DocketNumber: No. 7090.
Judges: Givens, Holden, Ailshie, Budge
Filed Date: 10/27/1943
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 262
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 263 Respondent, Twin Falls Highway District, was organized September 6, 1918. February 8, 1922, appellant, Murtaugh Highway District, and the Rock Creek Highway District were formed and took over part of the territory of the original district, the remaining portion continuing as the Twin Falls Highway District. July 1, 1919, $1,250,000.00 ten-twenty year bonds were issued, all outstanding February 8, 1922.
Appellant's suit herein was for reimbursement for claimed ad valorem overpayments of its proportionate liability on the bonds and its share of profits from respondent's purchase and sale of securities. The first cause of action is an omnibus one covering the others and will be disposed of by consideration of them. The facts were stipulated. Judgment was for respondent on its denials and affirmative defenses and claims, except as to certain interest.
Between 1932 and 1938 respondent certified to the constituent districts an ad valorem levy slightly larger than the ad valorem levy made in its district for the payment of principal and interest of the bonds. Appellant contends that because of this difference it paid in ad valorem taxes $12,660.78 more than it would have if the levy had been uniform. The difference, however, between the amount of the levy made by respondent in its own district and the amount it would have raised if it had made a levy equal to that in the other two districts was made up by the respondent district and applied on the payment of principal and interest of bonds out of motor vehicle license fees paid by its residents. Appellant contends that all of the license fees should have been used before any ad valorem tax was levied. Both the appellant district and the Rock Creek district received and retained the motor vehicle license fees collected in their districts, and none of these license fees were used in the payment of principal and interest of the bonds. Appellant's contention, insofar as it is that the basis *Page 265 for apportionment should be the automobile license fees rather than the relative assessed valuations of the district, is contrary to all of the plain statements and intendments of the appropriate and pertinent statutes and a prior decision of this court determining the proper basis for apportionment as between these parties. Sec. 39-1568 provides as follows:
"Security for bonds. — The full faith, credit and all taxable property within the limits of said district, as they exist at the time of the original resolution of the highway board for the issuance of such bonds, or may thereafter be extended, are and must continue pledged, and the proper officers of said district must continue to assess and collect on all taxable property within the limits thereof, the necessary taxes to pay said bonds and interest as the same become due. Should the tax for the payment of interest on or the principal of bonds issued under the provisions of this chapter at any time not be collected in time to meet such payment, the money must be paid out of any moneys in the general fund of the district, and the moneys so used for such payment must be repaid to the fund from which so taken, out of the first moneys paid therein and a sum sufficient to cover such deficit shall be levied and collected in the next, or any succeeding year. Any failure of any officers of said district to comply with any of the provisions of this section shall be deemed a misdemeanor, and any such officer shall be fined not exceeding the sum of $200.00 or imprisoned in the county jail not exceeding sixty days. * * *"
Sec. 39-1510 provides:
"Division of district — Levy to pay indebtedness. — Whenever an amount is found to be due from either of said districts to the other and where a warrant or warrants have been drawn for the amount so due, payable to the creditor district, and the levy for the first year found to be insufficient for the payment of said warrant or warrants it shall be the duty of the board of highway commissioners of said debtor district to levy annually a tax sufficient to pay annually at least twenty-five per cent of said warrant indebtedness or so much of said warrant indebtedness as the limit of levying taxes by highway district as now prescribed by law will permit, and providing further that the commissioner of the old district shall annually levy a property tax for both the old and the new district for the purpose *Page 266 of providing a sinking fund to pay the bonded indebtedness of said original district at the time of said division. Upon any such levy being made by the board of commissioners of the old district, it shall be the duty of the clerk of said board to transmit to the board of commissioners of the new district a certified copy of the resolution providing for said tax, and it shall be the duty of said board of commissioners of the new district to spread said resolution on its minutes and a tax shall be levied on said new district in accordance with said resolution and collected in like manner as other special highway district taxes are collected, and paid as rapidly as collected by the tax collector of the county in which the new district is situated, to the treasurer of the old district who shall credit same to the sinking fund to liquidate the aforesaid bonded indebtedness."
The bond limit in the highway district is on the assessed value and not on moneys that may be received from the motor vehicle license fund. Sec. 39-1566, I.C.A.
While the motor vehicle license fees are paid to the district and may be applied by them in the payment of the principal and interest of any outstanding bonds, the basis for apportionment by the districts is not thereby affected. Sec. 39-2111, I.C.A.1 *Page 267
In Murtaugh H. Dist. v. Twin Falls H. Dist.,
" 'Where a party by conduct has intimated that he consents to an act which has been done or will offer no opposition thereto, though it could not have been lawfully done without his consent, and he thereby induces others to do that from which they otherwise might have abstained, he cannot question the legality of the action to the prejudice of those who have acted on the fair inference to be drawn from his conduct.' " (Exchange State Bank v. Taber,
Whitley v. Spokane etc. Ry. Co.,
Highway districts are in the category of purely *Page 268
business and proprietary corporations. In re Rogers, Randall
Pitzen,
"We recognize the fact that ordinarily the doctrine of laches and estoppel may not be invoked against a municipality on account of the action or inaction or conduct of its public officers. This, however, is more especially true with reference to their acts and conduct in governmental and purely municipal affairs. It has never been held with the same strictness in reference to purely business and proprietary matters and transactions.
