State ex rel. Blaser v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
State ex rel. Blaser v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
This action was commenced in the circuit court of Cole County, Missouri, on May 23, 1915, by the State, at the relation of A. E. Blaser, Collector of the Revenue of Cole County, to collect from defendant $17.07 of hack taxes alleged to be due for the year ending June 1, 1913.
It appears from the record that the assessed valuation of Cole County for the years 1912 and 1913 was over six million and under ten million dollars. By virtue of Section'll of Article 10 of the Constitution of 1875 of Missouri, the county court of said county was authorized to levy, and did levy, forty cents on the one hundred dollars assessed valuation of property in said county for county purposes. The county court of said county, in making said levy, entered of record the following order:
“Ordered by the court that a tax be and the same is hereby levied upon the assessed valuation of Railroad, Telegraph, Telephone and Bridge Companies in Cole County, Mo., for 1913, as follows:
“State Rev. 15c, State Int. 2c, State Cap. 2c, total, 19c on the $100 assessed valuation, County Rev. for current expenses 40c, Inst. 5c, Sinking Fund 5c, total 50c on the $100 assessed valuation. Special road and bridge tax under constitutional amendment, 25c on the $100 assessed valuation.
“I. D. Bond, Presiding Judge.”
At the trial, it was stipulated and agreed that $17.07, the amount of the taxes sued for, exclusive of penalty, interest, fees and costs, was equal to the amount of taxes produced by a levy of ten cents on the one hundred dollars assessed valuation of the railroad property of the defendant, for 1913, in the towns of Russell-ville, Centertown and Lohman, and that said towns
The contention of respondent was, and is, that the above levy was not authorized by law; that the statutes of Missouri required a levy of at least ten cents on the one hundred dollars’ valuation for road district purposes on all property outside of incorporated cities, towns and .villages in any special road district; that Cole County could levy, for county purposes, only thirty cents on the one hundred dollars valuation on respondent’s property in Russelville, Centertown and Lohman; and that the respondent company did not, therefore, owe the $17.07 which represented the difference between the amount produced by a forty-cent levy and the amount produced by a thirty-cent levy on defendant’s railroad property in said towns.
Appellant, by the reply and by declarations of law, attacked the constitutionality of Section 19481, Revised Statutes 1909, as amended by an act of the Central Assembly approved March 25,1913, Laws 1913, pages 667-8.
At the trial, appellant offered to show by the county clerk, deputy clerk and presiding judge of the county court of said county, as well as by the records thereof, that a levy of thirty cents on the one hundred dollars’ valuation for county purposes for the year 1913 would not have produced a sufficient amount of taxes to pay the actual running expenses of said county. Counsel for respondent admitted the testimony of said witnesses to be as offered by appellant, and that the records of said county would show the same thing.
It is conceded that defendant paid all of its taxes, except that sued for in this action.
Respondent offered no evidence.
The judgment of the lower court was for respond- . ent, and appellant, after motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were filed and overruled, appealed to this court.
Respondent relies upon the Act of 1913, Laws 1913, at pages 667-8, which provides that:
“The county court in the several counties of this State, at the May term thereof in each year, shall levy upon all real and personal property made taxable by law, outside of incorporated cities, towns and villages, a tax of not more than twenty cents, nor less than ten cents, on the one hundred dollars’ valuation, as a road tax, which levy shall be collected and paid by the collector into the county treasury as other revenue, and the county treasurer shall place the same to the credit of the road district front which said tax was collected, and shall pay the same to the overseer of said district on the warrants of the county court. . . .” Section 10481, Revised Statutes 1909, of which the above act is amendatory, did not require a levy of at least ten cents on the hundred dollars’ valuation.
The validity of above Act of 1913 is assailed on the ground that its enforcement would not leave the county with sufficient revenue to meet its current expenses on a thirty-cent levy.
We have heretofore held that the road tax, contemplated by said Section 10481 and the Amendatory Act of 1913, is considered a part of the county funds, and, hence, must be governed by the provisions of Section 11 of Article 10 of our Constitution, limiting the rate in this case to forty cents on the one hundred dollars’ assessed valuation of property in said county. [State ex rel. v. Railroad, 270 Mo. l. c. 261, 192 S. W. 990; State ex rel. Love v. The Hannibal & St. J. Ry.
