White v. Board of County Com'rs of Albany County
Decision Date | 25 June 1957 |
Docket Number | No. 2784,2784 |
Citation | 77 Wyo. 246,313 P.2d 484 |
Parties | Bryan WHITE, Ray Bottom, S. W. Vogel, Noel Hall, Arthur McKechnie, Jr., and William W. Whitney, Plaintiffs, v. BOARD OF the COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF the COUNTY OF ALBANY, and James D. Gay, individually and as County Commissioner, George W. Dodge, individually and as County Commissioner, and Ralph E. Buescher, individually and as County Commissioner, Defendants. |
Court | Wyoming Supreme Court |
Ellery, Gray & Hickey, Cheyenne, and oral argument by J. J. Hickey, Cheyenne, for plaintiffs.
Lynn Rees, County and Pros. Atty. of Albany County, Laramie, for defendants.
Before BLUME, C. J., and HARNSBERGER, J., and McAVOY, D. J.
This case is before us on a reserved constitutional question pursuant to § 3-5501, Wyoming Compiled Statutes 1945.
On October 30, 1956, the plaintiffs commenced an action in the District Court of Albany County, Wyoming, to enjoin the Board of County Commissioners of said county and the individual members thereof from issuing the so-called recreational facilities bonds, alleging the illegality of those bonds. It appears that, pursuant to resolutions duly passed by the said board of county commissioners, an election was held on August 21, 1956, for the issuance of the so-called recreational facilities bonds. The actual question submitted to the voters of Albany county was as follows 'Shall the Board of County Commissioners of Albany County, Wyoming, be authorized to issue coupon bonds of said County the principal amount of $250,000.00 bearing interest at a rate not exceeding 4% per annum, payable semiannually, said bonds to be due and payable serially within 10 years after their date in amounts which will require substantially equal annual tax levies for principal and interest during the period, for the purpose of constructing and equipping a public building and acquiring, improving and developing pleasure grounds and recreational facilities for the use of the inhabitants of said County?'
At the said election the voters of said county voted as follows: taxpayers--2164 for and 1697 against; non-taxpayers--887 for and 347 against:
The bonds are intended to be issued pursuant to provisions of Chapter 150, Session Laws of Wyoming 1951, which provides in Section 1 as follows:
Section 2 of the Act authorizes the board of county commissioners to levy taxes, issue bonds or incur indebtedness in like manner as is or may be authorized by law for other county purposes.
Section 4 of the Act provides that the management and control of pleasure grounds and so forth shall be vested in a committee of 5 citizens of the county to be appointed by the county commissioners. For the purposes of this case, it is not necessary to set out the details of this section.
Also involved is Chapter 24, Session Laws of Wyoming 1951. Briefly this chapter provides that the governing body of any city, town, village, county or school district may establish a system of public recreation and playgrounds; that the board of county commissioners is authorized to make levies and expend funds obtained from said levies for recreational purposes. However, this chapter does not provide for the issuance of any bonds.
The defendants in this case filed an answer to the petition alleging in substance the legality of the issuance of the bonds hereinbefore mentioned. When the case came to be heard by the district court, it made certain findings and thereupon reserved a constitutional question to this court as follows:
'Is Subsection 4 and Subsection 2 of Chapter 150, Session Laws of Wyoming, 1951, unconstitutional and void as in contravention of one or more of the provisions of the Constitution of the State of Wyoming, and particularly in contravention of one or more of the provisions designated as Section 16, Article 6?' (This is a clerical error.
What was meant is Article 16, Section 6.)
The question of this constitutionality has been argued in this court.
The contention made by the plaintiffs herein is stated in paragraph 8 of the petition filed in the case and is as follows:
'That the plaintiffs further allege that defendants claim purported authority to issue the bonds and to enter into the sale of said bonds and the use of proceeds therefrom under Section 26-801 and 26-802, W.C.S.1945, Chapter 150 of Session Laws of Wyoming for 1951; that this chapter and these sections are not intended for authority to issue recreational bonds and that said sections and chapter if so intended are repugnant to the State Constitution of the State of Wyoming and in conflict with Article 16, Section 6 of said constitution and further that said Chapter 150 is limited by Chapter 24 of the Session Laws of Wyoming of 1951 which does not authorize them to issue bonds for recreational facilities; and for the further reason that the term 'recreational facilities' is vague and indefinite and did not apprise the taxpayers of how much of the appropriation was for the purpose of constructing and equipping a public building and how much was for the acquiring, equipping, and improving of the pleasure ground, and how much was for recreational facilities; and for the further reason that said proposition sets forth three separate and distinct purposes all of which render the said proposition as void and invalid and not in accordance with the laws of the State of Wyoming and of no effect.'
Under paragraph 8 of plaintiffs' petition, two distinct questions arise in this case, namely, (1) whether Chapter 150, Session Laws of Wyoming 1951, on its face authorizes the issuance of the bonds in question, and (2) if it does, then whether the statute is unconstitutional. The first of these questions involves (a) the meaning and effect of Section 1, Chapter 150, aforesaid, (b) its meaning and effect in the light of Chapter 24, Session Laws of Wyoming 1951, and (c) whether it was necessary to specify and allocate the amounts to be paid out for the several purposes mentioned.
We hate to be placed in a position as appearing to evade answering questions before us but the meaning and effect of the statutory provisions are clearly a matter of statutory construction and do not involve any constitutional question. No question except a constitutional question is authorized to be reserved to this court. If the statutory provisions, on their face, authorize the issuance of the bonds in question, then and then only does a constitutional question arise. If the statutory provisions do not authorize the issuance of these bonds, the reserved constitutional question becomes superfluous. We have held time and again that this court has no jurisdiction to pass upon a reserved constitutional question until after ...
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