226 P.2d 523 | Wyo. | 1951
Jane Guernsey, plaintiff and appellant herein, brought this action against the City of Casper, a municipal corporation, to compel it to pay her special assessment bonds out of the general revenue funds of the city. From an adverse judgment against her, she has appealed to this court.
Just before the expiration of 20 years after the issuance of the bonds, namely early in January 1941, Charles A. Cullen brought an action in accordance with Section 29-2049, Wyo. Comp. St. 1945 to enforce payment of bonds held by him, all of which were of a higher number that those of appellant. Numerous parties, owners of property assessed in the foregoing district, were made parties defendant and foreclosure was sought on some 15 or 16 different parcels of property assessed as above mentioned. The court in that action found that Cullen was the owner of some 34 bonds issued as above mentioned commencing with No. 146 upward. Judgment was rendered in the action on September 5, 1941 except that judgment against one of the defendants was rendered on April 23,1942. Foreclosure of the assessments was directed. The properties involved were directed to be sold to pay the bonds owned by the plaintiff and to satisfy the judgments in his favor, the amounts received to be turned over to him. The bonds were directed to be filed with the clerk of court and “that upon receiving said bonds so surrendered by plaintiff the clerk of court shall mark said bonds cancelled, and deliver them to the City Treasurer of said City of Casper, and the assessment against the above described property shall be cancelled upon the books of the City Treasurer.”
Subsequent proceedings are not altogether clear. It seems that Cullen entered into compromises and settlements of the judgments against some of the parties (how many does not appear). In the compromise Cullen received but a small portion of the amount of the judgments, while at the same time he delivered bonds to the clerk of court equaling the amount of the assessments. If for instance, there was an assessment against a cer
The theory of the appellant in her second amended petition is that the city collected some 10 bonds commencing with bond No. 174 and upward; that the money so collected should have been applied on her bonds which are lower numbered bonds, and that the municipality diverted and misapplied these moneys to her detriment. The city denied that any money was collected on the foregoing bonds in connection with the judgment in the Cullen action, and that whatever bonds and assessments were cancelled, were cancelled pursuant to the judgment in the Cullen action and the notices sent to it by the
In that connection counsel contends that the district court of Natrona Countyy had no jurisdiction in the Cullen case directing that the money realized by Cullen by reason of the foreclosures therein should be paid to him, and should have made the order that all money collected pursuant to the foreclosures in the action should be applied in numerical order in accordance with Section 29-2051, Wyo. Comp. St. 1945, reading so far as applicable herein as follows: “The city or town treasurer shall pay the interest on bonds authorized to be issued by this Act (Sections 29-2001 — 29-2066) out of the respective local improvement funds from which they are payable. The council may provide that whenever there shall be sufficient money in any local improvement fund against which bonds have been issued under the provisions of this act, over and above sufficient for the payment of interest on all unpaid bonds, to pay the principal of one or more bonds, the treasurer shall call in and pay such bonds; provided, that such bonds shall be called in and paid in their numerical order in each series,” etc. Counsel cites many authorities on the question of jurisdiction of the court, including the case of State vs. District Court, 33 Wyo. 281, 238 P. 545. We are inclined to
Counsel for appellant contends or claims that the City of Casper was trustee for the bondholders who held the bonds involved herein. That may be conceded for the purposes of this case insofar as any money actually received by it from the assessments involved herein, and as to any of its own affirmative and voluntary actions which would diminish the security of the bondholders. Many authorities are cited (e.g. 54 Am. Juris. 455) holding that a trustee must defend and intervene in actions to protect the trust estate, and that the City of Casper should have intervened in the Cullen case above mentioned, so that the money obtained by Cullen should have been applied as above contended. These authorities are doubtless sound when applied in the proper case, but so far as we can see, they have no application in this case. We held in Richardson vs. City of Casper, 48 Wyo. 219, 45 P. 2d 1 that a municipality is not compelled to take any affirmative steps to enforce any special assessments such as involved herein, in view of the following statutory provisions, namely Section 29-2050, Wyo. Comp. St. 1945 reading as follows: “Neither the holder nor owner of any bond issued under the authority of this Act (Sections 29-2001 — 29-2066) shall have any claim therefor against the city by which the same is issued, except from the special assessment made for the improvement for which such bond was issued, but his remedy in case of non-payment, shall be confined to the enforcement of such assessments. A copy of this section shall be plainly written, printed or engraved on each bond so issued,” and in view of Section 29-2049, Wyo. Comp. St. 1945, reading as follows: “If the city
Counsel for appellant further seems to contend that the city had no authority to accept bonds of higher numbers than those of the appellant in payment of any assessments in the district and that when it did so, and cancelled assessments it became liable for the payment in full of appellant’s bonds, even though it merely obeyed the order of the district court. It is true that the city was not a party to the Cullen action and the real question herein perhaps is whether or not it should have heeded the judgment of the district court above mentioned and whether, when it did so, it became liable to appellant. The authorities on the question before us are few. In fact, none of them are directly in point. There are special features in the case at bar which appear in no other cases that have been cited to us or which we have found. We shall briefly review the cases which are of interest herein with some comments of
