Plaintiff is a city of the fourth class. Relief of the poor in the county is provided for under the town system. During the year 1935 the city expended for poor relief $4,257.09 in excess of one mill of the taxable property therein. It claims reimbursement from the county under the statute for 75 percent of that amount, or $3,192.82. There is no city of the first or second class in Jackson county.
Judgment below was that §
In Village of Robbinsdale v. County of Hennepin,
Plaintiff contends that in the Robbinsdale case §
Defendant counters that we held §
1. The scope and effect of our decision in the Robbinsdale case is to be determined by what we there held. Following the rule that a nonuniform distribution of taxes is violative of Minn. Const. art.
"It is settled law in this state that where it clearly appears that the tax imposed in no way pertains to the district taxed and that it was imposed and apportioned without any reference whatsoever to any special interest on the part of such district in the purpose to be accomplished, the tax so imposed is unconstitutional as in violation of the uniformity clause, Minn. Const. art.
"The tax imposed here is of special interest only to the village of Robbinsdale and to villages in the same class. No benefit is derived therefrom by cities in the first and second class which pay the large share of the county taxes. Reimbursement here amounts *Page 248
to nothing more than payment by the county, and hence certain of its political subdivisions, of the obligations imposed by law on other political subdivisions. Obviously § 3195 [§
The basic reason for our decision, that a county's funds cannot be used to pay the obligations imposed by law on its political subdivisions without violating the uniformity of taxation clause of the constitution, applies with equal force here and in every case where such a use of county funds is attempted the same as in the Robbinsdale case. In effect we held that §
2. It was not the legislative intent that L. 1937, c. 286, §§ 1, 2, Minn. St. 1941, §
Our decision in the Robbinsdale case that §
All that remained of §
True, c. 286 contains no clause referring to, or purporting to repeal or amend, §
"If a later statute accomplishes the same purpose intended to be accomplished by a previously enacted statute but by obviously different methods and in a different manner, the later statute supersedes and repeals the earlier one."
The rule of repeal by implication applies to unconstitutional as well as to constitutional statutes. Where a former statute has been held unconstitutional, a later statute covering the same subject matter and intended as a substitute for it, even though it contains no express provision to that effect, repeals the former by implication. Luse v. City of Dallas (Tex.Civ.App.)
Section
Our conclusion is that our decision in the Robbinsdale case held §
Affirmed. *Page 251