109 Neb. 189 | Neb. | 1922
The object of this action is to enjoin the officers of the Nine Mile Irrigation District and the county treasurer of Morrill county from levying and collecting a tax for irrigation district purposes against certain city lots in the city of Bayard. The court granted the injunction. Defendants appeal.
In 1906 the Nine Mile Irrigation District issued $18,000 in bonds, due in 20 years thereafter, for the purchase of a canal and right of way. The bonds are unpaid. The statute at the time of the passage of the act provided: “Such bonds, and the interest thereon, shall be paid by revenue derived from an annual assessment upon the real property of the district, and all the real property of the1 district shall be and remain liable to be assessed for such payments as herein provided.” Rev. St. 1913, sec. 3471. In 3917 section 3472 of the same statute -was amended so as to provide: “That city and town lots within any irrigation district, which áre occupied and used exclusively for other than agricultural purposes, shall not be assessed or taxed by such irrigation district during the time such lots are so occupied and used.” Laws 1917, ch. 80, sec. 1. The officers of the district disregarded this amendment to the statute, and proceeded to levy and assess a tax against two lots belonging to the plaintiff which
The appellants admit that the taxes levied by an irrigation district for irrigation purposes are special taxes, but insist that the legislative power to levy a special assessment is not unlimited; that the assessment must be apportioned by some rule capable of producing reasonable equality, and that a statute making this impossible is not a legitimate exercise of legislative authority; that to amend the statute so as to exempt part of the real property in the district from contributing its proportionate share to the payment of the bonded indebtedness is an impairment of the obligation of the contract existing between the bondholders and the district, and between the owners of other real estate in such district and the state of Nebraska; that the act is void as applying to irrigation districts organized before the amendment was made, and that it takes private property without due process of law in violation of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States. It is also said that the 1917 amend ment to section 3472, being made to a section which is merely a direction to the assessor as to what property to assess, does not affect section 3471, and that the latter section is still in full force and effect.
On the other hand, plaintiff and appellee relies upon the validity of the amended statute, and holds that the attempted levy and assessment, being in violation of the statute as amended, is void. .He also argues that, since the- bondholders are not parties to this suit, their rights cannot be adjudicated herein; that the tax complained of is levied, not only for the protection of the bondholders, but also for the annual cost of the operation and maintenance of the ditch; that the taxpayers alone are interested1 in this, and that they have no vested interest in the permanent retention of the lots as liable to assessment.
..The irrigation district act of this state is based upon the Wright Act of California. It was first considered in
Is the act void as impairing the obligation of the contract Avitli the bondholders? In AdeAV of the statutory provision, section 3471, Rev. St. 1913, that “all the real property of the district shall be and remain liable to be assessed for such payments,” to exempt such lots' from taxation to pay the interest on the bonds, or the bonds at maturity, by a statute subsequently passed, would clearly impair the obligation of the contract Avith the bondholders, and this the Constitution prohibits. Such liability to assessment still exists notAAithstanding the passage of the
The levy for the bond fund on the lots affected is onljr $1.80, while for maintenance and other purposes of the district it amounts to $12.20. Since water-rights are apportioned ratably on the basis of. the ratio which the last assessment for each tract for district purposes bears to the whole sum assessed, the withdrawal of water-rights from all such lots not assessed may add to the volume of water subject to be used by the other landholders, sufficient so that each may willingly pay the additional sum necessary to make up the diminution of the bond fund, or perhaps the water released may be applied to additional land added to the district in the ‘ manner provided by the statute (Comp. St. 1922, sec. 2892 et seq.), and thus no reduction in the • acreage of the land assessable result. The court will not presume that the bondholders will suffer, and will not set aside the statute at the instanc: of parties not affected.
As to the assessment for upkeep, maintenance and salaries: Appellant insists that no change in the statutes can be made by which any part of the property included within the district may be released from its proportionate • share of the tax, and that this would have the effect of rendering the taxation not equal or uniform, and that equality and uniformity is a necessary condition for the imposition of special taxes as well as general taxes.
In the opinion in Board of Directors v. Collins, 46 Neb.
An irrigation district is a public corporation, but not a municipal corporation. Board of Directors v. Collins, 46 Neb. 411; Lincoln & Dawson County Irrigation District v. McNeal, 60 Neb. 613. Such corporations are subject to regulation, and their charter is subject to amendment by the legislature. Unless it is clearly shown or indisputably established that the result of its action will exact from the owner of private property within the district a sum in substantial excess of the special benefits accruing to him, he is not entitled to complain. To quote from Norwood v. Baker, 172 U. S. 269 : “We say 'substantial excess’ because exact equality of taxation is not always obtainable; and for that reason the excess of cost OArer special benefits, unless it be of a material character, ought not to be regarded by a court of equity AAdien its aid is invoked to restrain the enforcement of a special assessment.” The same is true as to legislation. The lots affected by the amendment, being used exclusively for other than agricultural purposes, use no Avater, receive no direct special benefit from the improvement, and may properly be distinguished from those susceptible of receiving and using water for a beneficial purpose, and thus receiving direct special benefits.
The argument is made that under the operation of the amended statute, by the growth of a city situated within - the irrigation district, large tracts of land might be removed from the operation of the taxing poAver and thus an excessiAre burden be cast upon the landoAvners occupying land for agricultural purposes, but it must be remembered
Under the statute, the amount of water apportionable to each landowner is determined by the ratio which his. assessment bears to the whole sum assessed by the district,, so that his assessment and his benefits are proportionate.. We have repeatedly held that special assessments for pub-’ lie uses may not exceed the special benefits received by the property, and if the amount of the tax should exceed the special benefit which the owner of the land receives, or is otherwise unjust, he may appeal from the decision of the board of equalization, or have other remedies available when it is sought to take private property for public use without due compensation. But, as we have seen, if the water apportioned to the lots assessed produces revenue elsewhere, this condition may never arise.
The defense in this case is not made by a landholder whose taxes have been increased, and it is not shown how much the tax per acre upon the land subject to assessment would be increased after the lots in controversy and others in their class are exempt from the assessment. We cannot declare an act of the legislature void upon a mere presumption, or at the instance of one not suffering a wrong from a violation of the rights guaranteed to him by the Constitution. It was the duty of the officers of the irrigation district to obey the statute.
Affirmed.
The following opinion on motion for rehearing was filed April 10, 1923. Rehearing denied.
The question whether ministerial officers may defend this suit on the ground that the statute involved is viola: t-ivé of the Constitution of the state has been briefed and
The constitutionality of an act may depend upon the result of its practical operation. In Cram v. Chicago B. & Q. R. Co., 84 Neb. 607, 85 Neb. 586, an act was held valid a priori. Afterwards, Davison v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 100 Neb. 462, where the evidence demonstrated that its practical operation was confiscatory, the same statute was held Amid. Conversely, in Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466, the United States supreme court held a statute regulating railroad rates void, but only void as long as its practical operation violated the protective clauses of the Constitution, and further held that under changed circumstances, making the rates reasonable, the injunction granted to restrain the operation of the statutes would be discharged. The acts in question in these cases were not void ab initio, but \vere only void Avhen and in so far as they operated to take away constitutional rights. The act in question in this case should be obeyed. If in its practical operation it deprives the bondholders of rights protected by the Constitution, when such facts are made to appear, the courts are open to afford relief.
It is argued that by the creation of the district there 'was a contract made between the state and the landowners in the district to the effect that all real estate Avithin the district'shall remain liable for the mantenance Of the canal and for running expenses of the district. No such contract exists. The relations of the landowners AAdthin the district to each other and to the district are
Motion for rehearing
Overruled.