270 N.W. 885 | N.D. | 1936
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff brought this action to foreclose a mortgage executed and delivered to it by the defendants, Martin Falk and his wife. The mortgage was executed and delivered on January 2, 1934, and covers certain lands in Stutsman county in this state. The county of Stutsman, and the state of North Dakota, doing business as the State Hail Insurance Department, were joined as parties defendant. It is alleged in the complaint that they claim certain interests in, or liens or encumbrances upon, said real property adverse to the plaintiff. It is further alleged that there is an unpaid hail indemnity tax for the year 1935 in the sum of $128.00 which the said county of Stutsman and the State Hail Insurance Department claim to be a lien against at portion of the land covered by the mortgage. The county of Stutsman and the State Hail Insurance Department interposed an answer wherein they allege that a hail indemnity tax was assessed and levied for the year 1935 in the sum of $128.00 against certain lands covered by the mortgage sought to be foreclosed in this action. In such answer it is also alleged that such hail indemnity tax is a lien paramount to the lien of plaintiff's mortgage. The plaintiff demurred to the answer on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense. The demurrer was brought on for argument. In connection with the demurrer "and to be used and made a part of the files and records in connection with the hearing on said demurrer" the parties, through their respective *157 counsel, entered into a written stipulation, wherein it was stipulated as a fact:
"That the hail indemnity tax for the year 1935 in the amount of One Hundred Twenty-eight Dollars ($128.00), alleged and referred to in Paragraph 11 of the Separate Answer of said defendants, County of Stutsman of the State of North Dakota, and the State of North Dakota, doing business as Hail Insurance Department, was, and is, in all things levied, assessed and spread in manner and form, and at the time or times, as provided by law; and that due, timely and proper application was made, and never withdrawn, for such hail insurance covering crops upon the lands mentioned and described in the plaintiff's complaint in the above entitled action."
The trial court overruled the demurrer and the plaintiff has appealed.
The sole question presented on this appeal is whether the lien of the hail indemnity tax levied in 1935 is superior to the lien of plaintiff's mortgage. The answer to this question depends upon the constitutionality of the provision in chapter 137, Laws 1933, that "the lien" of the hail indemnity tax "shall be prior and superior to all mortgages, liens and judgments executed subsequent to the approval of this act."
The plaintiff contends that this provision is violative of the guarantees in the state and Federal constitutions, that no law shall be passed impairing the obligation of contracts. U.S. Const. Art. 1, § 10, N.D. Const. § 16. Also that it violates the due process and equal protection of the law clauses of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The trial court held that it did not contravene these constitutional guarantees and that consequently the hail indemnity tax lien is superior to the lien of plaintiff's mortgage. A determination of the question thus presented involves a consideration of the constitutional and statutory provisions of this state relating to state hail insurance.
At the general election in 1918 two constitutional amendments were adopted authorizing the legislative assembly to provide for the insurance of crops against damage by hail. Amendments to North Dakota Constitution, Art 24, Laws 1919, p. 502; Art. 30, Laws 1919, p. 507. The legislative assembly in 1919 established the State Hail Insurance *158 Department, Laws 1919, chap. 160. The law then enacted made it the duty of all county and township assessors to list and return the number of tillable acres in every tract of land subject to taxation together with the name of the person in whose name the land was taxed and the number of acres of such land, if any, in crop or to be sowed or planted to crop during the year. The crops on the land became insured against loss by hail, unless the owner exercised the right to withdraw the same from the operation of the act.
The law made it the duty of the commissioner of insurance, on or before the 10th day of October of each year, to ascertain the amount, "which is required in addition to the amount secured by said flat acreage tax for the total payment of all loss caused by hail to crops insured by the department, plus the total cost of maintaining and operating said department, together with a sufficient sum to maintain and operate the same for the succeeding year" and to levy an indemnity acreage tax "sufficient to cover said amount on all actually cultivated and cropped land (except hay and meadow land) not withdrawn from the operation" of the act. Laws 1919, chap. 160, § 7.
