Thompson v. Board of County Commissioners

14 P.2d 194, 91 Colo. 214, 1932 Colo. LEXIS 348
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 27, 1932
DocketNo. 12,654.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 194 (Thompson v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Board of County Commissioners, 14 P.2d 194, 91 Colo. 214, 1932 Colo. LEXIS 348 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

The question here presented is the validity of two resolutions of a board of county commissioners ordering the sale by the county treasurer of certain tax certificates held by the county, and subsequent proceedings thereunder.

These parties appear in the same order as in the trial court and for convenience we hereinafter refer to plaintiffs in error as plaintiffs, to defendants in error as *216 defendants or as the commissioners and the Klein company respectively, and to the county treasurer of Mesa county as the treasurer.

This was an action to nullify said resolutions, abrogate sales thereunder, enjoin the issuance of deeds based on such sales, compel an accounting for all redemptions therefrom by property owners, hold the purchasers of the certificates from the county as trustees of all property and money involved, compel the transfer thereof to the treasurer, and enjoin all further acts based upon the questioned resolutions.

The complaint was amended and the commissioners and the Klein company answered. Motions and demurrers filed and disposed of need not here be noticed. The cause was tried to the court and at the close of plaintiffs ’ evidence, December 18, 1929, defendants’ motion to dismiss was sustained and judgment entered accordingly. To review that judgment plaintiffs prosecute this writ.

Section 7409, p. 1893, C. L. 1921, provides for striking off to the county, at face, real estate offered for sale for taxes with no bids, and the issuance of certificates to the county. Chapter 152, p. 612, L. 1927, authorizes the treasurer to sell such certificates to any person who desires to purchase them, on payment of ‘ ‘ such sum as the board of county commissioners * * * at any regular or special meeting may decide and authorize by order duly entered in the recorded proceedings of such board.”

March 8, 1928, Mesa county had on hand approximately 2,375 such certificates from the sales of 1893 to 1927, inclusive, of the approximate face value of $325,000. At their regular meeting of that date the commissioners passed a resolution ordering the treasurer to sell the bulk of these as directed by the statute “to the first person offering said sum or sums [specified in the resolution] for any or all of said certificates. That said order stand until said certificates be sold, for not to exceed a period of thirty (30) days from date hereof, or a further order’ of the Board of County Commissioners in *217 the premises.” This resolution specified by number approximately 2,239 certificates and the sum for which each was to be sold. These sums varied from $1 to $668. Their total “face” was approximately $321,000, and their total sale price approximately $32,000, plus treasurer’s fees. Forthwith the Klein company paid the total sale price and took all the certificates. May 3, 1928, the' commissioners passed a further similar resolution listing-126 additional certificates, and these were also taken by the Klein company. It is alleged that, prior to the passage of the original resolution, the commissioners had agreed with the Klein company to sell it all these certificates for a lump sum; that its said resolutions, its payment to the county treasurer, and the latter’s transfer to it of said certificates, were all in pursuance of said original agreement and hence all illegal and void.

It is settled in this state that, under the facts, here presented, the power of the commissioners is limited by the statute to the fixing of the price at which each certificate shall be sold, and that it neither extends to a bulk sale for a lump sum nor to a particular purchaser. Radetsky v. Palmer, 70 Colo. 146, 199 Pac. 490. That case was decided under section 2 (erroneously stated as. section 4), p. 569, L. 1913, which is section 7422, p. 1898,. C. L. 1921. This was amended by said chapter 152, p. 612, L. 1927, but the portion here applicable was not materially changed.

We first dispose of several preliminary questions.

The treasurer, who was a party below, is not here, and this is urged as fatal. It sufficiently appears from the record, however, that he has deposited in court all funds and documents whose possession would require his presence, and has disclaimed. This disposes of the objection.

It is contended that plaintiffs must allege and show damages to taxpayers as a class and that they have not done so. If the allegations of the complaint are true, property of Mesa county had been illegally disposed of, *218 and the county had a right of action against the Klein company, which should have been prosecuted by the commissioners themselves. Failing to do this because they were parties to the wrong from which that right arose, plaintiffs, as taxpayers, acting for themselves and others, were entitled to proceed in equity. IV Dillon Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.), p. 2785, §1588.

Counsel for the Klein company urge the binding force of the rule that, in the absence of fraud, official records are conclusive and may not be disputed even by the officials themselves, citing, among other authorities: Shapleigh v. Hull, 21 Colo. 419, 424, 41 Pac. 1108; Thatcher v. Crisman, 6 Colo. App. 49, 53, 39 Pac. 887. But these, and other citations to the same point, involve collateral attacks. Assuming, however, that the rule is here applicable, it amounts to nothing more than an assumption of the existence of the facts recited in the resolutions, and the actual passage of such resolutions. These thing's, as hereinafter noted, are not disputed, and their refutation is not essential to plaintiffs ’ case.

The basis of the complaint is the charge of a bulk sale for a lump sum to a particular purchaser, and the vital question is, Did plaintiffs make a prima facie case in support of that charge? We think they did.

The principal witness for plaintiffs was Johnson, chairman of the board of county commissioners, cross-examined under the statute. In October, following the passage of the resolutions, a certain statement, Exhibit B, purporting to be issued and signed by all the commissioners, and fully explaining the entire transaction, appeared in the public pr'ess. Johnson made some answers which were inconsistent with some portions of Exhibit B. Those portions were called to his attention and introduced in evidence. They were clearly admissible. Johnson testified that the statement was prepared under the direction of the commissioners, that he was present when it was prepared, and that it was prepared for the purpose of publication in the local newspapers *219 and addressed to the public of Mesa county. Counsel for defendants took the position “that if any part of this statement is admitted as independent evidence, that it must all go in. ” “In view of this attitude of counsel,” said the court, “* * * all of Exhibits A and B are admitted. ’ ’ These exhibits were identical and this ruling was correct. It is unnecessary here to quote the exhibit.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 194, 91 Colo. 214, 1932 Colo. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-board-of-county-commissioners-colo-1932.