April 24, 1924, respondents gave their note and mortgage for a loan of $4,700 made them by appellant from the permanent educational public school fund of the State. By agreement date of maturity was extended from April 24, 1929, to July 1, 1932. Interest to July 16, 1932, was paid December 16, 1932, thus starting the statute to run as at least of thе latter date and the note and mortgage thereafter remained due and unpaid. Foreclosure was commenced December 10, 1938.
Respondent’s demurrer was sustained by the trial court on the ground the cause of action was barred by section 5-216, I. C. A. 1 made applicable by section 5-225, 1. C. A. 2
Upon appellant’s failure to amend or рlead further judgment was entered for respondent, dismissing the action, hence this appeal. The sole question is whether section 5-216, I. C. A., thus bars the action.
Sections 5-216 and 5-225, I. O. A., were first enacted as sections 156 and 165, chapter X, pages 30 and 31, Territorial Session Laws 1881, which adjourned February 10, 1881, and without change have been carried through subsequent compilations and codifications into the 1932 codes.
The first cession of lands foreshadowing statehood and to constitute a trust fund as further provided for and prospectively accepted by the State in article 9 of the Constitution, *53 was by act of Congress, chapter 61, volume 21, U. S. Stats, at Large, Feb. 18, 1881, page 326, 3
Further grants were made in the admission bill, 26 U. S. Stat. at Large, chapter 656, page 215, sections 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12; volume 1, I. C. A., pages 164-166.
Section 3, article 9, Idaho Constitution, declares the public school fund “shall forever remain inviolate and intact the state to supply all losses that may in any manner occur. Section 11, article 9, authorizes the loaning of said funds upon restricted securities.
Thus these public school endowment funds are trust funds of the highest and most sacred order, made so by Act of Congress and the Constitution, so considered by the members of the Constitutional Convention (vol. I, pp. 647, 773, 861; vol. II, p. 1287) and so recognized and declared by this
*54
court
(Roach v. Gooding,
With regard to the applicability of the statute of limitations this court at an early day (1894) declared:
“It is also well settled that a state is not barred by a statute of limitations, unless expressly named.....As respects public rights or property held for public use upon trusts, municiрal corporations are not within the operation of the statute of limitations; . ... ” (emphasis ours). (In re Counties, etc., v. County of Alturas,4 Ida. 145 ,151 Pac. 349 , 95 Am. St. 53.)
While the court therein had before it a controversy between counties, if the statute of limitations therein mentioned, being the provisions considered herein, did not apply to a county when acting as trustee, they would not apply to the State, because the county is only a political branch or subdivision of the State.
(Strickfaden v. Greencreek Highway Dist.,
It is true
Bannock County v. Bell,
Thus the doctrine announced in
In re Counties v. Alturas, supra,
remains. There is as much justification because of the suрporting reasons therein to hold the statute of limitations not applicable herein, as there was for the holding in
State v. Fitzpatrick,
“It is contended that, as said promissory notes and mortgage called for compound interest, the provisions of said section 1266 of the Revised Statutes (above quoted) are applicable to this case, and must be followed in entering judgment therein. That section prescribes the penalty for making usurious contracts or contracts for unlawful interest. It declarеs that such unlawful contract works a forfeiture of ten cents on the hundred by the year, and at that rate upon the amount of such contract to the school fund of the county in which the suit is brought, and that the plaintiff must have judgment for the principal sum only, less all payments of principal or interest theretofore made, and without interest or costs. The court is required to render judgment for ten per cent per annum upon the entire principal of such contract, against the defendant, in favor of the state, for the use of the school fund of the county in which the suit is brought. To apply the provisions of said section 1266 to the ease at bar would deplete the permanent school fund, in violation both of the act admitting Idaho as a state and the provisions of said section 3 article 9 of the constitution, which declares that said public school fund shall forever remain inviolate and intact, and that the interest thereon only shall be expended in the maintenance of the public schools of the state. The people, through the constitution, have thus declared for what purpose all interest on the permanent fund shall be applied. No part of it can be expended in the payment оf forfeitures or penalties imposed by the statute law of the state. Any law enacted by the legisature diverting one dollar of principal or interest of said fund to other purposes would be unconstitu *56 tional. And if the state had been expressly named as coming within the provisions of said section 1266, which it is not, sаid statute would be unconstitutional so far as the state is concerned. The constitution expressly prohibited the legislature from enacting a law that would divei’t one dollar of said funds otherwise than as provided by the constitution.