The 1919 Law also provided that "all provisions of law with reference to lien and collection of taxes, shall apply to the taxes herein specified." Laws 1919, chap. 160, § 10. The laws of this state then in force provided that taxes upon real property are "made a perpetual paramount lien thereupon against all persons and bodies corporate, except the United States and the State." Comp. Laws 1913, § 2186.
Certain sections of the State Hail Insurance Act were amended at a special session of the legislative assembly held in December, 1919, but §§ 7 and 10 of the original act were not changed. Chapter 38, Special Session Laws, 1919.
The State Hail Insurance Act was amended and re-enacted by the legislative assembly in March, 1921. Laws 1921, chap. 77. So far as material here the provisions of the law as thus amended and reenacted read as follows:
Section 7. "The Commissioner of Insurance shall on or before the 25th day of October of each year ascertain the amount which is required for the total payment of all loss caused by hail to crops insured by the department and a sum sufficient to pay interest at the rate of six per cent on all warrants issued from the first day of December *159 until called for payment by the state treasurer plus a sufficient sum to maintain and operate the department for the succeeding year, and shall thereupon for the purpose of securing and paying the same levy an indemnity acreage tax sufficient to cover said amount on all cropped land insured (except hay and meadow land) not withdrawn from the operation of this act as hereinafter specified, . . ."
Section 8. "After the Commissioner of Insurance shall have determined and levied said indemnity acreage tax he shall forthwith notify the County Auditor of each county of such levy, and the County Auditor shall spread such indemnity and flat tax on the tax rolls in separate columns for that purpose. Such indemnity taxes and flat acreage taxes shall be collected by the Treasurer of said county and shall be kept in a separate fund to be known as the State Hail Insurance Fund."
Section 10. . . . "All laws relating to the collecting of penalty and interest, and sale of realty for non-payment of taxes, shall apply to taxes accruing under this Act."
In 1925 the legislative assembly amended the law establishing the State Hail Insurance Department so as to provide that any hail indemnity tax "which has been heretofore, or may hereafter, be levied shall be and constitute a first and prior lien upon all lands upon which the same is levied, to the same extent and with like effect as any general tax and shall be collected, and payment thereof enforced, in the same manner as any general tax." Laws 1925, chap. 151, § 1, Amending Laws of 1919, chap. 160, § 7.
In the course of the administration of the State Hail Insurance Law questions arose as to the status of the so-called hail indemnity tax under the laws enacted in 1919 and 1921. The Commissioner of Insurance and public officers charged with the administration of the laws took the position that the hail indemnity tax was a tax within the legal purview and contemplation of that term; that it was of precisely the same nature as a general tax levied upon the lands against which the hail indemnity tax was levied and that consequently it took priority over any and all other liens or encumbrances.
The question as to the status of the hail indemnity tax was first presented to this court in Davis v. McLean County,
The decision in Davis v. McLean County,
"Such hail indemnity tax shall be a general tax against the whole of said tract, parcel, or subdivision of land in like manner and to the same effect as general state and county taxes. It shall be of the same order and the lien therefor shall share ratably with other general tax liens in all tax proceedings and tax sales, and it shall be subject to all the provisions of law relating to general taxes except as hereinafter provided. The lien of the tax herein provided for shall be prior and superior to all mortgages, liens and judgments executed subsequent to the approval of this Act. Such tax shall become due and payable at the same time as other general taxes and delinquent at the same time as the first installment of other general taxes except that said tax shall be paid as a whole and not in installments.
"Provided, further, that this Act shall be legal notice that the hail indemnity taxes levied during any year after the passage and approval of this Act are prior and superior to mortgages, contracts for sale of realty, liens and judgments executed or otherwise coming into existence after the approval of this Act. . . ." Laws 1933, chap. 137, § 3.
