GORDON v. WHEATRIDGE WATER DISTRICT ET AL.
No. 14,882.
Supreme Court of Colorado
Decided January 13, 1941.
107 Colo. 128 | 109 P.2d 899
En Banc.
Mr. Justice Knous delivered the opinion of the court.
The questions presented in this proceeding pertain to the alleged unconstitutionality of chapter 175, S.L. 1939 (chapter 173A, 1939 Supp. ‘35 C.S.A.), providing for the organization of water and sanitation districts and arise on the issues raised by the demurrer of defendant in error district to the complaint of plaintiff in error, to whom we shall refer hereinafter as plaintiff, seeking a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief with respect to the matters involved. The district court sustained the demurrer and upon plaintiff‘s election to stand on his complaint, the court, in conformity with the practice under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Law (
As to the second mandate of the Constitution, supra, we are satisfied the title fairly expresses the subject matter of the act in such manner as to convey to the mind an indication of the object to which it relates, which is the criterion of sufficiency expressed in Johnson v. Harrison, 47 Minn. 575, 50 N.W. 923, 28 Am. St. Rep. 382. In In Re Breene, 14 Colo. 401, 24 Pac. 3, we said: “The general assembly may, within reason, make the
It would seem in considering the constitutional sufficiency of the title of the enabling act for a public corporation of the pattern under scrutiny here that, in the sense above expressed, the standard applicable to municipal corporations should attain. We, therefore, conclude that plaintiff‘s first objection is without merit.
Section 13, (1) of the act, relating to the powers of the board of directors, recites: “To fix and from time to time to increase or decrease water and sewer rates, tolls or charges for services or facilities furnished by the district, and to pledge such revenue for the payment of any indebtedness of the district. The board shall fix such rates, tolls or charges as shall be approved by the public utilities commission of the state of Colorado.”
As his second contention, plaintiff asserts that the above provision for approval by the Public Utilities Commission of rates to be fixed by the board of the water district, violates
Involved in the remaining objections are the following sections of the act:
“Section 14. In addition to the other means of providing revenue for such districts as herein provided, the board shall have power and authority to levy and collect ad valorem taxes on and against all taxable real property within the district.”
“Section 15. To levy and collect taxes as herein provided, the board shall, in each year, determine the amount of money necessary to be raised by taxation, taking into consideration other sources of revenue of the district, and shall fix a rate of levy which, when levied upon every dollar of assessed valuation of real property
within the district, and with other revenues will raise the amount required by the district annually, to supply funds for paying expenses of organization and the costs of construction, operating and maintaining the works and equipment of the district, and promptly to pay in full, when due, all interest on and principal of bonds and other obligations of the district, and in the event of accruing defaults or deficiencies, an additional levy may be made as provided in section 16 hereof. * * *” “Section 16. The board in certifying annual levies as herein provided, shall take into account the maturing indebtedness for the ensuing year as provided in its contracts, maturing bonds and interest on bonds, and deficiencies and defaults of prior years, and shall make ample provision for the payment thereof. In case the moneys produced from such levies, together with other revenues of the district, are not sufficient punctually to pay the annual installments on its contracts or bonds, and interest thereon, and to pay defaults and deficiencies, then the board shall make such additional levies of taxes as may be necessary for such purposes, and notwithstanding any limitations, such taxes shall be made and continue to be levied until the indebtedness of the district shall be fully paid.”
Section 17 provides that it shall be the duty of the proper county officers to levy and collect the taxes as other general taxes.
Section 18 provides that, “If the taxes levied are not paid * * * then the delinquent real property shall be sold at the regular tax sale for the payment of said taxes, interest and penalties, in the manner provided by the statutes of the state of Colorado for selling property for the non-payment of general taxes.”
