William Deering & Co. v. Peterson

77 N.W. 568, 75 Minn. 118, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 1002
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 27, 1898
DocketNos. 11,319—(58)
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 568 (William Deering & Co. v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Deering & Co. v. Peterson, 77 N.W. 568, 75 Minn. 118, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 1002 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

CANTY, J.

The garnishee herein disclosed that he had in his possession and under his control 144 bushels of wheat, the property of defendant. It is also to be inferred from the disclosure that defendant held the .title to this wheat under a chattel mortgage given by one Herman Peterson on his crop. It appeared also on the disclosure that Marshall county made a claim to the wheat. Thereupon the board of county commissioners of that county intervened as claimant, and alleged in their complaint that on March 25, 1898, said Herman Peterson was, and ever since has been, the owner and in actual possession of certain described land in that county, on which the wheat in question was raised; that on said March 25 he applied, under Laws 1893, cc. 225, 226, for money to buy seed grain; and that the money was furnished him. The application, and all the proceedings had in procuring the money, are set out in said complaint, and the intervenors claim a lien on the wheat in question for the repayment of the money.

Plaintiff demurred to the complaint on the ground that it does not state a cause of action, and on the ground that there is a defect of parties claimant, and appeals from an order overruling the demurrer.

Chapter 225 is entitled “An act to appropriate money for seed-grain loans to farmers in this state whose crops were destroyed by hail or storms last year.” The act appropriates $75,000 out of the state treasury for such purpose, and provides that any person desiring to avail himself of the benefits of the act shall file his application with the town clerk, who shall forward it to the county auditor, who shall publish a notice that the board of county commis[121]*121sioners will meet at his office on a day named for the purpose of considering the allowance of relief to such applicants. It is further provided that the board shall at such time fix and determine the amount to be allowed to each applicant, the county auditor shall furnish a copy of the resolution to the state'auditor, and the governor, state treasurer and state auditor shall meet and distribute the appropriation among the several counties' in which relief is sought. It is further provided (section 2),

“That any person or persons owning more than 160 acres of land free from mortgage incumbrance, whether the same be cultivated or not, shall be deprived from any of the benefits as set forth in this act.”

The act further provides (section 3) that,

“The county auditor shall levy a tax against the land for which such seed-grain loan may be granted, and on which such loan is hereby declared to be a lien, which shall take precedence over any and all incumbrances.”

Section 5 provides,

“That such tax shall be paid in three instalments as nearly equal as may be, and be included in the tax levy for the years 1894, 1895 and 1896.”

Section 6 provides that, to distribute the money appropriated, the state auditor shall draw a warrant on the state treasurer for the amount allowed each county, and the county auditor shall thereupon draw his warrant on the county treasurer for the amount allowed each person. Section 7 provides that all moneys collected on sftch seed-loan tax shall be paid over to the state treasurer, and section 8 provides that, whenever such tax remains unpaid and becomes delinquent, the board of county commissioners shall order the amount thereof paid to the state treasurer out of thé county treasury. Chapter 226 amends chapter 225 in several particulars, and declares the seed-grain loan a lien on the land for which the loan was made,

“And upon the crop of grain raised each year by the person receiving such loan until such amount is fully paid.”

[122]*122It also provides that such lien “shall take precedence over any and all incumbrances acquired subsequent to the lien of such loan.”

1. There is nothing in appellant’s claim that the application of Herman Peterson for the seed-grain loan, set out in the intervenor’s complaint, does not state the land which he owns or that he owns any land. The third question in the application, and the answer thereto, is as follows:

“(3) Give full description of land, with the number of acres owned. 160 on Sec. 10, Town 158, range 18; 80 acres on Sec. 9; 10 acres on Sec. 17; and 80 acres on Sec. 19.”

True, this does not state what part of the section each parcel of land is in, but the twelfth question is,

“(12) Give description of land upon which you intend to sow seed grain,”

And the answer to this question gives the same description and same number of acres, with the addition of the government subdivision of the section, and states that all of the land is in township 158, range 18.

These proceedings must be construed liberally in favor of the state, and it should be presumed that the same land is referred to in the third answer as in the twelfth answer in the application. The law did not permit him, because he owned land in one place, to obtain state aid to procure seed grain to sow in another place.

2. The application shows that Herman Peterson owned more than 160 acres of land, to wit 360 acres, and it does not appear, by the application or otherwise, that there was a mortgage incumbrance on any of it. Appellant contends that, as the statute prohibits every person owning more than 160 acres of land, free from mortgage incumbrance, from taking the benefits of the act, the whole proceeding is void. It does not appear that the statutory notice was given of the meeting of the board of county commissioners to act on the application for seed-grain loans. It is not alleged that certain other provisions of the law were complied with. Appellant contends that for these reasons the state gave away its [123]*123money improvidentlv, and without the right to reclaim it under the law. We cannot so hold.

These proceedings were not in invitum, but were voluntary on the part of Herman Peterson, and, in our opinion, he is estopped,, while taking the benefit of the statute, from denying that the statute has been complied with; and all those standing in his shoes are likewise estopped.

3. There is nothing in the claim that chapters 225 and 226 are each unconstitutional because the subject of each áct is not expressed in its title.

4. Neither is there anything in the claim that the method of collecting the amount loaned by levying a tax on the land is unequal taxation. It is not taxation at all. It is a statutory method of foreclosing a statutory lien for money loaned. Besides, that point does not concern appellant, as the claim here made by the intervenor is not under the statutory provisions for levying a so-called tax, but under the provision declaring the amount due a lien on the crops of grain thereafter raised on the land.

5. But there is one ground on which, in our opinion, this statute is unconstitutional. It appropriates public money for a private purpose. It is well settled that public money may be appropriated for the support of paupers, but the statute in question does not limit the appropriation to those who are paupers. On the contrary, it permits every one who has not more than 160 acres of land, free from mortgage incumbrance, to borrow from the state.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 568, 75 Minn. 118, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 1002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-deering-co-v-peterson-minn-1898.