“In the face of those solemn provisions of the constitution it is sought in this action to impose a forfeiture or penalty of $560 out of accrued interest earned by $2,000 of the permanent school fund, which interest, the constitution declares, must be distributed to the schools throughout the state; and also to reduce the permanent school fund $133.44; which fund, the constitution has declared, must be kеpt inviolate and intact. The legislature cannot thus do indirectly what it is prohibited from doing directly.” (Emphasis ours.)
Where there are two possible constructions of a statute, one resulting in its being held unconstitutional or of doubtful constitutionality the other free from such stigma, the court should and will adopt the one frеe from interdiction.
(City of Idaho Falls v. Pfost,
While there are expressions in
Small v. State,
Though section 2, article 21 of the Constitution and section 21 of the Admission Bill, continued in force territorial statutes not repugnant to the Constitution it is doubtful if it could be considered that the Territorial Legislature intended
*57
to make sections 5-216 and 5-225, I. C. A., when originally-passed, appliсable to bar this cause of action because no such cause of action then existed. But conceding that the statutes are to be considered as though passed after the adoption of the Constitution
(Nadeau v. Conn,
Many if not all of the land grant states which have had occasion to consider the question have held that the statute of limitations governing adverse possession do not apply to the state
(Hellerud v. Hauck,
“Section [4807] 4087,
supra,
under which the appellants claim by adverse possession was enacted by the territorial Legislature long prior to the admission of the state, and was in force in the state only by virtue of section 2, art. 27, of the Constitution, which provides that, ‘All laws now.in force in the territory of Washington which are not repugnant to this Constitution shall remain in force until they expire by their own limitation or are altered or repealed by the Legislature.’ If section 4807 should be construed to give title to school lands by adverse possession, in our opinion, it is repugnant to the act of Congress and the sections of the Constitution above quoted. This question was fully considered by the Supreme Court of Minnesota in
Murtaugh v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co.,
The underlying reasons of the above holdings, i. e., the existence of the trust relationship and the necessity for the preservation intact of the public school funds mаkes such theories just as cogent, applicable and forceful in holding the statute of limitations does not apply to a foreclosure action as to bar adverse possession.
*60
In a forceful and well considered opinion
(United States v. Fenton,
27 Fed. Supp. 816), Judge Cavanah noted with approval the above authorities and
Woods County v. State,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer and proceed accordingly.
Costs to appellant.
Notes
5-216, I. O. A.: “Action on written contract. — Within five years: An action upon any contract, obligation or liability founded upon an instrument in writing.”
5-225, I. O. A.: “The limitations рrescribed in this chapter apply to actions brought in the name of the state, in the same manner as to actions by private parties.”
“Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That there be, and are hereby, granted to the Territories of Dakota, Montana, Arizona, Idaho, and Wyoming respectively, seventy-two entire sections of the unappropriated public lands within each of said Territories, to be immediately selected and withdrawn from sale and located under the direction of the Secretary оf the Interior, and with the approval of the President of the United States for the use and support of a university in each of said Territories when they shall be admitted as States into the Union: Provided, That none of said lands shall be sold except at public auction, and after appraisement by a board of commissioners, to be appointed by the Secretary of the Interior: Provided further, That none of said lands shall be sold at less than the appraised value, and in no ease at less than two dollars and fifty cents per acre: Provided-, That the funds derived from the sale of said lands shall be invested in the bonds of the United States; and deposited with the Treasurer of the United States; that no more than one-tenth of said lands shall be offered for sale in any one year; that the money derived from the sale of said lands, invested and deposited as hereinbefore set forth, shall constitute a university fund; that no part of said fund shall be expendеd for university buildings, or the salary of professors or teachers, until the same shall amount to fifty thousand dollars, and then only shall the interest on said fund be used for either of the foregoing purposes until the said fund shall amount to one hundred thousand dollars, when any excess, and the interest thereof, may be used for the proper establishment and support respectively -of said universities.
“Approved, February 18, 1881.”
