The plaintiff, a Wisconsin corporation, licensed to do business in the state of Montana, and owner of certain lands in Fergus county, Mont., and mortgagee of certain other lands therein, brought this aetion to restrain Fergus county, its officers, etc., from applying for and securing tax deeds to lands owned by it and upon which it held mortgages ; the land having been sold to the county for delinquent general taxes and special assessments of the Judith Basin irrigation district after the plaintiff had tendered and offered to pay all delinquent general taxes due to the state, county, and school districts, including interest and penalties. Plaintiff claims that the irrigation district assessments are illegal and void for irregularity and want of power in the officers of the district to levy taxes and issue the irrigation district bonds, and also 'contends that certain validating statutes of the state of Montana (post), as construed by the Supreme Court of Montana, declaring said irrigation district bonds to be valid, operated to deprive plaintiff of its property without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. From an order dismissing the complaint, this appeal is prosecuted.
The appellees claim that appellant is estopped by acquiescence and laches and that, in any event, the validating statutes are conclusive as to validity. The power to tax within constitutional limitations is inherent in the state (Kelly v. Allen,
The court is of opinion that the validating statutes of the state are conclusive. The Legislature of a state may ratify any act that it could have authorized. Charlotte Harbor & N. R. Co. v. Welles,
In the instant ease there is no state constitutional limitation withholding legislative power of any of the acts complained of. The Legislature could, in the first instance, have
In Peery v. City of Los Angeles,
Nor is a state statute validating municipal bonds inhibited by the Federal Constitution. Rogers v. Burlington,
Section 72 of chapter 153, Laws of Montana 1921, provides: “And where districts have heretofore been organized, or bonds authorized, issued or sold or any proceedings have been undertaken on the theory that under the laws as they then existed, assessments might, be assessed, levied or collected, such organization, authorization, issuance or sale of bonds and any and all such proceedings are hereby validated, cured and confirmed.”
Section 2 of chapter 54, Laws of Montana 1923, provides: “All districts heretofore established by order of the court and having a de facto ’existence of at least one year, * * * and all acts and proceedings of any such district and of its board of commissioners leading up to the authorization, issuance or sale of bonds or the proposed issuance or sale of bonds, are hereby legalized, ratified, confirmed and declared valid to all intents and, purposes, and all sueh bonds whether sold heretofore or hereafter are hereby legalized and declared to be valid and legal obligations of and against the irrigation district so issuing and selling the same.”
These are the validating statutes which have been attacked. A more specific and all-inclusive ratification can scarcely be conceived.
In State v. Board of Com’rs of Fergus County,
Courts of the United States take judicial notice of the laws of any state, whether depending on state statutes or judicial decisions. Lamar v. Micou,
The further contention of appellant, that the validation laws as construed by the state Supreme Court in Cosman v. Chestnut Valley Irr. Dist.,
And this was affirmed by the same court in State v. Board of Com’rs of Cascade County,
While taxes are assessed for the common good, special assessments are for benefits to land equal to the assessment in a district common to all. The value of the land in the irrigation district and the bond issue and assessment and benefits must be considered as of the time when authorized and made. Appellant may not speculate upon public benefits; and, having stood by and taken advantage thereof for ten years and permitted assessments and taxes to become delinquent, because of accumulated taxes, assessments, and interest upon the bonded indebtedness, it cannot claim that “now” the assessments are out
No claim of unequal assessment is made. There is no claim that the special assessment when made was not equal in amount and benefit received.
Affirmed.