We are agreed that the hail indemnity tax imposed under the legislative enactment of 1933 cannot be sustained either as a general tax or as a special assessment for benefits to the real property. It is not a tax within the legal purview of that term and cannot be sustained as such. Davis v. McLean County,
There is a marked difference between the legislative enactment of 1933 and the enactments of 1919 and 1921 as regards the lien of the hail indemnity tax. The enactment of 1919 provided for the levy of a hail indemnity tax and declared that "all provisions of law with reference to lien and collection of taxes, shall apply to the taxes herein specified." The enactment of 1921 declared that "all laws relating to the collecting of penalty and interest, and sale of realty for non-payment of taxes, shall apply to taxes accruing under this act." There was no express declaration in either the 1919 or the 1921 enactments that the hail indemnity tax should be a lien superior to existing mortgages; and there was nothing in either of these acts expressive of any legislative intention to create a statutory lien other than one that would result from the imposition of a tax within the legal purview of that term. In both Davis v. McLean County,
It is true the statute speaks of the hail indemnity tax as a "tax;" but notwithstanding the fact that the legislature used the term "tax" *163
the provisions of the 1933 enactment show that the lawmakers realized that the hail indemnity tax was not a "tax." If it were a tax it would, of course, take priority over all liens without regard to when they came into existence. But, as was pointed out by this court in Davis v. McLean County,
"We are not concerned with the wisdom or expediency of the legislative enactment or with the form in which the legislative will was expressed further than to ascertain the intention of the lawmakers and to determine whether such intention, as expressed in the act, contravenes any constitutional inhibitions. In other words, we are concerned alone with the question of legislative power; the limitations upon that power are those fixed by the constitution. State ex rel. Linde v. Taylor,
The controlling question in this controversy therefore resolves itself to this: "Is the provision in the legislative enactment of 1933 that the lien of the hail indemnity tax `shall be prior and superior to all mortgages, liens and judgments executed subsequent to the approval of this act' violative of the constitutional guarantees invoked by the plaintiff?" A careful consideration leads us to the conclusion that this question must be answered in the negative.
It is well settled that where any reasonable grounds exist for so doing the legislative assembly may provide that a person, who at the request or with the consent of another has rendered service, furnished materials or supplies, shall have a lien on some property or thing of value belonging to the person at whose request or consent, and for whose benefit, the services were performed or materials or supplies furnished. And where such statute operates prospectively it is not violative of the due process or equal protection of the law clauses of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. 12 C.J. Constitutional Law, §§ 910, 733, 744, 1033; Rockford Sav. L. Asso. v. Rockford,
"As the case comes before us, it is not necessary to enter into the discussions that have occupied the State Courts. We are to assume that the rents, penalties and interest claimed by the city have been imposed and incurred in conformity with the laws and constitution of the State; and that, by virtue of said laws and constitution, they are a lien on the property mortgaged to the complainant prior to that of its mortgages; and, this being so, we are only concerned to inquire whether those laws thus interpreted are, or are not, repugnant to the Constitution of the United States. The only clause of the constitution *167 supposed to be violated is that portion of the 14th Amendment which declares that no State shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law. It is contended that the mortgages created in 1863 and 1869, there being then no valid water rents due on the lot mortgaged, invested the complainant with the first lien thereon, and that that lien is property; and that the Statutes of 1852 and 1871, by giving a superior lien to water rents afterwards accrued, deprive it of its said property without due process of law.
"What may be the effect of those statutes, in this regard, upon mortgages which were created prior to the Statute of 1852, it is unnecessary at present to inquire. The mortgages of the complainant were not created prior to that statute, but long subsequent thereto. When the complainant took its mortgages, it knew what the law was; it knew that, by the law, if the mortgaged lot should be supplied with Passaic water by the city authorities, the rent of that water, as regulated and exacted by them, would be a first lien on the lot. It chose to take its mortgages subject to this law; and it is idle to contend that a postponement of its lien to that of the water rents, whether after accruing or not, is a deprivation of its property without due process of law. Its own voluntary act, its own consent, is an element in the transaction. The cases referred to by counsel to the contrary, holding void a consent exacted contrary to the Constitution, have no bearing on the present cases."
