Evenson v. Demann
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Evenson v. Demann
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought to enjoin the county commissioners of Red Lake county from issuing bonds to the extent of $35,000 for the purpose of building a new courthouse. The board claimed to have authority to act under the provisions of chapter 175, p. 224, Laws 1905, “An act to authorize the board of county commissioners of any county not already owning a county courthouse, to issue its bonds, and to use the proceeds thereof for the building of a county courthouse.” Section 1 reads: “The board of county commissioners of any county of the state of Minnesota which does not already own a county courthouse, is hereby authorized and empowered to issue the bonds of said county to such an amount as, in its judgment, may be necessary, but not exceeding one per cent, of the assessed valuation of its real and personal property, as fixed by the last preceding assessment for general taxation, for the purpose of building a county courthouse in said county.”
It appears from the complaint that in January, 1905, the county of Red Lake became t}ie owner, by purchase, of a courthouse at the
Lexicographers define the word “already” to mean “prior to some specified time, either future, present, or past. * * * It has reference to past time, but may be used for a future past.” Webster. As used in this act, therefore, the word “already” may refer to the present — that is, the time of the adoption of the act — or to the future. The language being ambiguous, we must discover the necessity or call for such legislation. If it was intended-to legislate with reference to a condition existing at the time of the passage of the act, April 14, 1905, then a serious question arises as to its constitutionality. At that particular date there might have been one or more counties within the class; but upon what sound legal basis could such counties he distinguished from those which might be placed in the same condition a day, or a week, or at any time, thereafter % Section 412, R. L. 1905, provides that each county shall provide at the county seat, and keep in good repair, a suitable courthouse. Section 184 permits counties to issue bonds for the purpose of constructing a courthouse, when the amount to be expended does not increase the net indebtedness of the county beyond the limit fixed by law, and when the proposition shall have been duly submitted to and approved by the voters of the county.
There was some reason for selecting as the subject of legislation the general condition of counties which for any cause had no courthouse, or the emergency which might arise at any time in any county
Authorities are meager, but some of them have a bearing. In the Case of Schwarzwalder v. Tegen, 58 N. J. Eq. 319, 43 Atl. 587, the act of the legislature declared that any of the mutual insurance companies already chartered by the legislature, or already organized under general laws, might, under certain conditions, become joint-stock companies; and the court adopted the construction which would give reasonable and legal effect to the act, and held that the words “already organized under general laws” meant at the time when the change was desired to be made. So a law regulating all existing railroad corporations extends to and controls railroads incorporated after, as well as before, its passage. Indianapolis v. Blackman, 63 Ill. 117.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I am unable to concur in the construction given this statute. It was, in my judgment, passed for a special purpose, and was intended to apply only to those counties of the state not then owning or having a. courthouse. . 'As so" construed, it is unquestionably ’constitutional. And as all statutes should, by construction, be given a prospective operation, it would also apply to all new counties as they came into existence by 'formal organization. But it is clear to me that the legislature did not intend by this act to repeal all those wise provisions of other statutes restricting the authority of the county board of commissioners in creating public indebtedness without the consent of the taxpayers.
I concur with BROWN, J.
Reference
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- MARTIN V. EVENSON v. WILLIAM C. L. DEMANN and Others
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