Willard v. Morton

59 P.2d 338, 50 Wyo. 72, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 15
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1936
Docket1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 338 (Willard v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willard v. Morton, 59 P.2d 338, 50 Wyo. 72, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 15 (Wyo. 1936).

Opinion

Riner, Justice.

This cause' comes to this court by proceedings in error to review a judgment of the district court of Natrona County in an action wherein E. J. Morton was plaintiff and E. W. Willard and Nebraska Bond and Mortgage Company, with other parties not involved here, were defendants. The separate general demurrers of the named defendants to the plaintiff’s petition in said action were overruled, and inasmuch as they declined to plead further the judgment, of *78 which complaint is now made, was rendered against them.

The question presented for decision is one of law therefore, and arises upon the application of the provisions of Article 15 of Chapter 22 Revised Statutes of Wyoming, 1931, relating to local improvements in cities and towns in this state, to the following facts which appear in the record:

E. J. Morton, as the owner thereof, holds three bonds of Grading District No. 4 of the City of Casper, each bond having a par value of $500.00. This District was established pursuant to the local improvement law aforesaid on August 4, 1919, and the assessment roll for the improvement contemplated was confirmed by the Casper City Council on November 29, 1920, said roll being placed in the hands of the City Treasurer for collection on December 7, 1920. Consequently, by the terms of Section 22-1521, Wyoming Revised Statutes, 1931, the lien of the special assessments therein provided for became effective on the property assessed on the date last mentioned.

The defendant, E. W. Willard, is the owner of certain bonds of Paving Improvement District No. 38, and on February 21, 1930, he had obtained a judgment in the district court aforesaid, whereby the lien of the special improvement assessments in that Improvement District had been declared valid against certain properties in said judgment described and ordered foreclosed. This District also had been established under the local improvement law mentioned above. It had been created on June 18, 1923, its assessment roll had been confirmed by the City Council of the City of Cas-per May 19, 1924, and was thereafter delivered to the City Treasurer of said City for collection. Willard additionally held bonds in Paving District No. 48, and on October 15, 1929, he had obtained a judgment of *79 foreclosure of the lien of the special assessments for that District against the properties listed in said judgment. This District likewise had been created under the same law as District No. 38 aforesaid, on June 23, 1924, its assessment roll was confirmed by the Casper City Council December 4, 1924, and said roll had been thereafter transmitted to the City Treasurer for collection.

The defendant, Nebraska Bond and Mortgage Company, holds, as owner, certain bonds in Storm Sewer Improvement District No. 2, and on February 25, 1930, it, too, had obtained a judgment of foreclosure of the special assessments lien imposed in that District against certain properties named in the judgment. This District, like the others, had been established under the aforesaid local improvement law, its creation occurred on June 18, 1923, its assessment roll had been confirmed by the proper municipal authority July 21, 1924, and that roll thereafter delivered to the City Treasurer for collection.

The liens thus held by these two defendants were fastened upon certain properties affected also by the lien held by the plaintiff Morton, his lien, it will be observed, being prior in point of time to those of said defendants. His petition prayed that each of their liens be adjudged junior and inferior to the one held by him. The district court so decreed. The sole question for determination therefore, is the relative rank of the lien claims of these overlapping special assessments, all established, as has been indicated, under the provisions of Article 15 of Chapter 22 aforesaid. The solution of this question must necessarily be found in the terms of the law just mentioned, as all these liens exist only by virtue thereof.

This law, governing local improvements in cities and towns of this state, first became effective through *80 Chapter 120 of the 1915 Session Laws of Wyoming, which received Executive approval February 27, 1915. It was carried forward so as to be included as most of Chapter 129, Wyoming Compiled Statutes, 1920, and it now appears in the Wyoming Revised Statutes, 1931, as Article 15 of Chapter 22. Some of its provisions, particularly those relating to the issuance of bonds, have been placed in Article 16 of Chapter 22 of the Revised Statutes of 1931. Certain sections in Article 15, aforesaid, would appear to shed a great deal of light upon the problem before us.

An examination of the phraseology of the law as an entirety, and these sections in particular, makes it plain that both in language and structure these portions of the enactment which especially affect the matter in hand have been in a large measure borrowed from Chapter 98 of the Session Laws of the State of Washington for 1911, which, with certain changes, was subsequently embodied in Chapter XXII of 3 Rem. Comp. Stat., 1922. Indeed, some of the sections in our law and those in the Washington statute are to all intents and purposes practically identical. Counsel for plaintiffs in error have themselves referred to the fact that Section 22-1521 W. R. S., 1931 (a rescript of Section 20, Chapter 120, Laws of Wyoming, 1915), closely resembles Section 9372 in Chapter XXII of the Washington statutory compilation cited above, said Section 22-1521, creating the lien of special assessments, for local improvements and reading:

“The charge on the respective lots, tracts, parcels of land and other property, for the purpose of special assessment, to pay the cost and expense, in whole or in part of any improvement authorized in this chapter, when assessed and the assessment roll confirmed by the legislative body of such city or town in the manner therein provided by ordinance, shall be a lien upon the property assessed from the time said assessment roll shall be placed in the hands of the officer, authorized *81 by law to collect such assessment. Such lien shall be paramount and superior to any other lien or incum-brance whatsoever, theretofore or thereafter created except a lien for assessments for general taxes.”

Counsel, however, point out that the parallel section of the Washington law, as set out in Section 9372 Rem. Comp. Stat., 1922, in the last sentence thereof contains the word “or” instead of “for” immediately preceding the words “general taxes.” That this is so we find from our library copy of the Washington compilation cited. It is asserted that a mistake occurred in the language borrowed by the Wyoming Legislature “because only with the use of the word ‘or’ as it appears in the Washington statute can any sense be given to this last sentence of the section.” On the other hand, counsel for defendant in error, arguing that no mistake at all has occurred, maintain that “there is a fundamental difference between the Washington and Wyoming statutes because of the use of the word ‘or’ in the Washington statute and the substitution therefor of the word ‘for’ in the Wyoming statute.”

However, it would seem that counsel for both parties have been misled by the language of the 1922 Rem. Comp. Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 338, 50 Wyo. 72, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-morton-wyo-1936.