IL Is the relator entitled to maintain this action, regardless of the constitutionality of the Act of 1913 supra? The county court levied the full forty-cent limit in this case. If it had set apart thirty cents on the one hundred dollars ’ assessed valuation out of same for county purposes, exclusive of the roads mentioned in Section 10481 and the above act, and had set apart ten cents on the one hundred dollars’ valuation for the roads mentioned in said laws, then the respondent would have been compelled to pay, according to its own conception of the law, the full forty-cent rate on the one hundred dollars’ valuation.
The duty of the county court in regard to appropriations, is found in Section 11423, Revised Statutes 1909, which reads as follows:
“The county courts of the several counties of this State are hereby authorized and empowered, at the first regular term of such court after the taking effect of this chapter, and at the May term every year thereafter, to appropriate, apportion and subdivide all the revenues collected, and to be collected, and moneys received and to be received, in the various' counties in the State, for county purposes, in the following order:
“I. A sum sufficient for the payment of all the necessary expenses that may be incurred for the care of paupers and insane persons of such county.
“III. A sum sufficient for the payment of the salary of all county officers, where the same is by law-made payable out of the ordinary revenues of the county.
“IV. A sum sufficient for the payment of the fees of grand and petit jurors, judges and clerks of elections, and fees of witnesses for the grand jury of the county.
“V. A sum sufficient for the payment of the other ordinary current expenses of the county, not hereinbefore specially provided for, which shall be known and designated as the contingent fund of such county; which last sum shall in no ease exceed one-fifth of the total revenue of such county for county purposes for any one year.”
"While the county court in this case did not follow the above statutory form of appropriations, yet it has levied all that could be levied under Section 11 of Article 10 of our Constitution. "When the full amount thus levied is collected, it is held by the- officer in charge thereof as a trust fund. If the county court, after the revenue is thus collected, should refuse to apportion the ten cents on the one hundred dollars’ valuation to the roads contemplated by said Section 10481, and the Amendatory Act of 1913, it may be proceeded against by law to transfer the same, and in- that proceeding, the validity of the Act of 1913 supra might be challenged by the county court, if it desired to do so. Under the circumstances of this case, we are of the opinion that the defendant should have paid the taxes in controversy and left the distribution of same to be determined thereafter.
“The admitted facts in this case show that the receipt from the Auditor of the certificate of the action of the Board of Equalization, etc., under the provisions of Section 6879, was received by the clerk July 28, 1884, and n.o levy of taxes was made by the county court as required by that section, but the deputy county clerk, of Ms own head, in July or August, 1884, during vacation, made out the railroad tax-book already mentioned, .and extended the taxes thereon, and this was the only book made out or delivered to the collector, the deputy county clerk, obtaining his rates and his data for that purpose from the order of, the county court, made in June, 1884, levying taxes on the general property of the county. This action of the official mentioned, it is scarcely necessary to say, was wholly unwarranted, and at war with the plain provisions of ■Sections 6879 and 6881, of the revenue law.”
In the case at bar, the county court of Cole County did act and enter of record a levy for the full forty-cent limit.
In State ex rel. v. Hannibal & St. J. Ry. Co., 135 Mo. l. c. 627-8, it appears that the secretary of the board of directors of the school district of Kansas City, Missouri, issued a certificate reciting that the school board had made a certain levy and setting the same out, Brace, J., on page 628, said: “Upon the authority of this certificate the clerk without any order of the county court, extended upon the tax book the Kansas City school tax of five mills against defendant’s local'property described as tracts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, which is the subject of defendant’s first objection.” After considering the subject, Judge Brace, on page 629, said: “It follows that the Kansas City local school tax Sued for, not having been levied by the county
In each of the above cases, the county court took no action whatever, while in the case before us, it did act, as shown by the record, and levied the highest amount authorized by the Constitution.
PER CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion of Railey, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE ex rel. A. E. BLASER, Collector v. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published