"* * *
"We recognize that, as a general rule, the doctrine of estoppel does not apply to municipal corporations, and we are not unmindful of the fact that the courts of many states have absolutely refused to apply it to such corporations. We are not prepared, however, to announce an unalterable and unexceptionable rule in this state which would inevitably result in perpetrating wrong and injustice in exceptional cases like this. Courts of equity are established for the administration of justice in those peculiar cases where substantial justice cannot be administered under the express rules of law, and to adopt a rigid rule that recognizes no exceptions would be to rob such courts of much of their efficacy and power for administering even-handed justice. The people in their collective and sovereign capacity ought to observe the same rules and standard of honesty and fair dealing that is expected of a private citizen. In their collective and governmental capacity, they should no more be allowed to lull the citizen to repose and confidence in what would otherwise be a false and erroneous position than should the private citizen." (Boise City v. Wilkinson,
Twin Falls Co. v. West,
There has been no disparity whatever in the amounts paid by the three districts, and, as a matter of fact, as found by the court, respondent overpaid $1144.94 on the basis of the relative assessed valuations, as specified in the stipulation.
Appellant makes the naive contention, however, that all of the license fees received by the Twin Falls district and used by it in paying its share of the indebtedness became *Page 269
in some manner trust funds, whereby all, apparently, of the motor vehicle license fees received by the Twin Falls district should have been applied on bonded indebtedness, though appellant contributed none of its license fees and has not offered to do so, urging that moneys set apart for a certain purpose may not be used for some other purpose. In the first instance, respondent didn't any more use the license fees for an improper purpose than did appellant; in the second, the use of the funds is not what would have occasioned any ground for redress, but the failure of respondent to pay its proper share of the indebtedness; in the third place, these funds were never apportioned or irrevocably dedicated by the legislature to the payment of bonds in lieu of or prior to the use of ad valorem taxes, and the cases cited by appellant do not sustain its position in this regard. Excelsior Township v. Kirby, CountyClerk,
Appellant does not object because respondent paidsome of its motor vehicle license funds on the bonded indebtedness but objects because it did not pay more or all thereof. Appellant must be consistent in its theory (EasternIdaho Loan Trust Co. v. Blomberg,
Respondent district has paid its full share and proportion as based upon the relative assessed valuations, using the balance of its motor vehicle license funds over and above the amount used by it in payment of what otherwise it would have paid by ad valorem tax just the same as the other districts have used all their motor vehicle license fees.
If the license fees of all three districts had been used in the payment of bonds and interest thereon, ad valorem taxes in the amount of $1,047,300.63 need not have been levied. Appellant's third cause of action is for a relative share thereof, which it contends is $40,785.52. This position is equally untenable for the above reasons.
From time to time there was not in the bond retirement or interest funds sufficient money to pay on the due date of the bonds. Respondent advanced from other sources money sufficient to make these payments. None of the money advanced was paid by appellant district or the Rock Creek district, but from other funds received by respondent. Secs. 39-1543, 39-1546, 39-1552, 39-1568, 39-2111, I.C.A. When taxes were received from the two districts in sufficient amount, respondent reimbursed itself for these advances. There remained in this fund, June 5, 1940, of respondent's moneys, not appellant's, some $74,000. Appellant contends it is entitled to share therein, though it did not contribute thereto, on the theory that having been advanced by respondent it became trust funds in which the other districts were entitled to share. Conceding respondent was trustee for the other districts of joint funds, that did not give appellant any right to share in a distribution of respondent's moneys to which it had not contributed. Appellant was benefited by these advances made by respondent of its own funds because *Page 271 appellant was not required to make a larger levy necessary if sufficient funds had been previously collected.
From time to time respondent invested some of its own money in various securities and made a profit therefrom. None of the money used by it in these transactions was contributed by appellant, yet it contends it should share therein, which contention is as fallacious as the one advanced in connection with the fourth cause of action.
There remains in respondent's possession $5729.12 jointly contributed by the three districts over and above the amount necessary to retire the bonds, which have all been paid. It was stipulated that this should be distributed in accordance with the assessed valuation. The judgment was in accordance therewith, and it is unnecessary to further consider that cause of action.
Respondent contended that it was entitled to contribution from appellant for the expense of administering the payment of bonds, etc. The trial court gave judgment for this amount, which, if due and owing from appellant to respondent, was conceded to reasonably be the sum of $365.35. If the districts had not been separated, appellant's portion of the original territory would have borne its share of the expense, and this contribution is justified by sec. 39-1510, I.C.A.
The judgment is therefore affirmed. Costs awarded to respondent.
Holden, C.J., and Ailshie and Budge, JJ., concur.
"The commissioner of any highway or good road district receiving money under the terms of this section shall set aside for interest and sinking fund requirements such sum or sums as may be necessary to meet such demands accruing during the current fiscal year on any unpaid bonds of said district, and shall use any remaining balance for road and bridge construction, repairs or improvements."
Murtaugh Highway District v. Twin Falls Highway District ( 1935 )
Joint Highway Dist. No. 13 v. Hinman ( 1934 )
In Re Rogers, Rendall Pitzen ( 1936 )
Delaware County Excise Board v. St. Louis-S. F. R. ( 1935 )
Township of Excelsior v. Kirkby ( 1930 )