State Ex Rel. State Land Board v. Blake

56 P.2d 1347, 88 Utah 600, 1936 Utah LEXIS 101
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1936
DocketNo. 5133.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 56 P.2d 1347 (State Ex Rel. State Land Board v. Blake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. State Land Board v. Blake, 56 P.2d 1347, 88 Utah 600, 1936 Utah LEXIS 101 (Utah 1936).

Opinion

ELIAS HANSEN, Chief Justice.

In this cause an alternative writ of mandate was issued commanding the defendants to execute and deliver releases and discharges of liens on fourteen tracts of land situated in *601 Millard county, drainage district No. 3, Millard county, Utah, or to show cause why such releases and discharges should not be so executed and delivered. The liens were for bonded indebtedness and equalized assessments of benefits and taxes upon lands owned by the plaintiffs. After the writ was issued the Millard County Eealty Corporation asked for and was granted leave to intervene. It filed a complaint in intervention. Upon the pleadings so filed the cause was argued and submitted and an opinion rendered. State v. Blake, 88 Utah 584, 20 P. (2d) 871. The intervener applied for and was granted a rehearing. One of the grounds urged for rehearing was that we had misconstrued the pleadings and misconceived the facts. In the former opinion it was assumed that the total amount of the original equalized assessed benefits on the various tracts of land had been paid by the plaintiff; that of the amounts so paid $10 on each tract of land was in cash and the remainder in outstanding bonds and matured interest coupons of the district. At the time of the oral argument on the rehearing the parties were unable to agree as to whether or not the total amount of the original equalized assessed benefits had or had not been paid with bonds and cash. Counsel for plaintiff claimed that such total amount had been paid. Counsel for the intervener contended to the contrary. This court requested that counsel either stipulate as to the facts in such respect or furnish proof thereof. Counsel were apparently unable to stipulate as to the facts, but they have furnished certified copies of the record with respect to the facts. From such record the following facts are established: At the time the state land board of Utah delivered bonds and matured interest coupons to the treasurer of Millard county, Utah, and demanded that the supervisors of Millard county drainage district No. 3 execute and deliver to the land board releases and discharges of the several liens on the fourteen tracts of land owned by the land board, the total amount of unpaid equalized assessment of benefits which had not assumed the status of taxes or assessments theretofore levied against *602 such lands amounted to the total sum of $48,671.60, which was the amount at par of bonds and matured interest coupons delivered by the land board to the treasurer of Millard county, Utah. There were unpaid drainage taxes which had been levied against such lands in the total sum of $12,240.60. Interest at 12 per cent, had accrued on the unpaid taxes in the sum of $3,628.46. Because the drainage taxes had not been paid when due penalties in the sum of $366.22 had also accrued. In payment of the unpaid taxes, together with the interest and penalties thereon, the land board paid to the treasurer the sum of $10 in cash on each tract of land, or a total sum of $140 for the fourteen tracts involved in this controversy. It will thus be seen that in the former opinion we misconceived the facts and that we were probably in error in construing the pleadings to mean that the total amount of the original equalized assessments of benefits were paid by the land board. The facts are that the bonds merely paid the amount of equalized assessment of benefits which had not theretofore, by various levies, assumed the status of taxes. The land board is thus in the position of attempting to secure the release of unpaid taxes together with interest thereon and penalties in the total sum of $16,235.28, by the payment of $140. May this be done? We now conceive that is the question which was not properly disposed of in the former opinion, and which must now be decided.

In 1929 the Legislature of Utah passed two acts affecting the payment of drainage taxes. Chapter 32 provides that equalized drainage district benefit assessments and taxes may be paid in lawful money of the United States, with bonds or matured interest coupons of the district at the face or par value of the same, provided (section 2) that, “all assessments or taxes other than those levied for payment of bond, interest or principal shall be payable only in lawful money of the United States, or in warrants of the district issued within the same calendar year in which the warrants are tendered.” In that chapter it is made the duty *603 of the county treasurer to accept such payments, and when payment is so made, the drainage district is directed to issue a release discharging the lands from further liability for the payment of assessments other than for supervision and maintenance.

Chapter 33 provides that any person interested in lands sold to the drainage district for taxes and assessments may redeem the same by paying the amount of such taxes and assessments, together with interest, costs, and penalties “unless in the judgment of the board of supervisors of the drainage district and the board of county commissioners of the county wherein the land is situated, the interest of the drainage district will be best sub-served by accepting a lesser sum in which case such lesser sum, to be fixed by such board of county commissioners, shall be accepted.” Section 2. By virtue of the provisions of chapter 33, Laws of Utah 1929, just quoted, and in pursuance of actions taken thereunder by the board of supervisors of Millard county drainage district No. 3, and of the board of county commissioners of Millard county, Utah, it is claimed by the state land board that it is entitled to the execution and delivery of the releases discharging its lands from further liability for the payment of the bonded indebtedness of the district, notwithstanding only a small part of the unpaid taxes, interest. costs, and penalties were paid by it to the treasurer of Millard county. It is now made to appear that on February 8, 1930, by unanimous vote of the board of supervisors of Millard county drainage district No. 3 the following resolution was passed:

“Whereas, many land owners in Millard County Drainage District No. 3, in Millard County, Utah, have paid the total equalized drainage benefits assessed against their respective tracts of land and hold receipts from the County Treasurer of Millard County, Utah, showing payment and,
“Whereas, the holders of the outstanding bonds of the Drainage District have joined in such request and desire the cancellation of such drainage taxes.
“Now therefore be it resolved, that upon presentation by any land owner in Millard County Drainage District No. 3, or by his agent, *604 trustee or other representative, of a receipt from the County Treasurer of Millard County, Utah, showing payment in full of the total equalized drainage benefits assessed against such land, to the Board of County Commissioners of Millard County, with a request from such landowner in the manner aforesaid for the cancellation of the due and or delinquent drainage district taxes against such land, which said request for cancellation is also requested by a representative of the holders of the outstanding bonds of the drainage district, we the Board of Supervisors of said Drainage District join in

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56 P.2d 1347, 88 Utah 600, 1936 Utah LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-land-board-v-blake-utah-1936.