204 P. 600 | Mont. | 1922
delivered tbe opinion of the court.
The fourteenth legislative assembly of this state enacted a statute entitled “An Act to provide for financial aid in tbe
The controversy involves merely the construction of the Mothers’ Pension Act. The judgment in the contempt proceedings was rendered upon an agreed statement of facts. Some of the facts stated are not material, in our judgment, while other facts which should have been made to appear are omitted. This state of the record circumscribes our inquiry within somewhat narrower limits than those covered in the briefs of counsel.
On July 1, 1921, there was a balance to the credit of the poor fund of Silver Bow county, and this balance, with the receipts properly credited to the fund up to December 21, amounted to something over $64,000. On July 1 there were outstanding warrants registered against the poor fund to the amount of $41,651.50. From July 1 to December 21 some of these registered warrants to the amount of $1,358.48 were paid and ordinary expenses amounting to $3,000 in round numbers were also paid from the poor fund, so that on December 21, when Mrs. Willoughby made demand for her warrant, there was in the poor fund an amount exceeding $59,000, In the meantime, however, other warrants drawn upon the poor fund had been registered and on December 21 the total of registered poor fund warrants was $109,000, of which amount $40,293 worth were registered prior to July 1, but none of these warrants were issued for claims under the Mothers’ Pension Act.
The ordinary income of the poor fund is limited to such an amount as will be produced by a general property tax which cannot exceed two mills on the dollar valuation. (Sec. 2894, Rev. Codes 1907, as amended by Chap. 84, Laws of 1919, and Chap. 261, Laws of 1921.) At the time the tax levy was
The purpose of the last legislative assembly in amending
The meaning of the Act is not difficult to comprehend. One-half of the poor fund, if that much is necessary, is set apart automatically for the payment of mothers’ pensions, and the remainder only can be devoted to other poor fund charges. This must be so, for otherwise the statute would be practically a dead letter, and of two or more admissible constructions the courts are never justified in adopting the one which defeats the manifest purpose of the law. (Wilkinson v. La Combe, 59 Mont. 518, 197 Pac. 836.) Heretofore we referred to the ordinary resources of the poor fund. Under certain circumstances
On December 21 there was available in the poor fund, after setting apart a sum sufficient to redeem the outstanding warrants registered prior to July 1 something like $18,000 or $19,000, one-half of which could and should have been devoted to the payment of mothers’ pensions, and until that available fund was exhausted the board could not justify its refusal to obey the order of October 14.
The motion to quash is sustained and this proceeding is dismissed.
Dismissed.