51 Wash. 12 | Wash. | 1908
— This case came up on appeal by the plaintiff from an order and judgment entered by the superior court of Pierce county sustaining a demurrer to the complaint and dismissing the action. The complaint was addressed to the equity side of the court, and set up substantially the following-facts : That the plaintiff is the Northern Pacific Railway Company; that Pierce county is a municipal corporation,, and E. M. Lakin is treasurer of the same; that about the 10th day of September, 1904, drainage district No. 4, of the county of Pierce, was established; that thereafter the said commissioners commenced a proceeding irt the superior court-of Pierce county, entitled “Prank R. Spinning, Charles A. Stewart and T. S. Pierce, as the board of drainage commissioners of drainage district No. 4, of Pierce county, Washington, plaintiffs, and H. M. Anderson et al., defendants," for the purpose of prosecuting the construction of a system of drainage within said district; that the plaintiff was joined;
It is the contention of the appellant that an examination of the various provisions of chap. 115, Laws of 1895, shows that the legislature had in mind but two classes of land to be included within the drainage district, to wit, those receiving benefit by reason of the proposed improvement and those necessary to be condemned in carrying out the work; and as it affirmatively appears that the appellant’s lands were not benefited by reason of the judgment in that respect, and that the improvement was abandoned, it follows that its lands should not be taxed to pay the expenses of ascertaining whether or not the improvements should be made. This contention is not consistent with the provisions of § 4, chap. 115, Laws of 1895, for the reason that that section provides for the organization of a district where an improvement would be of special benefit to a majority of the lands included in the proposed boundaries, thereby especially negativing the idea suggested by the appellant that the law contemplated the inclusion only of such lands as were benefited; and the constitutionality of this law was determined by this court in Lewis County v. Gordon, 20 Wash. 80, 54 Pac. 779, and subsequent cases. There is nothing in the complaint indicating that the proceedings leading up to the formation of the district were not in strict compliance with the law, nor that there was any objection to the incorporation of appellant’s lands into the district. The essential complaint is only that the proceedings for the purpose of raising money to pay the preliminary expenses of the proposed improvement which failed were illegal, and that its land should not be taxed because it had been determined that they would not have been benefited by the improvement if it had been carried out.
The constitutionality of the original act having been determined, the power complained of here, viz., the power to tax for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of the act, it seems to us, is necessarily incident to the main power conferred and is not affected by the fact that the contemplated improvement has failed; for it became necessary, in order to carry out the original scheme contemplated and to determine facts which had to be determined in order to make the scheme effective, to incur the expenses complained of. The legisla
Nor is it necessary to determine whether this drainage district is a municipal corporation, within the meaning of said § 12 under which the power to assess and collect taxes is especially conferred. The state constitution is a limitation and not a grant of power, and the legislature has supreme authority, in the absence of constitutional limitations .expressed or necessarily implied. This is an organization voluntarily entered into under powers, regulations' and forms prescribed by the legislature, and the burden of paying the expenses necessary to effectuate the object of the organization was voluntarily assumed by a vote of the people. As we said in State ex rel. Seattle v. Carson, 6 Wash. 250, 33 Pac. 428: “So long, therefore, as the tax is imposed by the corporate authorities, the evil sought to be avoided by the constitutional 'provisions is not incurred.” In this case the burden being self-imposed, there is no room to exclaim against legislative power.
Nor do we think that chapter 67 of the Laws of 1903 falls under the ban of § 37, art. 2 of the constitution, which provides that: “No act shall ever be revised or amended by mere reference to its title, but the act revised or the section amended shall be set forth at full length;” for the reason that an examination of the act plainly shows that it is a law of procedure complete within itself.
There appearing to be no valid constitutional objections to the law under which the tax is sought to be collected, and it not appearing that there has been any violation or misconstruction of the law, the judgment is affirmed.
Mount, Rudkin, Fullerton, and Root, JJ., concur.
Hadley, C. J., and Crow, J., took no part.