State Ex Rel. Wilson v. Board of County Commissioners

306 P.2d 259, 62 N.M. 137
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1957
Docket6124
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 306 P.2d 259 (State Ex Rel. Wilson v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Wilson v. Board of County Commissioners, 306 P.2d 259, 62 N.M. 137 (N.M. 1957).

Opinion

KIKER, Justice.

This action was brought to secure a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the Board of County Commissioners of Quay County to pay a sum of money to the Public Employees’ Retirement Board. The alleged default of the board was in not paying to the petitioner various sums of money, making up the sum prayed, alleged tp be due under the provisions of the Public Employees’ Retirement Act of 1947.

The legislature, in creating the Public Employees’ Retirement Association, provided for the payment of certain monies from time' to time into a fund to be administered by the petitioner for the benefit' of public employees to be retired. The Act required all conservancy districts, counties, and other municipalities in the state, except towns having less than 2,000 population, to make such payments on behalf of their eligible employees; but there was a proviso that any of such municipalities might, by its own action, exempt itself from the requirement otherwise placed upon it.

In order to have the exemption, all that was necessary was for the governing authority of the municipality, in this case the Board of County Commissioners, to adopt a resolution or ordinance so exempting the municipality before September 1, 1949, and to send to the retirement board a certified copy of the resolution or ordinance within ten days after the adoption thereof. § 2(3), Ch. 167, Laws 1947.

The language used in the statute is as follows:

“Method of exemption by cities, counties, and municipalities. Any municipality, city, or county, in the State of New Mexico, may, by appropriate action of the city council, board of trustees, board of county commissioners, or other governing body thereof, as the case may be, exempt said municipality, city, or county, from the purview of this Act, provided such action in the form of a resolution or ordinance, duly adopted, is taken before September 1, 1949, and notice thereof to the said Retirement Board in the form of a certified copy of said resolution or -ordinance is transmitted within ten days thereafter; * *

The Public Employees’ Retirement Act was approved March 20, 1947. It provided, in its Section 22, that the act would take effect upon its passage and approval, so that the act was in full force and effect from and after the said date of approval. The County Commissioners, therefore, had a little more than one year and five months in which to comply with the requirements of the act. This the board failed to do; but on the 6th day of September, 1949, the Board of County Commissioners did pass a resolution by which they attempted to exempt the County of Quay from the requirements of the act. The copy of the resolution was forwarded to the retirement board and reached that body on September 13, 1949.

It will be observed from a consideration of the act that the portion quoted above is a subparagraph of the enacting clause creating the liability upon municipalities, and that the time within which a municipality may exempt itself from the effect of the act is stated within a proviso to that which is necessary to be done to secure an exemption. The proviso requires positively that action be taken by a municipality desiring the exemption on or before September 1, 1949..

The retirement board, holding the language providing the time within which the municipality must act was mandatory, declined to hold Quay County exempt from the requirements of the act.

The district court having issued the peremptory writ, this appeal was taken. The petitioner, retirement board, contends that, by operation of law, the failure of the Board of County Commissioners of Quay County to pass the resolution in proper time made the County of Quay a contributing member of the Association. The Board of County Commissioners, respondent-appellant, takes the position that all the statute required of it was substantial compliance with the terms of the proviso set out above.

We think the contention of the retirement board is correct. In Lujan v. Triangle Oil Co., 38 N.M. 543, 37 P.2d 797, 798, the oil company failed to pay gasoline excise taxes upon certain fluid handled by it. The refusal was based upon the claim that the fluid was not gasoline and therefore not subject to gasoline taxes. The term gasoline was defined by statute, and the portion of that statute material to the Triangle Oil case reads:

“ * * * (b) any volatile substance of not less than 46 degrees Tagliaubes (Tagliabue) Baume test derived wholly or in part from petroleum, natural gas, oil shales, or coal; (c) any volatile substance of not less than 46 degrees Tagliaubes (Tagliabue) Baume test sold or used for generating power in internal combustion engines; Provided, however, that the term ‘gasoline’ as defined herein shall not be construed to include any petroleum, natural gas, oil shale or coal derivative which must be further refined or processed before it can be used in internal combustion engines.” Comp.St.1929, § 60-201.

The trial court found that the oil company had received and used, in its business as a distributor of gasoline, within about a month, nine carloads of naphtha, and that the naphtha “tested in excess of 46 degrees, Tagliaubes Baume Test.”- Thus, the court found, the fluid met the statutory definition of gasoline and was subject to tax. The oil company claimed that the naphtha had to be “further refined or processed”, as stated in the proviso, before it could be used in internal combustion engines, in that it was merely one component of a tractor fuel.

This court, speaking of the proviso under which defendant claimed an exemption, said:

“Any one claiming the benefit of the proviso or exemption must clearly and unmistakably establish his right to its benefits. The rule is well expressed in the case of United States v. Dickson, 15 Pet. 141, 165, 40 U.S. 141, 165, 10 L.Ed. 689, in the following language: ‘We are led to the general rule of law which has always prevailed, and become consecrated almost as a maxim' in the interpretation of statutes, that where the enacting clause is general in its language and objects, and a proviso is afterwards introduced, that proviso is construed strictly, and takes no case out of the enacting clause which does not fall fairly within its terms. In short, a proviso carves special exceptions only out of the enacting clause; and those who set up any such exception, must establish it as being within the words as well as within the reason thereof.’ ”

The rule is general in its application and not restricted to taxing statutes. Detroit Edison Co. v. Securities Exchange Commission, 6 Cir., 119 F.2d 730, certiorari denied 314 U.S. 618, 62 S.Ct. 105, 86 L.Ed. 497; Stafford v. Wessel, 321 Ill.App. 183, 52 N.E.2d 605; State v. Bauer, 236 Iowa 1020, 20 N.W.2d 431; Emporia Tp. in Lyon County v.

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Bluebook (online)
306 P.2d 259, 62 N.M. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wilson-v-board-of-county-commissioners-nm-1957.