In Freeman vs. Town of Gallup, 152 Fed. 2d 273, the town was sought to be held liable for payment of special assessment bonds out of its general treasury because of not paying bonds in their numerical order. The town accepted bonds instead of money in paying higher numbered bonds. The majority of the court considered the act of the town to be in the nature of a tort, and that the statute of limitations had run against an action therefor. Judge Phillips, in a concurring opinion, stated as follows: “The wrong was the acceptance by the town officials of bonds instead of money in payment of assessments and the purported cancellation of the assessments of record. The town officials were wholly without legal authority to accept such bonds in payment or to cancel such assessments on receipt of payment in bonds. Their action in that respect was a nullity. The assessments were still valid and subsisting and the duty to collect them remained. Appellant’s remedy was not for injury to, or conversion of, property, but a suit in equity to vacate the cancellation and reinstate the assessments on the town records, and to compel the collection of the assessments and the proper application of the moneys collected in payment of the bonds in numerical order.” That case was decided under a statute of New Mexico which provided that the town or city was primarily bound to collect special assessments. The difference between that case and the case at bar is this: in that case a municipality voluntarily chose to disregard the statute providing that bonds should be called in their numerical
The case of Crist vs. Town of Gallup, 51 N. Mex. 286, 183 P. 2d 156 was an action against the town of Gallup to recover the value of special assessment bonds made worthless by the act of the town in paying bonds out of their numerical order. It seems that the payments were made, partially at least, out of sums of money which had actually been collected and were paid into the town treasury. In addition to that, some bonds were accepted by the town from property owners as payment of the assessments and the liens against the property were released. The court, however, held that that was not a defense and apparently considered that the bonds which had been delivered in payment of assessments should be treated as so much money collected. The case is not in point herein for the reason that it seems that whatever action the city took was taken while all the various bonds of the special assessment district were still enforceable, and apparently while the district was solvent.
In Fidelity Trust Co. vs. Village of Stickney, 129 Fed. 2d 506 decided under the Illinois law, it appeared that the village collector improperly collected money for special assessments by arrangements with persons not property owners, whereby such persons purchased village bonds at a discount and then turned the bonds over to the collector with the understanding that the property owners designated by such person should receive a receipt in full on payment of less than the amount due. That was one of the methods pursued as mentioned in the case and under it about three-fourths of the
In the case of Read vs. Abe Rosenblum & Sons, 115 Ind. App. 200, 58 N. E. 2d 376 it appears that the assessments made in a special assessment district were very much depreciated in value as in the case at bar. The action was to foreclose on the special assessments and in addition to that, to hold the city liable as for money collected for the special improvement fund in the treasury of the city. The court held that the right of action on these bonds was barred by the statute of limitations, and then states as to the liability of the municipality in view of that fact as follows: “Questions on the bond liability of the municipality have been resolved, we think, by the decisions of this and the Supreme Court to the effect that a city is in no way liable for the payment of improvement bonds except to the extent of moneys actually collected and accumulated by it from assessments made against property benefited. Rottger, Rec. v. City of Union City, 1936, 101 Ind. App. 438, 196 N. E. 355; Read v. Beczkiewicz, Treas., 1939, 215 Ind. 365, 18 N. E. 2d 789, 19 N. E. 2d 465.” If we understand the case correctly, it would seem to decide that whenever bonds are unenforceable by reason of the bar of the statute of limitations, no liability thereafter arises on the part of the city, except for funds actually collected by it to pay these bonds.
In Johnson vs. McGraw, 139 Wash. 139, 245 P. 915 plaintiff, while apparently all the bonds of a special assessment district were still enforceable, brought an
Fortunately, for the present, we can limit our decision in this case. We are here dealing with foreclosure proceedings brought on the eve when the special assessments — and so the bonds — would be barred by the statute of limitations and in which judgments were entered at a time when this statute had run its entire length. The bonds of appellant were dead at that time or substantially so. 5 McQuillin, supra, page 1175. It is incongruous to say that life could be injected into the bonds by some subsequent action or inaction of the municipality in connection with a fund which came into existence subsequently, and that too, not in the treasury of the city, but in the hands of the clerk of court as a consequence of the diligence of some other bondholder. The right of action which the plaintiff had — and the exclusive one as we have seen — to enforce her lien, was created by statute, namely Section 29-2049, supra. Section 29-2041 already quoted fixes the time in which the action must be brought. It is said in 53 C. J. S. 975 that: “Where by statute a right of action is given which did
Affirmed.