170 P. 942 | Mont. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
Suit to enjoin the board of county commissioners of Sheridan county from holding a special election under the provisions of the Act approved February 16, 1915, known as the seed grain law (Chap. 13, Laws 1915).
The complaint shows that in consequence of a partial failure of crops in 1916, the long, hard winter of 1916-17, and the general failure of crops in 1917, due to the cold, late spring and the drought and hot winds of the summer of that year, there is now in Sheridan county a large number of farmers who are without seed grain for the coming season or financial resources with which to procure any, and who are destitute and will become dependent upon the county for support, unless such seed grain can be obtained; that with knowledge and in consequence of these facts, the board of county commissioners, after petition duly signed, presented and considered, as required by said Act, has called a special election of the electors of said county for the submission of the question whether said county shall issue and sell its warrants drawn on the general fund to an amount aggregating $300,000 for the purpose of providing means with which to purchase seed grain for the inhabitants of said county “who are resident freeholders” in need of seed grain and unable to procure the same; that the notice of said election is being published and such election will be held, unless restrained, at a large cost to the taxpayers of said county, including the plain
The defendants appear by general demurrer, contesting the sufficiency of the complaint, and thus join issue upon the question sought to be raised, viz., the validity, under the Constitution, of the seed grain law; but the demurrer is more far-reaching, for it also presents the question whether the defendants are proceeding in conformity with that law, should its validity be established.
The Act is entitled, “An Act authorizing counties to issue bonds or warrants to procure seed grain for needy farmers resident therein, * * * providing for the distribution of said seed grain among the needy farmers,” etc.; its provisions, pertinent to the present inquiry, are: Section 1: In any county where the crops for the preceding year have been a total or partial failure by reason of drought or other cause, it shall be lawful for the board of county commissioners to issue bonds of the county, and with the proceeds derived from the sale thereof, to purchase seed wheat for the inhabitants of the county who are in need of seed grain and are unable to procure the same, whenever said board shall be petitioned in writing to do so, by not less than 100 freeholders resident in the county; provided that all such petitions shall be filed on or before April 1. Section 6: The board of county commissioners may issue warrants instead of bonds, if in their judgment the best interests of the county are thereby served; provided, that such warrants shall not be issued in any single amount to exceed $3,000. Section 7: The fund arising from the sale of said bonds or warrants shall be applied exclusively by the said board for the purchase of seed grain for residents of the county who are .unable to procure the same; not more than 100 bushels of wheat or its equivalent in other grains to be furnished to any one person. Section 9: All persons entitled to and wishing the benefit of this Act, shall on or before April 1 file an application, sworn to, which shall
1. "With this, as with all other Acts of the legislative assembly
We realize that in State ex rel. Griffith v. Osawkee Twp., 14 Kan. 418, 19 Am. Rep. 99, the court, in a precisely similar case and under a precisely similar constitutional provision, has taken other ground — holding, in effect, that one is not a proper subject of relief until he is actually a pauper, not only helpless, but hopeless. This case was decided in 1875, and the opinion, though written by one of the foremost jurists of that era, shows how even mighty minds are circumscribed by the spirit of their time. The argument is considered in the only two other seed grain cases in the books, and is fully answered in one (State v. Nelson County, 1 N. D. 88, 26 Am. St. Rep. 609, 8 L. R. A. 283, 45 N. W. 33), and discounted in the other (Deering & Co. v. Peterson, 75 Minn. 118, 77 N. W. 568); it no longer responds to the spirit, nor meets the needs, of an age which has learned that “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,” and that it is sounder benevolence to help the needy to support themselves, to retain or regain their self-respect, than it is to wholly and forever keep them in the public charge and at the public expense.
We also realize that some phrases of the Act would seem to
(b) Keeping in mind, then, that the Act is to be considered,
It may be argued, however — as in the Kansas case it was held— that the furnishing of seed grain to needy farmers is an aid to them in their private business, and thus within the restrictions above noted. The same may be said of any measure of poor relief which is not absolutely confined to paupers in the poorhouse; whether it may be properly so said in any case depends upon the primary object in view. If that object is to foster private enterprises and the only benefit to be derived by the public is incidental and secondary, then the restrictions apply, and the credit or donation may not be granted; but if the primary object is to prevent a class of needy citizens from becoming a permanent public charge, the fact that their own efforts and self-respect are called in to aid the design cannot make it the less a public one. The application upon an extended scale of such laws as this can only come in seasons of true calamity, when the question presented is whether a most important element of the population shall starve, be idly supported by the public without any prospect of alleviation, or be helped to sustain themselves. That the solution of such a question is primarily of public concern is perfectly plain, and deference is due to any enactment of the legislature in the rational effort to solve it.
(c) Section 35 of Article Y has no relevancy here; it 'is
2. There is, however, a constitutional objection to this Act
3. But though the Act itself may be upheld to the extent just stated, the proceedings here questioned may not, because they contemplated an expenditure of more than $10,000 for the particular object, and because they are not otherwise in conformity with the Act. Its purpose, as we have seen, is the relief of needy farmers who are unable to procure seed, and its benefits cannot be confined to those who have estates of freehold; yet this is precisely what the defendants propose to do and what they are submitting to the electors as their intention. Moreover, the Act limits the amount of warrants to be issued upon any one occasion to $3,000, and does not authorize this form of indebtedness multiplied a hundred-fold; but the action deliberately resolved and determined upon by the defendants is to issue warrants in the sum of $300,000. For these reasons the election cannot be allowed to proceed.
The demurrer to the complaint must be overruled; and as, according to our understanding, it was intended to present the decisive issue of law, no pleading by the defendants different in substance from the complaint being possible, it follows that a final decree according to the plaintiff’s prayer should issue. So ordered.