Schweiss v. First Judicial District Court

45 P. 289 | Nev. | 1896

The question involved in this case is the validity of the act of the legislature entitled "An act to incorporate Storey county and provide for the government thereof," approved March 15, 1895 (Stats. 1895, 73). Its constitutionality is attacked upon several different grounds, of which it will be necessary to notice but one or two.

Section 1 of the act describes Storey county, not by name, but by metes and bounds, and then creates the territory so described into a municipal corporation by the name of Storey county, with large and varied powers — among them that of having a common seal, of holding and enjoying both real and personal property, either within or without the municipality, *230 and the same to buy, sell and mortgage, to receive bequests, gifts and donations of property, either in fee simple or in trust for charitable or other purposes, with power to manage, sell, lease or otherwise dispose of the same in accordance with the terms of the trust.

Section 2 provides that all buildings, lands and property, all rights of property and rights of action, all moneys, revenues and incomes belonging or appertaining to Storey county, evidently referring to the county as it now exists, to the city of Virginia or the town of Gold Hill, shall be vested in Storey county, meaning by the name as now used, the new municipality.

Section 3, that the new municipality shall succeed to all property rights, all books, records, etc., of Storey county, Virginia City or Gold Hill, and shall become subject to all liabilities of those organizations.

Section 4, that Storey county (evidently the municipality) may sue for and recover all property, etc., belonging to either said county, city or town, and that all existing suits, actions and proceedings to which "said county" or the city or town is a party, are to be continued by or against "said county."

Section 7, that all county moneys are to be kept in one fund, to be known as the county general fund.

Section 10, that the board of commissioners may levy a tax for county purposes, not exceeding the sum of $3 50 on each $100 valuation of the property therein.

A comparison of this act with the existing laws governing all the other counties in the state seems to demonstrate that it is in conflict with section 20 of article IV of the constitution, which forbids local and special laws regulating county business; with section 25 of the same article, which requires the legislature to establish a system of county governments which shall be uniform throughout the state.

Clearly, a county is not a municipal corporation. If it were, there would have been no occasion for this act changing Storey county into a municipality. It is, at the most, only aquasi corporation, and possesses only such powers and is subjected to only such liabilities as are specially provided for by law. Mr. Beach, in his work on Public Corporations, *231 states the distinction between them as follows: "Municipal corporations embrace incorporated cities, villages and towns, which are full-fledged corporations, with all the powers, duties and liabilities incident to such a status; while publicquasi corporations possess only a portion of the powers, duties and liabilities of corporations. As instances of the latter class may be mentioned counties, hundreds, townships, overseers of the poor, town supervisors, school districts and road districts." (Beach Pub. Corp., sec. 3.)

And again, in section 6, the same author says: "The preceding sections indicate the essential differences between the municipal and the public quasi corporation. The latter may be defined to be an involuntary political or civil division of the state, created by general laws to aid in the administration of government. * * * Counties, townships, school districts, road districts and like public quasi corporations do not usually possess corporate powers under special charters; but they exist under general laws of the state, which apportion the territory of the state into political divisions for convenience of government, and require of the people residing within those divisions the performance of certain public duties as a part of the machinery of the state, and, in order that they may be able to perform these duties, vests them with certain corporate powers."

A county is certainly very far from being the complete corporation that is created by the act in question, with all, and probably more than all, the powers that can be vested in a municipal corporation. This of itself is sufficient to destroy the uniformity that the constitution requires to exist in the several county governments.

In Singleton v. Eureka County, 22 Nev. 91, we had occasion to consider this clause of the constitution at some length, and there concluded that it meant that such governments must, in all essential particulars, be alike.State v. Boyd, 19 Nev. 43, is to the same effect. But Storey county, as created into a municipal corporation by this act, is not like the other counties, either in form or substance, and therefore the act is in conflict with the constitution.

With the law in question in force, it would be an interesting study to determine just what position Storey county that *232 used to be, the city of Virginia and the town of Gold Hill would be in. While there is no provision for their disestablishment, there can be little doubt that the framers of the law intended that they should practically cease to exist. If not totally destroyed, it was certainly intended that the breath of life should be taken from them. All property, all rights of action, all revenues and incomes, all books, records, claims, demands, etc., theretofore belonging to Storey county, are transferred to the new municipality. Without property, without records, without rights in anything, either in possession or in action, its bones are marrowless, and it has nothing in common with the living organizations in the other counties.

It is no answer to say that the new municipal corporation has taken its place and has all the powers, duties and liabilities that the county formerly had, for it is an entirely different system of government, whereas the constitution requires them to be the same. Nor is this true merely in matters of form. The municipality has different and additional powers from those possessed by the counties. No county has a common seal; nor can it hold property outside its boundaries, or even inside, except for a few purposes, nor purchase, sell or mortgage property generally; nor hold and manage it in trust for any purpose, while the municipality of Storey county is authorized to hold it for all purposes. Other counties must have at least three funds for county purposes: a general fund, an indigent fund and a contingent fund (Gen. Stats., sec. 2008), but this municipality is to have but one; other counties can under no circumstances levy a tax for county purposes of more than $2 upon each $100 of property valuation (Stats. 1895, 22), while the new Storey county can levy $3 50. In fact, were it not that the municipality has the same name and the same boundaries as Storey county, it would be fully as difficult to point out wherein the two governments are uniform as that wherein they differ.

In addition, as the act is confined to Storey county, it is both local and special, and as it unquestionably regulates the business of that county, it is also invalid for that reason.

Writ refused.

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