Indianapolis, Cincinnati & Lafayette R. R. v. Kilner
Indianapolis, Cincinnati & Lafayette R. R. v. Kilner
Opinion of the Court
This was an action of replevin, brought by the appellant against the appellees, to recover possession of a certain railroad locomotive engine.
Issue ; trial by the court; finding and judgment for the defendants.
The plaintiff was the owner of the engine, but it had been seized by the defendant Kilner, as treasurer of Dear-born county, in order to make certain taxes charged upon the White-Water Valley Railroad, but in the name of the “ Harrison Branch of the I. & C. Railroad.”
The plaintiff was the lessee of the White-Water Valley Railroad at the time of the assessment of the taxes in question, and was bound, we suppose, to pay them if properly assessed. But the appellant insists that the taxes had not been properly assessed, and could not, therefore, be legally collected. If this be the case, it follows that the treasurer had no right to seize the engine for the payment of the taxes. The taxes charged were for the year 1868, and stood upon the tax duplicate as follows :
“Harrison Branch of the I. & C. Railroad; 7T‘a miles at $2,500 per mile.”
The total amount of taxes was $401.15.
The point in reference to the assessment may be best developed by setting out, the testimony of Richard D. Slater, who testified as follows :
“I am auditor of Dearborn county; I have been since 1867; the book now presented is the tax duplicate of Dearborn county for the year 1868 ; the tax levied against the Harrison Branch of the I., C. & L. R. R. is on 7fa miles of railroad running through Harrison township,
• “First. The length of the road that I obtained, as before stated, from the survey of Mr. McMullen, made in 1867.
“ I made the' assessment on said Harrison Branch for 1868 as omitted, property; I made no inquiry of the officers as to the basis of the assessment for 1868, but made from my knowledge of business and value of the road; I have known this road ever since it was built; I do not remember when the road was completed; the first assessment was made in 1867; Valley Junction is in the látate of Ohio ; the road enters Dearborn county, Indiana, a mile or a mile and a half below Harrison, Indiana ; from Valley Junction to the Indiana line the road all lies in the State of Ohio; that part of the road lying in Ohio is fou. or five miles long; prior to 1869, I made no inquiry at the office of the secretary for the correct name of the road in question ; the road passes out of Dearborn into Franklin county, northward.”
From the foregoing facts, as detailed by the auditor, it seems to us there was no such assessment of the road in question as would justify the collection of the tax for the year 1868. "Wo pass over the mistake in the name in which the assessment was made as, perhaps, unimportant. The assessment thus made by the auditor would, it seems to us, have been invalid had it been in the correct name.
The act of December 21st, 1858, 1 G-. & TI. 85, seems to have been in force at the time of the assessment, except so far as it may have been modified or repealed by the act to be found in the acts of the called session of 1865, at page 121. See, in connection with the act last above mentioned, the act of March 9th, 1867. Acts 1867, p. 164.
The act of December 21st, 1858, contemplated taxing railroads, including all property used in running and operating the same, as an entirety or unit; the road to be ap
We are not aware that up to the time of the assessment in question there was any other method provided for the appraisement of railroads for the purpose of taxation. The act of 1865, above cited, also contemplates an appraisement by the appraisers ofalltlie counties through which the road may run, or a majority of them ; but the appraisement contemplated by that act was not to take place until after the first Monday of April, 1869.
It is apparent from the evidence set out, that the road in question runs through or into more than one county in the State, and that it was not appraised as contemplated by the law for the purpose of taxation. Nor are we aware of any provision of the statute which authorized the auditor to enter the part of the road running through his county, upon the duplicate/or taxation, as omitted property. We have no brief for the appellees, and are not advised upon what ground it was held below that the taxes were properly assessed.
It is said in the brief of counsel for the appellant, that it ivas claimed in the court below that the assessment could have been and was properly made under sections 76, 82, 85 and 86, 1 G. & II. 94, 95 and 96. These sections all aPply evidently to personal property, or to such real estate
The judgment below is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Lafayette R. R. Co. v. Kilner, Treasurer
- Status
- Published