Court Opinion

ID: 8192540
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:15:38.907497+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:39.382992
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed January 5, 1918:
Vinje, J.
Was the detached territory released from its direct obligation to the state for its share of the loan ? Defendant claims an affirmative answer should be given this *630question because the legislature in the act detaching it provided for an adjxistment of assets and debts between the district and it, and therefore released the detached territory from any direct obligation to the state. It is argued that the legislature can do what the commissioners of public lands can do, and that a consent given by them under sec. 258 Stats. 1915, wherein it is provided that the boundary of a district to which a loan has been made “shall not be changed or altered so as to exclude therefrom any land included therein at the time of the making of such loan, until such loan shall be fully paid, without the consent of the commissioners of public lands,” operates to discharge the detached territory from a direct liability to the state. We do not find it necessary to decide that question here because we are not dealing with an act of the commissioners but of the legislature. It is sufficient to suggest merely a doubt as to whether such a result would follow the consent of the commissioners.
A brief reference to a few statutory provisions governing the loaning of the trust funds will, we think, conclusively show that the legislature, by providing for an adjustment of debts and assets between the detached territory and the district, did not intend to repeal such provisions. Sec. 25 8&, Stats. 1915, provides that before a loan can be made to a school district a certified copy of a resohition of said district providing for the collection of a direct annual tax sufficient to pay the interest and principal of the loan within a specified time, must accompany the application for the loan. And sec. 258d provides that “All the taxable property in any school district . . . which hás obtained or shall obtain any loan from the state or any of its trust funds shall stand charged for the payment of the principal and interest thereof.” "
In view of these specific statutory provisions requiring the levy of a tax upon the property of a district sufficient to pay the loan with interest before it is made, and the declara*631tion that the property of the district shall stand charged for the payment thereof, there is no force in an argument based upon implications from other language or upon a construction that would nullify the plainly expressed intentions of the legislature. The provision in the act of detachment that the territory set off should be liable for its share of the indebtedness and credited with its share of the assets of the district is in no wise inconsistent with the town’s direct liability to the state for its share of the loan. The status of this loan was fixed when made. All the property of the district stood charged with its payment — the town of Kim-ball with its proportionate share. Such being the express mandate of the written law, the provision of the later’ act cannot be construed to discharge the detached portion from the direct liability created 'when the loan was made. It is conceded that the defendant has acted in good faith and upon advice of co-unsel in refusing to put the certified amounts upon the tax roll, hence no costs will be taxed in favor of either party.
By the Gourt. — Let a peremptory writ issue commanding the defendant J. P. Rogers, as town clerk of the town of Kimball, to insert in the present tax roll of his town the sum of two' thousand seven hundred and ninety-one dollars and sixty-nine cents ($2,791.69) to pay its share of the loan together with accrued penalties, for the years 1915, 1916, and 1917.