Dunbar v. New York,
In Ford Motor Co. v. Kearny,
"The fact that a statute providing for a lien against the `premises' for unpaid-for water supplied thereto by a municipality, is on the statute books, reads into every lease when made an authority to the tenant to subject such premises to such lien for the unpaid-for water which the circumstances indicate the parties contemplated should be supplied (within the limitations of the statute) to the tenant upon the premises in pursuance of the lease." (¶ 4, Syllabus.)
In Garr, S. Co. v. Clements,
"The plaintiff assails as unconstitutional that portion of the law which gives such a lien priority over a mortgage on the property, executed, delivered, and filed before the lien was created. It is urged that there is only one ground on which a lien can lawfully be given such priority, and that that is the implied assent of the mortgagee to the creation of the lien. It is contended that, unless the owner can be regarded as the agent of the mortgagee for that purpose, his rights cannot be impaired by anything the owner may do. We will assume this position to be sound, but we are unable to deduce from it the *169 conclusion that the statute is unconstitutional. This statute, in legal effect, informs every mortgagee in every mortgage thereafter executed that by leaving the mortgaged property in the possession of the owner he thereby makes the owner his agent for the purpose of having necessary repairs made, the cost of which will be a first lien upon the property. . . . We are unable to discover a single adjudication holding void such a statute as the one in question. An unbroken line of authority, a settled rule of the common law, sound principle and a due regard for business convenience, all join to sustain this statute."
In East Grand Forks v. Luck,
Under these authorities we see no reason why the legislature may not provide that the hail indemnity tax shall constitute a lien having priority over liens and mortgages coming into existence after the statute was enacted. Constitutional guarantees of due process of law and equal protection of the law and against the impairment of contracts can be taken advantage of only by persons whose constitutional rights are affected. State ex rel. Linde v. Taylor,
The basic subject matter of the legislation involved here is one peculiarly within legislative control. The business of insurance itself is impressed with a public interest so as to justify legislative regulation to an extent that may not be justified in many other types of business. State ex rel. Linde v. Taylor,
Appellant's counsel appear to place special reliance on the decision of this court in State v. Johnson,
Our conclusion is that the statutory provision in question here does not operate to impair the obligation of contracts, to deprive the plaintiff of its property without due process of law, or to deny to it the equal protection of the laws. It follows that the trial court was correct in over-ruling plaintiff's demurrer to the answers. Order affirmed.
BURKE, Ch. J., and BURR, NUESSLE and MORRIS, JJ., concur.
Addendum
Appellant has petitioned for a rehearing. In such petition the legal questions raised on the appeal and considered and determined in the former opinion *172 in this case are re-argued. The contentions advanced by the appellant are epitomized in the petition as follows:
"1. That the 1933 amendment to the hail insurance law, in so far as it seeks to make so-called hail indemnity taxes liens prior to pre-existing mortgages taken after the passage of that amendment, is unconstitutional for all the reasons urged above. The legislature may not, merely by fiat, create a situation so that eventually the protection afforded by the fourteenth amendment shall not be available to anyone within that state.
"2. The settled law of the State of North Dakota, at the time the Appellant's mortgage was taken, was such that the Appellant was justified in believing that the mortgages thereafter taken by it would be liens prior to subsequently assessed, levied or determined so-called hail indemnity taxes.
"3. The law as so settled was and is a rule of property entering into the mortgage of the Appellant in this case, and if this Court desires to change the rule as announced in the above cited cases of James River Lumber Co. v. Danner,
We have again considered the questions involved on this appeal in light of the argument and authorities presented in the petition for rehearing.
1. We adhere to the conclusions announced in our former opinion that the legislative enactment of 1933 does not violate any of the constitutional provisions invoked by the plaintiff. In other words, it is our opinion that such legislative enactment does not operate to deprive the plaintiff of property without due process of law; or deny to it the equal protection of the law; or impair the obligations of its contract.
