142 P. 561 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
Displeased at the action of the county court of Clatsop County in entering into an agreement with the Nease Timber Company to cruise and estimate the value of the timber lands in the county and in executing a contract for the construction of a jail therein, plaintiff brings this suit to enjoin the county court from approving any claims created thereby in excess of $5,000, upon the hypothesis that the expenditure of the county funds in excess of that sum is in violation of Article XI, Section 10, of the state Constitution. On March 16, 1913, the assessor of that county invited the attention of the county court to the statement that timber lands to the value of many
Counsel agree that the pre-eminent question sought to be determined is whether the contract executed by the county created a voluntary indebtedness, and therefore within the prohibition of the Constitution. Article XI of Section 10 of the Constitution as amended by Laws of 1911, page 11, provides:
. “No county shall create any debts or liabilities which shall singly or in the aggregate exceed the sum
“The legislative assembly shall provide by law for uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation; and shall prescribe such regulations as shall secure a just valuation for taxation of all property, both real and personal, excepting such only for municipal, educational, literary, scientific, religious, or charitable purposes, as may be specially exempted by law.”
The architects and builders of the Constitution wisely saw that social stability was impossible without an equitable distribution of the burden of civil government, and, to avoid the ruinous consequences of inequitable taxation, imposed upon the legislature the enactment of such laws as would render taxation equal and uniform.
In the case of Burnett v. Markley, 23 Or. 436 (31 Pac. 1050), Mr. Justice Robert S. Bean well said:
“It is the ‘business’ of the county, through its officers and agents, to see that all the property within the county liable to assessment and taxation, be placed upon the assessment-roll, so that the burdens of government may fall in like proportion upon all.”
The case before us is strikingly similar to that of Burnett v. Markley, 23 Or. 436 (31 Pac. 1050), the facts of which disclose that the county court of Benton County entered into a contract for the preparation of present ownership books to facilitate the assessor in listing the property of his county. In upholding the contract, the court said:
“It is a matter of common knowledge that under our present system of listing and assessing property, it is practically impossible for the assessor to list and assess all the property in his county without some such aid as was to be provided by the contract in question here. There was no attempt by the county court by this contract to usurp or interfere with the duties of the assessor; but, on the other hand, the object was to provide a present ownership list to assist him in the discharge of the duties of his officé, and enable him to list and assess a large amount of real estate which had heretofore escaped taxation, amounting in value, as the record discloses, to over $650,000. We think, therefore, the contract in question was such a one as the county had power and authority to make. ’ ’
To obey the mandates of the Constitution as expressed through statute, and fairly to distribute the
The learned counsel for appellant complains of the court’s refusal to grant a permanent injunction against the construction of the county jail, urging the same constitutional disability invoked against the contract with the Nease Timber Company. The records of Clatsop County unfold that the county court, at its term in January, 1913, made provision for a special tax to be levied upon the taxable property in the county, amounting to $15,000, to be used in the construction and furnishing■ of a county’jail, a special fund being thereby created. It is conceded that the amount of money the county proposes to expend for the construction of the jail does not exceed the amount of the appropriation.
From a collation of. the best judicial thought before us, we are brought to the conclusion that, where a fund has been provided for, although not collected, or where an appropriation has been made of anticipated revenue, and the contract is payable out of such funds, the contract does not create an indebtedness within the meaning of the Constitution. This view seems to be in accord with the decisions of this state as exemplified in Municipal Security Co. v. Baker County, 33 Or. 338 (54 Pac. 174); Eaton v. Mimnaugh, 43 Or. 465 (73 Pac. 754); Bowers v. Neil, 64 Or. 104 (128 Pac. 433). Inevitably from these conclusions the decree of the lower court must be affirmed. Affirmed.