Carriger v. Mayor of Morristown
Carriger v. Mayor of Morristown
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Prior to the 25th of February, 1870, complainant M. Carriger resided on a farm of over one hundred acres adjacent to the corporate limits of Morristown on the east, and complainant J. E. Robertson resided on a similar farm adjacent to Morristown on the west. Each had his residence on that part of his farm nearest to the corporate limits, consisting of a dwelling and the usual outhouses, with a yard, garden and orchard attached. Previous to that date, also, complainant Carriger had extended the streets of the town beyond his residence, and opened cross-streets in accord with the plan of the town, named accordingly, and had sold lots calling for these streets, one of the lots thus sold and improved being beyond his residence. He had also turned a stable or outhouse on his place into a dwelling-house, and rented it for several years. On the 25th of February, 1870, the Legislature, by an act passed for the purpose, extended the corporate limits of the town so as to include the residences of the complainants and a portion of their lands within those limits, with this proviso: “Provided, that land embraced in the corporate limits of said town as defined by this act, used only for farming purposes, shall not be subject to taxation for corporation purposes until the same is laid off into town lots.” This bill was filed to enjoin the collection of taxes by the town for corporation purposes on
All land embraced within the boundaries of -an incorporated town is, of course, subject to taxation unless expressly exempted by law. McCallie v. Mayor and Aldermen of Chattanooga, 3 Head, 317. The exemption, which the court, in the case just cited, concedes may be made in respect to particular lands under the Constitution of 1834, is in the nature of a privilege, and cannot be carried beyond the fair meaning of the language used. The statute exempts from corporate taxation such land as is “used only for-farming purposes;” that is, plainly, so much of the land brought within the new bounds as is used for the cultivation of crops or the pasturage of stock in the usual routine of farming operations, and for no-other purpose. To hold, as contended for by the learned counsel of the complainants, that the dwelling-houses, with the usual appurtenances, are also included in the exemption, would be to render the corporate extension nugatory so far as the municipality was concerned, throwing upon it a burden without any benefit, and to strain the words into a sense which could, if intended, have been expressed readily in an unequivocal form. The dwelling-houses, outhouses and
It was rather suggested than urged in argument that the act extending the corporate limits of Morris-town was unconstitutional, because a previous bill of the same purport had been previously rejected by the Legislature at the same session. The original bill does say that if the proviso of the act is treated as a nullity, then the first bill introduced in the Legislature was the same in substance with the bill passed into an act, while the amended bill states that such first bill was indefinitely postponed. But the .answer says nothing on the subject, and the only evidence consists in the testimony of one or two witnesses, to the effect that a bill for the extension of the limits of the town had been before the Legislature and defeated in some way. It is impossible for this court
The Chancellor’s decree must be reversed, and the bill dismissed, with the costs of this court and of the Chancery Court.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.