State Ex Rel. Steere v. Franklin County Farm Bureau

239 P.2d 570, 172 Kan. 179, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 27, 1951
Docket38,372
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 239 P.2d 570 (State Ex Rel. Steere v. Franklin County Farm Bureau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Steere v. Franklin County Farm Bureau, 239 P.2d 570, 172 Kan. 179, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 420 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action to enjoin the defendant, The Franklin County Farm Bureau, and the Director of Extension Service of the Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science of Manhattan, from making payments to the Kansas Farm Bureau, Inc., and to enjoin the Board of County Commissioners of Franklin County from making a tax levy for the Franklin County Farm Bureau until such time as the other defendants had complied with certain statutory requirements as to filing a list of the current membership and a proper request for funds. Judgment was for the plaintiff. The defendants, The Franklin County Bureau and The Kansas Farm Bureau, Inc., have appealed.

The action was brought by the state on the relation of the county attorney of Franklin county.

The petition first identified all parties.

*180 It then alleged that the Franklin County Farm Bureau was organized under what is now G. S. 1949, 2-601 to 2-607 and that all the requirements and provisions of the statute had been complied with by it and it had a membership of 575 members.

The petition then alleged that the words “Farm Bureau” as used in the petition did not include “Kansas Farm Bureau.” It will be well to note here that in this opinion “Director” will refer to Director of Extension, “Farm Bureau” will refer to the Franklin County Farm Bureau and the words “Kansas Farm Bureau, Inc.,” will refer to the state-wide organization. They are organized under separate statutes.

A copy of the constitution of the farm bureau was attached to the petition.

The petition then stated the duties of the secretary-treasurer of the organization, as provided by its constitution, and that the annual dues since the third of December, 1948, had been eight dollars for the head of a family and a dollar for women and that under the section of the constitution referred to above, it was the duty of the secretary-treasurer to collect the membership dues and to draw all checks and vouchers for the disbursement of funds and that by the provisions of G. S. 1949, 2-607, expenditures were subject to the approval of the director.

The petition then set out the purpose of the Franklin County Farm Bureau as follows:

“In harmony with the Smith-Lever Act and the Kansas Farm Bureau Law providing for the support of the Farm Bureau work, this organization shall have for its purpose, ‘The giving of instruction in agriculture and home economics to the people of said county through practical demonstrations and otherwise, and the employment of a county agricultural agent or agents to prosecute this work.’ The efforts of this organization and its employees shall be to promote the most profitable and permanent system of agriculture; the most wholesome and satisfying living conditions; the highest ideals in home and community fife; and a genuine interest in the farm business and rural life on the part of young people.”

The petition then alleged that the chief purpose and function of the Franklin County Farm Bureau was educational in character;

“That the Franklin County Farm Bureau is a separate organization and has no legal authority to affiliate with the Kansas Farm Bureau, or with any private organization engaged in commercial activities or in the influencing of legislation.”

The petition then stated the money paid by the members of the Franklin County Farm Bureau as dues must under the statutes *181 and its constitution be used by its officers for the purposes specified and tbe farm bureau or its officers were without authority to pay any part of it to the Kansas Farm Bureau or any other organization, public or private, engaged in commercial activities or in influencing of legislation.

The petition then stated that the Kansas Farm Bureau, a private corporation, had made the director an ex-officio member of its board of directors; had appropriated the name “Farm Bureau” in order to confuse the members of the Franklin County Farm Bureau and had so confused its activities through the director of extension service, its assistants and agents, as to give an understanding to the members of the Franklin County Farm Bureau and the farmers of Franklin county that it was the main and official farm bureau organization and through its agents secured an amendment to the constitution of the Franklin County Farm Bureau providing for annual dues in the sum of eight dollars, which increased dues in the sum of five dollars was for the sole benefit of the Kansas Farm Bureau and not for the purpose contained in the constitution of the Franklin County Farm Bureau, and as a result of this amendment and its approval by the director the farm bureau had paid, without lawful authority, five dollars out of each eight dollar membership collected to the Kansas Farm Bureau for the past year and would continue to do so unless restrained, and the director of extension would continue to approve, in violation of the constitution of Franklin County Farm Bureau and the Farm Bureau Act of the State of Kansas, unless restrained.

The petition then alleged that the constitution of the Franklin County Farm Bureau required the secretary-treasurer to collect the membership dues, keep a record of all receipts and expenditures, pursuant to R. S. 1923, Art. 6, Sec. 2-607, draw checks for the disbursement of funds, and for the calendar year of 1950 membership dues in the amount of $5,200 were collected, of which amount $4,600 was collected from the “head of family” members, of which $2,875 was placed in a special bank account and later was unlawfully paid to the Kansas Farm Bureau; that by reason of this plan and manipulation caused by the Kansas Farm Bureau, Inc. and approved by the director a budget was submitted to the Franklin County Commissioners for the year 1950, a copy of which budget was attached to the petition; that G. S. 1949, 2-603 provided as follows:

“. . . The executive committee of the farm bureau shall be required to prepare and present to the board of county commissioners, on or before the first Monday in August of each year, its list of names of the current membership of *182 the county farm bureau, as provided in section 2-601 of the General Statutes of 1935, which list shall be at all reasonable times open to public inspection, and a budget or budgets showing clearly the amounts needed from year to year, which budgets shall be used as the basis for the appropriation by the county commissioners, and the county commissioners shall be empowered to make a tax levy against the property of the county, real and personal, sufficient to raise the funds needed for the farm bureau work, which levy shall be in addition to all'other levies authorized by law: Provided, That such tax levy shall not exceed one-half mill: ...”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 P.2d 570, 172 Kan. 179, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-steere-v-franklin-county-farm-bureau-kan-1951.