid bonds in the sum,of $447,500, leaving outstanding bonds in the sum of $2,004,000 with coupons thereto attached for Interest yet to accrue at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum.

It is conceded that the provisions of said chapter 89 constitute a contract between the state and the holders of the bonds now outstanding, and that the terms of said contract cannot be impaired by any subsequent legislation. The general rule is that, where a special fund has been pledged for use in the payment of bonds or other obligations, such fund miay not be diverted to any purpose other than that to which it is pledged. Diggs v. Lobsitz, 4 Okla. 232, 43 Pac. 1069; Wabash & Erie Canal Co. v. Beers, 67 U. S. (2 Black) 448, 17 L. Ed. 327; Louisiana v. Jumel, 107 U. S. 711, 2 Sup. Ct. 128, 27 L. Ed. 448; Graham v. Horton, 6 Kan. 343; People v. Pachico, 29 Cal. 210; McCauley v. Brooks, 16 Cal. 11; Edemiller v. City of Tacoma, 14 Wash. 376, 44 Pac. 877; State v. Cardozo, 8 S. C. 71, 28 Am. Rep. 275; Park v. Candler, 113 Ga. 647, 39 S. E. 89; Western Savings Fund Society v. Philadelphia, 31 Pa. 175; Fazende et al. v. City of Houston (C. C.) 34 Fed. 95.

The Attorney General contends that the trust provisions of chapter 89 do not prevent the use of moneys received to the credit of the public building fund in excess of the amount required to pay installments of bonds and interest as they mature for it-he purpose of paying appropriations made, ‘and, further, that the pledge made by section 9 of said chapter extends, not alone to the bonds actually sold, but to the full amount of bonds authorized, and that moneys accruing to said fund in excess of the amount necessary to pay current' maturing bonds and interest may lawfully be used to meet appropriations made without impairing any contract obligation contained within chapter 89, so long as th-e amount used does not exceed the amount of unsold bonds and interest that would accrue thereon.

Previous to the sale of the bonds provision had beesn made for the sale of said lands on 40 years’ time, the purchase price to be paid in installments and to bear interest. Rev. Laws 1910, a-nt.1, c. 69. And according to this plan there- was provided an .annual income sufficient to pay installments of bonds maturing and interest and leave an annual surplus of from $90,000 to $100,000. It certainly was not the intention of the Legislature that the total receipts to the credit of said fund should be paid -to 'the bondholders, for all that they could demand would be the principal amount of the bonds held by them, together with the interest that would accrue thereon according to the terms of said bonds. Neither the state nor the purchasers of said bonds -understood otherwise. Was it then intended that all of said fund, *298 other than what was necitsary to 'take care of accruing claims of bondholders, should remain inthet until the last of said bonds had been retired? By section 2 of chapter 89 certain warrants theretofore issued were made a legal and valid lien against the public building fund, and by chapter 34, Laws 1913, p. 67, all moneys in the building fund, in excess of the amount required for the payment of outstanding bonds and interest accruing, was ¡transferred to the “union graded or consolidated school fund.” By chapter 222, Laws 1917, these moneys were retransferred to the public building fund “in excess of the amount for which bonds have been issued,” and all appropriations for the construction of public buildings have been made from the public building fund. Thus we have legislative evidence of legislative intent. True the obligations of chapter S9 cannot be changed by subsequent legislation, but it is permissible for us to refer to such subsequent legislation in order to determine the legislative intent in the enactment thereof. Tiger v. Western Inv. Co., 221 U. S. 286, 31 Sup. Ct. 578, 55 L. Ed. 738; Board Com’rs v. Alexander, 58 Okla. 128, 159 Pac. 311.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 93, 171 P. 41, 67 Okla. 296, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-freeling-v-howard-okla-1918.