Amendments of § 2058 of the Compiled Laws of Utah, so as to
provide that sales of lands in drainage districts for delinquency
in payment of drainage taxes shall be separate from sales of the
same lands for general taxes,
held not to impair the
obligation of drainage district bonds, sold before the amendments,
or to deprive the bondholders of property without due process of
law.
86 Utah 424, 46 P.2d 400, affirmed.
Appeal from the affirmance of a judgment quieting the title of
the plaintiff, the present appellee, to land in a drainage district
which had been taken by the county for general taxes and conveyed
by the county to him.
PER CURIAM.
Appellee brought this suit in the state district court to quiet
his title to certain land in Millard County, Utah. He alleged that
the general taxes against the land for they year 1926 had not been
paid, and that as a result a tax deed of the property was taken by
the county which had conveyed the land to him. The land lay within
the
Page 297 U. S. 379
boundaries of the Midland County Drainage District No. 3.
Appellants are owners of the bonds of the drainage district. They
set up that the bonds were payable by annual assessments and levy
of drainage taxes under the statutes of Utah in force when the
bonds were sold. Compiled Laws of Utah, 1917, §§ 2055,
2057, 2058, 2071, 2072, 2073. They contend that the provisions of
the statute became part of the obligations of their bonds and
required that, when general taxes and drainage taxes became
delinquent, there should be but one notice of sale, and but one
certificate of sale and tax deed, in which all general and special
taxes should be included.
In 1921 and again in 1925, § 2058 of the Compiled Laws of
Utah was amended so as to provide that lands sold for delinquent
district taxes should be sold separately for such taxes and that a
separate certificate of sale should be issued. Appellants contend
that the amendment impaired the obligation of their contracts in
violation of the contract clause of the Constitution of the United
States, and hence that the separate sale in question, exclusively
for the nonpayment of general taxes, and appellee's tax deed were
void. The amended statute was also assailed as depriving appellants
of their property without due process of law in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment. The state district court overruled these
contentions and entered judgment quieting appellee's title "against
the lien and cloud" of the bonds of the drainage district. The
judgment was affirmed by the supreme court of the state, 46 P.2d
400, and the case comes here on appeal.
It is not disputed that, under the laws of Utah, taxes for
general governmental purposes are paramount to all other demands
against the property to which the tax lien attaches.
Robinson
v. Hanson, 75 Utah 30, 282 P. 782. The state court held that
the challenged amendment did not make any substantial change in the
rights of the holders of the drainage district bonds. Two
Page 297 U. S. 380
opinions were delivered. By separate paths, they reached the
same result. In the principal opinion by Justice Moffat, it was
said:
"The manner by which the drainage tax lien is made effective for
the purpose of reaching the security to which the bond lien
attaches is substantially the same since the amendment as before,
even considering the statutory references in the drainage tax law
as making the procedure for the collection of general taxes
applicable. By the procedure prescribed, no added burden is placed
upon the drainage district nor the bondholder whereby the lien
provided by the statute is impaired, nor is it made more difficult
of enforcement. . . . That the lien for general taxes was superior
to the lien for drainage district taxes was as much the law then as
it is now. No right to pursue and make effective the drainage tax
lien has been taken away or impaired. . . . Between the time of
sale and expiration of the redemption period, and during which
there is outstanding a certificate of sale for both delinquencies
for nonpayment of general and drainage taxes, the drainage district
may pay general taxes and take tax sale certificate. After the
period of redemption has expired, the drainage district, upon
payment of the general taxes, is entitled to a deed vesting it with
title to the property sold for drainage taxes, if general taxes
have been paid and drainage taxes have not. This is the ultimate
limit to which the drainage district and the bondholders were
entitled to go at any time, whether before or after the amended
statutes."
Hanson v. Burris, 46 P.2d 400, 409-410. In the
concurring opinion of Justice Wolfe, it was said that the words of
the statute
"meant the same before the amendment of 1921 as the amendment
itself specifies, and that said amendment was for the purpose of
clarifying and not changing the law."
Further, that
"the tax officials in 1920, before and after the amendment,
followed a procedure which was justified by the statutes
throughout,
Page 297 U. S. 381
and followed the method of assessing, notifying, levying and
collecting taxes as the same was in force at the time of the
issuance of the bonds."
Id., p. 418.
While this Court, in enforcing the contract clause, may
determine for itself the meaning and effect of the contract
(
Appleby v. New York City, 271 U.
S. 364,
271 U. S. 380;
Larson v. South Dakota, 278 U. S. 429,
278 U. S.
433), we see no reason for not accepting the ruling of
the state court as to the construction of the statute in question
and the state practice. We find no basis for a conclusion that,
under the amendment, the procedure for enforcing the liens of
drainage district taxes was substantially different from that which
obtained before the amendment, or that the contract rights of the
bondholders have been impaired.
Compare Violet Trapping Co. v.
Grace, ante, p.
297 U. S. 119. No
question, materially different, is presented under the Fourteenth
Amendment.
The judgment is
Affirmed.