Yeatman v. King

51 N.W. 721, 2 N.D. 421, 1892 N.D. LEXIS 24
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 51 N.W. 721 (Yeatman v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeatman v. King, 51 N.W. 721, 2 N.D. 421, 1892 N.D. LEXIS 24 (N.D. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Corliss, C. J.

The contest here is between plaintiff and defendant Foster county for priority of lien. The action is to foreclose a real estate mortgage. Foster county is made a party defendant on the theory that it holds a lien on the mortgaged real property subordinate to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage. This contention of the plaintiff is denied by Foster county, and the latter, having been defeated by the trial court, brings the question before us for review. It is purely an issue of law. The facts are undisputed. Plaintiff’s mortgage is dated July 1, 1886, and was duly recorded July 5, 1886. On March 26, 1889, Foster county entered into a contract to furnish, and actually did furnish on that day, to the mortgagor and owner of the mortgaged - premises, pursuant to such contract, 150 bushels of seed wheat, ■ to be used by him to raise a crop upon the mortgaged premises in the season of 1889. The seed was actually used for that purpose. All proceedings were duly taken by the county in conformity with the statute to perfect a lien upon the land under the provisions of chapter 43 of the Laws of 1889. This act so far as it is material to this case, provides that, “ if the said indebtedness ■ (for the seed grain furnished) be not paid on November 1,1889, the amount thereof shall be entered upon the tax list of such county for the year 1889 as a tax upon the land upon which such seed wheat was sown, to be collected as other taxes are; and the sum so entered and levied shall be a first lien upon the crop of grain raised each year by the person ■ receiving said seed grain, and also upon the real estate owned [424]*424by such person, until the tax is fully paid.” On April 14,1890, Poster county furnished the mortgagor, King, seed wheat for the season of 1890, to be sown upon this same land. It was so sown. The county claims a lien upon the land for the value of this seed, under the provisions of chapter 152 of the Laws of 1890. No question is raised as to the existence of liens on the land for the seed wheat furnished in 1889 and 1890. The only inquiry is whether such liens are paramount to that of the mortgage, which was executed and became a lien upon the land more than two years before the first law was enacted. It is unnecessary to refer to the provisions • of the act of 1890, as the law of 1889 confers upon the county greater rights than are conferred upon it by the act of 1890, the lien being in express terms declared to be a first lien under the statute of 1889, while the act of 1890 is silent on this subject of priority. Having reached the conclusion that the provision of the act of 1889, giving priority to the. seed lien, cannot, in the face of the inhibition against the - impairment by a state of the obligations of a contract, work the destruction or impairment of a prior subsisting lien, created before the act of 1889 was passed, it is, of course, unnecessary to determine whether the act of 1890 does or does not attempt to make the seed lien paramount. The statute which makes the lien a first lien upon the land describes it as a tax lien, and the amount due for the seed grain is declared to be a tax, and the amount thereof, in case of default in its payment, is directed to be entered upon the tax list of the county. But the voice of the legislature cannot alter the essential nature of things. No legislative fiat can make that a tax which is not and cannot be a tax. If the law-making power were vested with unlimited authority to fix the meaning of words, to take cases without the prohibition of the constitution by arbitrary definitions, the fundamental rights of the citizen would be safe only so long as the legislature should abstain from defining away constitutional protections. Due process of law might be defined to embrace arbitrary confiscation; such a thing as an ex post facto statute might be defined practically out of existence; and many, if not all, of the barriers erected to shield the fundamental rights of the citizen from legislative [425]*425assault — barriers seemingly of adamant, and apparently standing upon abiding foundations — would crumble before tbe breath of legislative definition. We are confident the agent has no power to define away the limitations upon his delegated authority. Said Mr. Justice Miller in Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U. S. 97: “ But when, in the year of grace 1886, there is placed in the constitution of the United States a declaration that ‘no state shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law,’ can a state make anything due process of law which by its own legislation it choses to declare such? To affirm this is to hold that the prohibition of the state is of no avail, or has no application, where the invasion of private rights is affected under the form of Btate legislation.” In the Munn Case, 94 U. S. 113, the language of Mr. Justice Field is equally emphatic. Speaking of the provision in the constitution of Illinois declaring certain grain elevators public warehouses, he said: “There is no magic in the language, though used by a constitutional convention, which can change a private business into a public one, or alter the character of the building in which the busi ness is transacted.” Chief Justice Waite, in the same case, after reaching the conclusion that the business of the warehouseman at Chicago, under the peculiar circumstances, was affected with a public interest — was a public business — said: “ It may not be made so by the operation of the constitution of Illinois or this statute, but it is by the facts.” It is needless to dwell longer upon a principle so obvious.

Is, then, the obligation under the law resting upon the person who has received temporary county aid in the shape of seed grain, to repay to the county the value thereof, a tax in any sense of the word whatever? We are very clear that it is not. If the oracle be consulted we find it gives back no answer that will justify the theory that this obligation is a tax. Says Judge Cooley at the very threshold of his work on Taxation: c‘ Taxes are defined as being the enforced proportional contribution of persons and property, levied by authority of the state for the support of the government and for all public needs.’1 The amount to be paid by him who has been supplied by the [426]*426public with seed grain is not in any sense a “ contribution,” but it is a debt owing by him to the county for value received by him in the form of property. If it could be regarded as a contribution, it is not a proportionate contribution, for he who owes the duty to make this payment owes it in addition to his duty to pay his proportion of taxes, and he may be the only person in the county upon whom this extra obligation rests. Neither can it be said to be an “enforced ” contribution. Whatever he is bound to pay is owing because of his voluntary purchase of seed grain from the county. There is no coercion. He pays what he agrees to pay and no more. The money is not paid for the support of the government, nor for any public purpose. So far as the statute apportions the burden of furnishing this seed grain among all taxpayers, the sum so apportioned is a proper tax. This we have held under the peculiar phraseology of our constitution, and in view of the trend of legislation in the northwestern agricultural states, acquiesced in by the people, which we regarded as so expanding the significance of the words “ public purpose,” when applied to taxation, as to make the imposition of taxes for such a purpose constitutional. State v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.W. 721, 2 N.D. 421, 1892 N.D. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeatman-v-king-nd-1892.