Weiss v. Commissioners of the Land Office

1938 OK 79, 75 P.2d 1142, 182 Okla. 39, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 1, 1938
DocketNo. 28088.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1938 OK 79 (Weiss v. Commissioners of the Land Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weiss v. Commissioners of the Land Office, 1938 OK 79, 75 P.2d 1142, 182 Okla. 39, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 47 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

This original action is brought to compel the Commissioners of the Land Office of the state to segregate and retain sufficient moneys now on hand or to be received from any source in the public building fund as well as assets now owned or to be acquired by the public building fund, so that such segregated funds may secure the payment of the outstanding University Dormitory public building bonds, Agricultural and Mechanical College Dormitory building bonds, and University Infirmary public building bonds, and interest thereon. Plaintiff seeks an injunction on the theory that the commissioners, unless restrained, will pay certain unnamed appropriations made by the Sixteenth Legislature against the public building fund, asserting that until there is sufficient moneys in the public building fund “earmarked to secure the paj'ment of the dormitory and infirmary public building bonds and interest due thereon to the maturity of the bonds,” no appropriations should be paid.

The commissioners, expressing their desire to see every pledge and every promise made by the state in the issuance of these bonds carefully and fully observed, join in the request for a construction of the statutes, but take the position that the laws under which the bonds were issued do not make the bonds a lien against all the public building fund and do not require the impounding of a sum in said fund sufficient to equal the' amount of all outstanding bonds and the interest thereon to maturity.

The dormitory bonds were issued under the provisions of chapter 87, S. L. 1923-21 (O- S. 1931, secs. 7135-40), and the infirmary bonds under authority of chapter 104, S. L. 1927 (O. S. 1931, secs. 7236-40). Each act provides a special sinking fund to be derived from rentals, charges, and fees— in the case of the dormitories, only from those using the dormitories; and in the case of the infirmary, from all the students attending the State University. The acts provide for payment of the bonds issued, respectively, as follows:

“All funds accruing to the said ‘University Dormitory Sinking Fund,’ or the said ‘Agricultural and Mechanical College Dormitory Sinking Fund,’ as herein provided, together with all credits accruing' from the State Public Building Lands, or Funds, not otherwise pledged, or so much thereof as may be required, are hereby irrevocably pledged to the payment of the interest and principal of said bonds.” O. S. 1931, sec. 7139. (Emphasis ours.)

The statute authorizing the issuance of the infirmary bonds contains identical provisions, except, of course, the special sinking fund is differently designated. O. S. 1931, sec. 7240. In each case, also, the duty is enjoined upon the proper governing boards to charge rentals or fees for the use of such dormitories or infirmary sufficient to pay the interest and principal of said bonds.

The bonds were issued in series and in each case recite the foregoing applicable provisions of the statutes, and refer to the Enabling Act, section 4, article 11, of the Constitution, articles 1 to 7, inclusive, and article 9, of chapter 81, O. O. S. 1921, relating to the public lands and building fund. (See chapter 28, 0. S. 1931, same numbered articles.) These sections authorize the leasing, rental, and sale of the public lands and the creation of the public building fund.

By chapter 89, S. D. 1910-11 (art. 11, ch. 27, O. S. 1931), the first public building fund bonds were issued. Under this act (sec. 5483, O. S. 1931) the bonds so issued were expressly made payable out of the public building fund arising from the sale or rental of section 33 and lands granted in lieu thereof, and the good faith of the state was solemnly pledged to keep the proceeds safely and to use the public building fund for no other purpose, until the bonds with interest were fully paid. This act came before this court in the case of State ex rel. Freeling v. Howard, 67 Okla. 296, 171 P. 41. Each side here points to that case as an authority.

Some of the propositions of law admitted or decided in the cited cases are not at issue here. It is admitted that the commissioners are trustees of the funds involved either for the state or bondholders or both. It is also undisputed that the statutes and constitutional provisions under which the bonds were issued constitute a contract with the bondholders, and that, if the appropriations of the Sixteenth Legislature call for expenditure of any of the pledged funds so *41 as to lessen tlie security of the bondholders, such appropriations are ineffective. Some other questions here presented, however, are by that opinion expressly pretermitted, since it appeared in that case, as the court said, that there were sufficient excess funds at hand to pay the appropriations made by the Legislature after making allowance for the payment of the interest accruing and the principal of the bonds. It appears from the facts recited in that case, moreover, that this excess was determined by considering the sum of the annual receipts to the fund during the lifetime of the bonds as well as the funds on hand and available during the appropriation period.

The bonds under consideration in the case just discussed have been paid. The bonds here under consideration are in priority according to the dates of the acts under which they were issued, the dormitory bonds constituting a first lien and the infirmary bonds a second lien upon the “credits accruing’' to the public lauds and funds not otherwise pledged. The bonds considered in the case just referred to were expressly made payable out of the public building fund whether it arose from the sale or rental of lands which were to form the basis for the creation of the fund.

It is apparent here, however, that the Legislature has not pledged the lands and fund ; it has pledged only the “credits accruing” from said lands and funds. We read the act as if the Legislature, after enjoining upon the board (in charge of the university or college, as the ease may be) the duty of establishing such rentals, charges, and fees to be paid by tlie students attending as would be necessary to provide a sufficient sinking fund for the payment of the interest and principal of the bonds authorized, had then said:

“Such sums so collected shall be deposited in the State Treasury, to the credit of a fund to be maintained and designated in the treasury as ‘The University Dormitory sinking fund,’ or ‘The Agricultural and Mechanical College Dormitory sinking fund’ (or ‘The University Infirmary building sinking fund’) as the same may be. All funds accruing to the said ‘University Dormitory sinking fund,’ or (to) the said ‘Agricultural and Mechanical College Dormitory sinking fund’ (or to ‘University Infirmary building-sinking fund’) as herein provided, together with all credits accruing from the state public building lands, or (from the state public building) funds not otherwise pledged, or so much (of such credits) as may be required (as necessary to make up any deficiency in revenues arising from the use of the dormitories or infirmary as the case may be) are hereby irrevocably pledged to the payment of the interest and principal of said bonds.”

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 79, 75 P.2d 1142, 182 Okla. 39, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiss-v-commissioners-of-the-land-office-okla-1938.