34 Kan. 379 | Kan. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On April 24, 1884, the city council of the city of Atchison enacted an ordinance appropriating $25,000 with which to build certain bridges in the city; and as there was no money in the treasury for that purpose, it was therein provided that the proposition of issuing the bonds of the city in the amount of $25,000, to be used in payment of the bridges, and the levy of a special tax to pay such bonds, should be submitted to the qualified voters of the city for their ratification or rejection. In accordance with the provisions of the ordinance, the election was held on the 14th day of May, 1884, and upon the canvass of the vote by the proper authorities, it was found and declared that the proposition had been carried. The city then entered into contracts with the defendants Dilgert & Wagner and John Peterson for the construction of the bridges, and issued and delivered the bonds that had been voted in payment therefor. Afterward the city levied and caused to be extended upon the tax-roll a special tax of eight mills on the dollar of the taxable property of the city, for the purpose of paying the bridge bonds. The county treasurer obtained the possession of the tax-roll and proceeded to collect this tax, and had collected a considerable amount thereof, when on December 31, 1884, this action was brought in the name of the state of Kansas, by the acting county attorney of Atchison county.
It was alleged by the plaintiff, as will be seen in the peti
“The defendants be enjoined from demanding payment of or receiving taxes heretofore collected or that may hereafter be collected on account of said levy of taxes for special bridge fund, the same being a tax of eight mills on the dollar for the year 1884; and enjoined from paying out any of the money by them hereafter received on tax levy of the city of Atchison, of what is known as the special bridge fund tax.”
Conceding, then, that the tax is illegal, what interest has the state of Kansas in the controversy? If private rights and private interests only are involved, then the state cannot maintain the action. It can only be brought by the party who is beneficially or specially interested in the subject-matter. This is not a case to prevent a corporation or its officers from violating the law, or from abusing the powers conferred upon them by the law. The bonds alleged to be unauthorized and illegal
“It is obvious that this interference on the part of the state is unnecessary for the protection of any rights. It is not a case where, but for the intervention of the state, an irremediable wrong would be perpetrated. Conceding the bonds to be void, each and every tax-payer has ample protection by an action of injunction. Nor is a multiplicity of suits necessary. The tax, as a tax, being illegal, all the tax-payers may unite in a single action. (Hudson v. Comm’rs of Atchison Co., 12 Kas. 140.) It is apparent too, that no action of the corporation, the school district, is sought to be prevented. . . . It is obvious that the state as a state has no direct interest in this controversy, any more than a controversy between individuals. The payment of these bonds may be illegal, but their payment works no greater wrong to the state than the payment by a single individual of an illegal debt. The single individual may, if he chooses, by appealing to the ordinary proceedings of the law, protect himself against such illegal payment. So may the many tax-payers.”
The point made that the county may be embarrassed by reason of the objection to the tax, and the failure of the taxpayers to pay the same, and the probable lack of bidders at the tax sale thereafter to be held, is without force in this proceeding. It appears that the special bridge-fund tax is separate and distinct from all other levies, and the tax-payer can therefore distinguish, if he chooses, the legal from the illegal tax. But more than that the plaintiff does not desire, or at least is not asking to restrain further proceedings in the collection of the tax. In fact, by the petition of the plaintiff, it is assumed and evidently intended that the county treasurer shall continue to collect the tax, and shall sell the property if necessary to accomplish that end. He asks that the county treasurer shall hold and not pay out the money hereafter collected under such levy.
Indeed, it would seem from the showing made by the plaintiff, that even the tax-payers could not maintain an action to recover from the county treasurer the money which they have paid. It appears to have been a free and voluntary act upon their part, and it has been settled by the repeated decisions of this court that money thus voluntarily paid cannot be recovered by the individual paying the same. (Phillips v. Jefferson Co., 5 Kas. 412; Wabaunsee Co. v. Walker, 8 id. 431; K. P. Rly. Co. v. Comm’rs of Wyandotte Co., 16 id. 587; Sapp v. Comm’rs of Brown Co., 20 id. 243; Thimes v. Stumpff, 33 id. 53.)
If the action brought by the plaintiff could be maintained, the peculiar dilemma' is presented of inferentially authorizing