14 Kan. 418 | Kan. | 1875
The opinion of the court was delivered by
But a single question is presented in this case for our consideration, and that is, the constitutionality of
TwO propositions may be considered settled: first, that taxation to be sustained must be for a public purpose; and second, that where municipal bonds are issued, whose payment is provided for solely by taxation, their validity depends upon the question whether the purposes to which the proceeds of such bonds are to be applied are public purposes. Leavenworth County v. Miller, 7 Kas., 479; The Citizens Savings and Loan Association v. The City of Topeka, recently decided by the supreme court of the United States; (23 Wallace.) It is also conceded by counsel that the entire purpose, or, if there are several, and no rule of apportionment as to the application of the proceeds, that all the purposes must be public. In other words, that the legislature cannot validate bonds for private purposes by declaring that the authorities may apply an indefinite portion of the proceeds to some public purpose. With these preliminary remarks let us turn to the act in
“Sec. 5. The trustee, clerk and treasurer of such township, or a majority of them, shall, as soon as practicable, sell and dispose of the bonds issued by them under the authority of this act to the best possible advantage, and invest the proceeds, or so much thereof as in the judgment of said officers may be necessary, for the purpose of providing the destitute citizens of such townships with provisions and with grain for seed and feed; and the officers aforesaid shall distribute such articles of necessity amongst the destitute citizens of such township in proportion to their several necessities, under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed, in accordance with the provisions of the fourth section of this act: Provided, That no family shall receive more than seventy-five dollars in value.”
The relief of the poor; the care of those who are unable to care for themselves, is among the unquestioned objects of public duty. In obedience to the impulses of common humanity, it is everywhere so recognized. Our own constitution but gives utterance to the universal voice when it says, “The respective counties of the state shall provide, as may be' prescribed by law, for those inhabitants who, by reason of age, infirmity, or other misfortune, may have claims upon sympathy and aid of society.” Art. 7, § 4. It must be borne in mind however that the term “poor” is used in two senses, We use it in one sense simply as opposed to the term “rich.” Thus we speak of the ordinary laborers, mechanics and artisans as poor people, without a thought of describing persons who are other than self-supporting. Indeed, the large majority of our people are poor people, and yet they would feel insulted to be told that they are objects of public charity.
The purpose of the act, as expressed in the section quoted, is to provide the destitute with provisions and with grain for seed and feed. This legislation must be construed in the light of known facts. For reasons unnecessary here to recount, in some portions of the state last season there was a total, and in others a partial failure of the crops. It was generally understood that many farmers would come to this spring’s sowing with little or no seed, and with stock weakened for lack of grain. To make good this lack is the evident purpose of the act, to provide grain for seed and feed. Its aim is not to furnish food to the hungry, clothing to the naked, or fuel to those suffering from cold. It is not the helpless and dependent, whose wants are alone sought to be relieved. If it were, the fact that many who are neither helpless nor dependent might obtain assistance through its administration, would be no valid objection to the constitutionality of the law. It contemplates a class who have fields to till and stock to care for, and purposes to help them with seed for their fields and grain for their stock, that thus they may pursue with better prospects of success their ordinary avocations. It taxes the whole community to assist one class, and that not for the purpose of relieving actual want, but to assist them in their regular occupations. These people are engaged in the business of farming. This business cannot
Sec. 6. Each person receiving any portion of the aid provided for in this act, shall take and subscribe the following oath:
I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I am buying the aid, this day furnished to me, for myself, and not for speculation, but in good faith, for the use of myself and family, and that I am unable to procure the same on my own account. {Name.)
Attest:--
Sec. 7. Each person receiving any part of the aid provided for in this act shall execute his or her note to such township for an amount equal to the cost of the aid received by him; and if the maker of such note be a married man, the same shall be signed by his wife, which note shall bear the same date as the bonds herein provided for, shall bear interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, payable semiannually; and the principal of the note shall be payable in
$- ---187—
For value received —r promise to pay to the township of- in the county of-, the sum of- dollars, payable in installments as follows: - dollars on the - day of- 187 — , and - dollars on the- day of- 187 — , with interest on said sums at the rate of ten per cent, per annum until paid; and this note shall be a lien upon the real and personal property now owned or hereafter acquired by - until the said note is fully paid.--
Sec. 8. The treasurers of such townships shall collect said notes as they become due, and credit the amounts so collected to the “relief fund” of such township; and it shall be the duty of such treasurers to take all proper and needful action for the purpose of enforcing the claims of such township against the property of the makers of said notes.
Sec. 9. Upon the recommendation of the proper officers of such townships, the proper officer or officers of the county in which such township is situated, shall annually, when other taxes are levied, levy and collect, as other taxes are levied and collected, a sufficient tax to pay the interest on the bonds' provided for in this act, as the same falls due, and to provide a sinking fund for the final payment of the principal of said bonds; but in no case shall any such tax be levied if the payments made on the notes provided for in the seventh section of this act shall be sufficient to meet the interest and principal of such bonds as they fall due.
But it may be said that this legislation can be defended
It is with reluctance that we have reached the conclusion that this act cannot be sustained. But ours is an unmixed duty, to declare the law as it is, and not as we might wish it to be. Especially imperative is that duty when as in cases like the present there is in the surrounding circumstances a strong appeal to overlook permanent rules in favor of a present and pressing want.
The judgment of the court below is reversed.