Alcorn v. Bliss-Cook Oak Co.

201 S.W. 797, 133 Ark. 118, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 25, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 797 (Alcorn v. Bliss-Cook Oak Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alcorn v. Bliss-Cook Oak Co., 201 S.W. 797, 133 Ark. 118, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 190 (Ark. 1918).

Opinions

HART, J.

This suit was instituted in the chancery court by the Bliss-Cook Oak Company and other owners of land in Chicot County against R. E. Alcorn, as collector of taxes for said county and the board of levee inspectors of Chicot County, Arkansas. The object of the suit was to enjoin the collector from collecting the levee taxes extended against said lands on the tax books in the year 1915, for the taxes of 1916, and to prevent the levee inspectors from extending levee taxes for any other years. The chancellor granted the relief prayed for and the case is here on appeal.

A levee district comprising in its boundaries all the alluvial lands of Chicot County has existed under various acts of the Arkansas Legislatures since 1857. The act of 1883, creating the board of levee inspectors of Chicot County provided that a tax not exceeding 2 per cent, of the assessed value thereof might be levied and collected in said county' annually on all alluvial lands therein for levee purposes. Acts of 1883, page 163. The Legislature of 1915 passed an act to provide for building and repairing levees in Chicot County and the act was declared to be the sole law on the subject. Acts of 1915, page 423. Section 15 reads as follows:

‘ ‘ There shall be levied and collected' in said county annually on-all lands therein that are now or would be benefited by levees, and on all lands in said county on which levee taxes have been levied and collected for the past five years, and which are now and which shall become taxable for the State revenue, a levee tax not exceeding ten cents per acre upon each and every acre of said land, except such lands as are included within the limits of any town. There shall be levied and collected annually in said county on all lands in the limits of any town benefited by levees which are not subject to levee tax, and have been paying levee tax for the past five years or shall become taxable for State revenue a levee tax not exceeding one per centum on the assessed value therof.”

Section 16 provides that the board of levee inspectors at the regular October meeting shall determine the amount of taxes to be levied.

Section 17 provides that taxes when levied shall constitute a lien and shall be collected in the same manner as taxes for State and county purposes.

At its October meeting in 1915, the board levied the maximum of ten cents per acre upon each acre of land in said district and $150 per mile on the right-of-ways of railroads. The levies were duly certified as required by the act and extended upon the tax books against the land.

The lands owned by the plaintiffs all overflowed, but' they were principally timber or cut-over lands and were not nearly so valuable as the cultivated lands situated within the boundaries of the levee district.- There was testimony tending to show that the lands owned by the plaintiffs did not receive nearly so much benefit from the levee within the district as were received by the other lands in the district. Some of the witnesses for the plaintiffs also testified that before the levees were constructed along the Arkansas and Mississippi rivers their lands did not overflow but that since the construction of the levees, their lands had become subject to-the overflows from those rivers. The president of the levee board testified that the board considered that each and every acre of land in Chicot County received a greater benefit than ten cents per acre. That it was necessary to levy the maximum of ten cents per acre in order to raise sufficient revenue to carry on the levee construction. The levees were constructed for the purpose of protecting the lands within .the boundaries of the district, but it was shown that a part of the levee was situated outside of the boundaries of the district and that so much of the taxes collected from the lands within the district as was necessary was expended in constructing that part of the levee which was situated outside the district.

The chancellor found as a fact that the lands of plaintiffs involved herein were benefited to some extent by the levees mentioned in the act involved but that the board appointed by the Legislature made an illegal and arbitrary assessment of the property involved herein and one not in accordance with the benefits received.

There was testimony tending to support the finding of the chancellor that the lands of the plaintiffs were benefited to some extent by the construction of the levees. There was also testimony to the effect that the lands of the plaintiffs did not derive as much benefit from the construction of the levees' as the other lands within the district, but we need not consider in detail the testimony on this point.

Under section 15 of the act it was provided that the board might levy a tax not exceeding ten cents per acre upon each and every acre of land except such lands as are included within the limits of any town. Acting under the power conferred by this section, the board levied a rate of ten cents per acre-upon every acre of land situated outside of the limits of the- towns, regardless of the fact of whether or not the land was in cultivation.

(1) Where the Legislature has fixed the amount of assessments which may be levied upon the lands benefited by a levee, its finding is conclusive of the amount unless an arbitrary and manifest abuse of power is shown. Salmon v. Board of Directors of Long Prairie Levee District, 100 Ark. 366; Board of Directors of Crawford County Levee District v. Crawford County Bank, 108 Ark. 419, and cases cited.

In the first mentioned case the statute creating the levee district provided for annual assessments not exceeding 8 per cent, of the valuation of the lands, such rate to be determined at a meeting of the board on the third Tuesday in May each year. For the year 1907 the board on the day named levied an assessment at the maximum rate, and it was held that it had authority to do so. The court held that mere mistakes of the law makers or those empowered by the law makers to make assessments, in fixing the amount or rate of assessments, will not be reviewed or corrected by the courts. Recognizing that in the construction of levees if may cost as much to protect one acre of land from overflow as it does another, apportionment by the acre as a basis for an assessment has frequently been adopted in levee cases. Cooley on Taxation (3 ed.), vol. 2, p. 1226; Hamilton on Law of Special Assessments, § 229; Wallace v. Shelton et al., Levee Commissioners, 14 La. Ann. 498; Daily v. Swope, 47 Miss. 367, and Egyptian Levee Company v. Hardin, 27 Mo. 495.

(2-3) It was doubtless recognized that the lands in the district varied in value and that some of them should be rated at a much higher value than others. All the authorities establish the proposition that local assessments whereby the value of land within a district will be increased should be made on the basis of benefits. In the present case to reach this result, the Legislature determined to impose a specific tax upon the acreage. If the construction of the levee increases the value of the different classes of lands within the district proportionately, there is no injustice. In this way the burden will be distributed in proportion to the benefits. It is impossible to foresee exactly how a proposed tax will fall.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 797, 133 Ark. 118, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alcorn-v-bliss-cook-oak-co-ark-1918.