2. This being so it follows that the "settled law of the state of North Dakota at the time appellant's mortgage was taken" as regards whether the lien of the hail indemnity tax in question here is "prior and superior to a mortgage executed subsequent to the approval" of chapter 137, Laws 1933, was set forth in that statute; and it specifically provided that the lien of a hail indemnity tax "shall be prior and superior to all mortgages, liens and judgments executed subsequent to *173 the approval" of such act. Appellant, as well as all other persons, corporations and concerns doing business in North Dakota, was chargeable with notice of and bound by the provisions of that law.
There was a deliberate legislative purpose to establish the lien of a hail indemnity tax as prior and superior to all mortgages, liens and judgments executed subsequent to the approval of the act. Following the decisions of this court in Davis v. McLean County,
The state hail insurance department is a legislative creation. The department itself and the plan of operation thereof were peculiarly for legislative consideration. And the records of the legislative assembly disclose that the subject was one to which the different legislative assemblies gave much consideration. It was for the legislature to determine the policy of the state hail insurance department. The legislative power in this particular field was limited only by the provisions of the constitution of the state and of the nation. Obviously the court may not substitute its judgment for that of the legislature as regards the wisdom or desirability of legislation.
The function of the court is to ascertain the intent of the lawmakers as expressed in the law and to give effect thereto unless it clearly appears that to give effect to such intent will result in a violation of some provision of the state or Federal constitution.
The language employed by the legislature in the provision under consideration here is clear and specific. There is no room for misunderstanding. The legislature said: "The lien of the tax (hail indemnity tax) herein provided for, shall be prior and superior to all *174 mortgages, liens and judgments executed subsequent to the approval of this act." The act was approved March 7, 1933.
As was said by this court in State v. Rother,
"`The legislature must be understood to mean what it has plainly expressed, and this excludes construction. The legislative intent being plainly expressed, so that the act read by itself, or in connection with other statutes pertaining to the same subject, is clear, certain, and unambiguous, the courts have only the simple and obvious duty to enforce the law according to its terms.' Lewis's Sutherland, Stat. Constr. 2d ed. p. 701. `Courts only determine by construction the scope and intent of a law when the law itself is ambiguous or doubtful. If a law is plain, and within the legislative power, it declares itself and nothing is left for interpretation. It is as binding upon the court as upon every citizen. To allow a court, in such a case, to say that the law must mean something different from the common import of its language, because the court may think that its penalties are unwise or harsh, would make the judicial superior to the legislative branch of the government, and practically invest it with the lawmaking power.' The remedy for a harsh or unwise statute is not in interpretation, but in amendment or repeal. State v. Duggan,
3. The law as it existed prior to the enactment of chapter 137, Laws 1933 was, of course, applicable to mortgages made prior to that date; but mortgages made subsequent to that date are subject to the provisions of that enactment. In the very nature of things this court could not, in James River Lumber Co. v. Danner,
The question presented in this case is one of legislative power. Either the legislative enactment of 1933, in so far as it provided that *175
hail indemnity taxes levied subsequent to that act should have priority over mortgages executed subsequent to such approval, operated to deprive plaintiff of its property without due process; or deny it the equal protection of the law; or impair the obligations of its contract, or it did not. If it operated so to do, then the statute would be invalid without regard to anything that might have been said in decisions of this court in prior years regarding other liens; if on the other hand the statute did not so operate and it was within legislative power to enact it, then the statute does not become unconstitutional because of something said in former decisions dealing with other and different legislative enactments. Dunbar v. New York,
For reasons stated in the former opinion we are all agreed that the legislative assembly, in the enactment of the statutory provision under consideration here, did not contravene the guarantees of the Federal Constitution invoked by the plaintiff. A rehearing is denied.
NUESSLE, BURKE, MORRIS and BURR, JJ., concur.