“Section 19. Whenever any indebtedness has been incurred by a district, it shall be lawful for the board to levy taxes and collect revenue for the purpose of creating a reserve fund in such amount as the board may determine, which may be used to meet the obligations
Since plaintiff‘s third and fourth objections are primarily directed to the foregoing sections of the act, we shall consider them together. In a sense these contentions are reciprocal and alternative. The third asserts that if the act is to be construed as attempting to authorize a special or local improvement district, it is violative of
Fourthly and lastly, plaintiff urges that if the tax authorized by the sections hereinabove set out is considered as being a general tax, the circumstance that it may be imposed only on the real estate of the district and not upon both real and personal property therein, places the act in conflict with
Further, in so far as an act attempts to provide for cumulative levies of special taxes to discharge delinquencies of local improvement districts, it is unenforceable under the doctrine announced in Interstate Trust Co. v. Montezuma Valley District, 66 Colo. 219, 181 Pac. 123. See, also, Wilcox v. Riverview District, 93 Colo. 115, 25 P. (2d) 172, and People ex rel. v. Letford, supra.
With the third contention eliminated from consideration and consequently all question as to whether the tax authorized is not a special assessment or special tax based upon the theory of apportionment of benefits and costs removed, it would seem that the exaction authorized by the act, of necessity, must be a general tax, since that is the only other type of direct tax which may be levied upon tangible property under our system of taxation. For a discussion of distinctions between general and special taxes, see, Illinois Central R.R. Co. v. City of Decatur, 147 U.S. 190, 13 Sup. Ct. 293, 37 L. Ed. 132; City of Denver v. Tihen, 77 Colo. 212, 235 Pac. 777, and People ex rel. v. Letford, supra. Indeed, the terms of the act itself proclaim that the legislature intended the tax to be general. The deliberate omission of any method for the determination of benefits and the imposition of assessments otherwise is unexplainable. Section 7 of the act provides inter alia that a district “shall be a governmental subdivision of the state of Colorado and a body corporate, with all the powers of
In our opinion the authorities cited by the district as maintaining its theory that the exemption authorized by the act is a third type of direct tax in special tax districts, do not support such classification, since the taxes therein authorized in reality fall into the categories of: (1) special assessments in local improvement districts, where, differently than here, the legislature fixed boundaries and determined benefits or provided the means for so doing; (2) or general taxes for general purposes. In jurisdictions where a tax of the latter type imposed on realty alone was sustained, no provisions similar to those contained in sections 3 and 6, article X, of our Constitution were involved.
The district affirmatively urges that even if the questioned tax last discussed is unconstitutional because
As corollary to the foregoing, the district next contends that the power to issue bonds as conferred by section 13 (e) and section 23 of the act, carries with it the power to levy such general taxes as may be necessary to pay the bonds and the interest thereon. In support of this proposition, among other authorities, are cited City v. Board of Commissioners, 33 Colo. 1, 77 Pac. 858; Ralls County Court v. United States, 105 U.S. 733, 26 L. Ed. 1220; Scotland County Court v. United States, 140 U.S. 41, 137 Sup. Ct. 697, 35 L. Ed. 351. From an examination of practically all the cases of this character cited by defendants it clearly appears that such power may not be presumed if a limitation is contained in the act itself which dispels the inference of a general grant of power to levy taxes to pay bonds. Such limitation is injected in the case at bar since here the act purports to prescribe a complete method for the payment of the bonds authorized thereby. As we have seen, section 15 directs the board, after taking into consideration other
Notwithstanding the power of taxation attempted to be authorized by the act is offensive to the Constitution in the particulars stated and its levy must be restrained, we are of the opinion that as against the objections here advanced, the remainder of the act is valid and the questioned features severable therefrom. This is evident from the circumstance that the act (section 14) provides that such tax was designed to supplement “other means of providing revenue for such districts” and not as the sole source thereof.
Section 31 of the act, as it appears in S.L. 1939, page 610, provides: “If it should be judicially determined that any part of this act is invalid or unenforceable, such determination shall not affect the remaining parts, it being the intention to make this act and all its parts severable.”
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cause remanded with directions to modify the judgment to conform with the views herein expressed.
Mr. Justice Otto Bock dissents in part.
Mr. Justice Otto Bock dissenting in part.
I dissent from that portion of this opinion construing sections 3 and 6 of article X of the state Constitution, as applied to chapter 175, S.L. 1939. In all other respects I concur.
