State ex rel. Viking Township v. Mikkelson

139 N.W. 525, 24 N.D. 175, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 26
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 525 (State ex rel. Viking Township v. Mikkelson) 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. Viking Township v. Mikkelson, 139 N.W. 525, 24 N.D. 175, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 26 (N.D. 1912).

Opinion

Goss, J.

This is a proceeding in mandamus to compel the county treasurer of Richland county to credit a collection made by him of interest and penalty collected to the particular drain fund for which such interest and penalty and special assessment was paid. Viking-township, the relator, was assessed $2,641 for special benefits received by highways within its limits from the construction of Viking drain Ho. 14. Upon payment thereof after delinquency, it also paid in addition thereto the sum of $185 as interest and penalty upon such special assessment, which sum was so received by the county treasurer of Richland county. The total payment was then divided, and said offi[179]*179cial, acting under the orders of the county commissioners, credited said $185 to a so-called county courthouse fund belonging to the county, instead of its being credited to and placed as a part of the drain fund of Viking drain. Relator seeks to compel the county treasurer to credit, as a part of said drain fund, this amount so collected as interest and penalty. From an order of the lower court so directing, the county treasurer appeals.

On the merits, appellant’s contentions are summarized by him to be: “First, that there was no law authorizing the collection of either interest or penalty at the time of this collection, it being prior to the enactment of chap. 125 of the Session Laws of 1911; and, second, that under the law this interest and penalty collected belonged to the county.” To the first of these propositions we unqualifiedly agree. We have held in Hackney v. Elliott, 23 N. D. 373, 137 N. W. 433, that on special assessments levied for drainage purposes prior to the 1911 statute, no interest and penalty can legally be collected. Until the enactment of the 1911 statute, no authority existed for the collection of interest and penalty upon drainage assessments. We may here remark that cities have always had statutory authority for the collection of interest and penalty on special assessments for city purposes, so this holding concerning interest and penalty on drain assessments is not to be understood as applying to the collection of special assessments for cities. Rev. Codes 1905, Sec. 2807; Fargo v. Ross, 11 N. D. 369, 92 N. W. 449; Pine Tree Lumber Co. v. Fargo, 12 N. D. 360, 96 N. W. 357; Red River Valley Nat. Bank v. Fargo, 14 N. D. 88, 103 N. W. 390.

The question then is, Conceding that the amount so paid for and as interest and penalty on delinquent special assessments could not have been collected if it had not been voluntarily paid for such purposes, does it belong to the county or to the said drain fund ? The statute, § 1832, Rev. Codes 1905, as amended by the Session Laws of 1907, at page 127, concerning the collection of drainage assessments, provides: “The drain taxes shall be collected by the county treasurer, and all moneys so collected shall be credited to the drain fund to which they belong, and the county treasurer shall be the treasurer of such drain: funds.” The excess part of this special assessment collection then was so collected by the treasurer of this drain fund, the county treasurer [180]*180by statute being ex officio collector of said fund. Had the collection of interest and penalty been authorized by statute, then by virtue thereof it should “be credited to the drain fund” to which it belonged. And unless some statute operates to transfer the right to such excess collected as interest and penalty to the county, it must on general principles follow the special assessment (37 Cyc. 1594) ; and under this statute directing the credit of “all moneys so collected” it must be regarded as a part of the fund for which it was paid and collected. Besides, a further reason exists, being that the taxpayer, relator, still has a right concerning the ajjplication of the money paid, it having been voluntarily paid and received as trust funds to be applied to the payment of the expenses of the drainage construction, to the extent at least to which the township property may have been heretofore, or may have to be hereafter, assessed to fully meet such cost of drain construction. As is stated in Red River Valley Hat. Bank v. Bargo, 14 N. D. 88, on page, 93, 103 N. W. 390, concerning city assessments analogous to drainage assessments: “Every dollar thereafter coming into that fund up to the amount required to redeem each of these warrants became impressed with a trust in favor of the holder of each warrant, and the city was the trustee.” In this case the county undoubtedly is the trustee. A diversion by a city of moneys collected by it to meet special assessment paving warrants is a “violation of a trust, rendering the city liable.” Pine Tree Lumber Co. v. Fargo, 12 N. D. 360, at page 377, 96 N. W. 357, and abundant authority there cited. “If overpayments upon the assessments have been made, the party who has made such overpayments is entitled to have them applied to the payment of in-stalments to become due in the future.” Page & J. Taxation by Assessment, § 1094, citing Fall Creek & W. Twp. G. R. Co. v. Wallace, 39 Ind. 435; Re Rust, 24 Hun, 229; Cincinnati v. James, 55 Ohio St. 180, 44 N. E. 925; and Cincinnati v. Manss, 54 Ohio St. 257, 43 H. E. 687. We think the law is settled that a special assessment collection cannot be diverted to other uses.

But appellants contend that § 1575, Rev. Codes 1905, operates to transfer the right to this penalty and interest collection to the county. The statute reads: “All penalty and interest collected on taxes shall belong to the county and become a part of the general fund, or such other fund as the county commissioners may direct; except the penalty [181]*181and interest collected on special assessments due to cities, and all such penalties and interest shall he paid to the city thereunto entitled.” We have held in Hackney v. Elliott, supra, that this and other statutes concerning taxes do not apply to special assessments for drainage purposes, and that interest and penalty on drain assessments as heretofore stated cannot he legally collected. If the law does not contemplate or authorize the collection of interest and penalty on drain assessments, most certainly § 1575 of the Code cannot authorize or be construed as directing that such interest and penalty collected without authority of law shall belong to the county and become a part of the general fund, or be subject to the control of the county commissioners. This statutory provision has reference only to taxes, and has no application to special assessments or any payments made as a part of special assessments or collected under color of special assessment provisions. Jones & P. Taxation by Assessment, § 475, and § 1575 was not repealed by chap. 93, Sess. Laws, 1907. This collection is no part of a tax, but rather is part of a special assessment and is left in the fund into which it was voluntarily paid and in which relator is still interested in its application.

But there is another all-sufficient reason why the appellant, the county- treasurer, should not prevail. Appellant cannot he heard to urge any irregularity or illegality in this collection as against the respondent so interested in the Yiking township drain fund. Acting as the treasurer of such drain fund, the county treasurer has collected this $185 as interest and penalty and as a part of a total collection made for this particular drain fund of which he is, by virtue of his office, custodian, with the county also a trustee for the fund. He should not he heard to question the legality of his own act in collecting the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.W. 525, 24 N.D. 175, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-viking-township-v-mikkelson-nd-1912.