Attorney General ex rel. Barnes v. Board of Supervisors

178 Mich. 513
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1914
DocketCalendar No. 25,968
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 178 Mich. 513 (Attorney General ex rel. Barnes v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General ex rel. Barnes v. Board of Supervisors, 178 Mich. 513 (Mich. 1914).

Opinions

KUHN, J.

This is an application for mandamus to compel the respondent board of supervisors to reconvene and reapportion the State and county taxes in accordance with the report and order of the relator board of State tax commissioners. The board of supervisors of Midland county, upon the 25th day of October, 1913, took action equalizing the properties of the various assessing districts in said county. The relators John Thompson and Henry Belitz, who are supervisors of two of the townships in said county, objected to this equalization and appealed to the board of State tax commissioners, as provided for by Act No. 201 of the Public Acts of 1913, complaining of unfairness and discrimination in said equalization, [515]*515and petitioned the said board to review the action of the board of supervisors in this respect. The board of State tax commissioners, in accordance with the provisions of said act, gave notice to the respondent of its decision to investigate the complaint, and upon testimony introduced upon a hearing had, and from other data previously gathered by the said relator board, determined that the equalization made on October 25, 1913, by the respondent board was unfair and discriminatory, and. thereupon made another equalization of the various assessing districts of said county, and ordered the respondent board to reapportion the State and county taxes upon the basis so determined by the relator board. The respondent board met on November 18, 1913, in the regular manner, upon notice from the clerk, but refused to comply with the orders of the relator board and, in a resolution at that time adopted, gave as its reason for its refusal to act the following:

“Whereas, in the opinion of counsel of the board, Act 201 of the Public Acts of Michigan for 1913 and said order and determination of the said board of State tax commissioners is illegal and unconstitutional and void for the reason that the same violates the principles of local government and also that said order and determination was made without any evidence whatever, and that several of the townships of the said county was raised on knowledge of said board of State tax commissioners, without any evidence whatever as to the value of those townships, or as to their assessments or equalization: Therefore, be it resolved, that the board of supervisors hereby consider that the only legal and valid equalization of the property assessed in said county and apportionment of State and county taxes in said county is the equalization and apportionment ■ made by the board on the 25th day of October, 1913. All of which is in accordance with the advice of counsel of the said board.”

In this proceeding respondent denies that the peti-[516]*516tioners are entitled to the relief prayed for in the petition, for the following reasons:

“(1) Because section 34 of Act No. 201 of the Public Acts of the State of Michigan, for the year 1913, in so far as it purports to confer upon the board of State tax .commissioners any authority to review the proceedings of the boards of supervisors of the several counties of the State of Michigan, for the equalization of township valuations within said counties, and in so far as it is sought to be applied to the proceedings hereby affected, is unconstitutional and void.
“(2) That by failing to serve notice of their proceedings upon the said Stewart B. Gordon and Ira Fales, members of the board of supervisors of the said county, and representing the city of Midland on said board, the board of State tax commissioners failed to acquire jurisdiction of the pretended proceedings pending before said board.
“(3) That the relators’ petition, although purporting to be the petition, among others, of the board of State tax commissioners, is not signed or verified by any member of the said board, or by any other person acting for or by the authority of the said board, or any member thereof.”

The answer to the second reason above advanced is that there is nothing in the act in question which requires the board of State tax commissioriers to convene the board of supervisors. The act provides that:

“The said board of State tax commissioners shall have the right to order the said board of supervisors to reconvene and to cause the assessment rolls of said county to be brought before it, and it may summon the several supervisors of said county before it to give evidence in relation to said equalization, and may take such further action and may make such further investigation in the premises as it may deem necessary.”

The failure of the State board to reconvene the respondent board as provided for in the act would not invalidate the proceedings had by them.

[517]*517The effect of the omission of the State board to properly sign and verify the petition would be to strike their names from the proceedings as relators, and would leave John Thompson and Henry Belitz as relators, who have a sufficient interest in the case to bring, the proceedings. We do not find that there is any merit in the third reason.

Counsel for respondent say that the instant case “presents almost a precise parallel to the case of Zimmer v. Bay County Sup’rs, 159 Mich. 213 (123 N. W. 899),” where a similar statute (Act No. 292 of the Public Acts of 1909) was involved. The material change in the present statute from the one considered in the Zimmer Case is that the board of State tax commissioners is substituted for the committee on appeals, which was created by the parties in interest from ex-supervisors of adjoining counties. Two opinions were filed in the Zimmer Case, both holding the statute unconstitutional. The majority opinion held, in effect, that, as the committee on appeals was a nonresident body of men not representatives of the people of the county, it violated the constitutional principle of local self-government, and, also, the method of its selection created an appeal tribunal, which violated the rule that no man may be a judge, or select the judge, of a case in which he has an interest. The minority opinion was based on the latter ground alone. In the majority opinion the following appears:

“Can it be said of the act under consideration that the State has an interest in the activities of the committee on appeal, or that they are not ‘distinctively a matter of local concern?’ We think not. The concluding sentence of section 34 of the act is as follows:
‘Provided, further, That the said committee on appeal, shall not increase the aggregate valuation of said county.’
“It is manifest that the State has no interest in the matter. The county as a whole pays the same tax to [518]*518the State, whether it pays according to one equalization or the other. The burden is simply, in part, lifted from one township or ward, and imposed upon another township or ward. The action of the committee produces a purely local result. Its action, however, relieves one portion of the local community from taxation in a measure, and imposes upon another an additional burden. This result is reached through the intervention of a nonresident body of men not representatives of the people of the county in which they act, and is repugnant to the well-settled principles of local self-government, so frequently asserted and upheld by an unbroken line of decisions of this court. People v. Hurlbut, 24 Mich. 44 (9 Am.

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Bluebook (online)
178 Mich. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-ex-rel-barnes-v-board-of-supervisors-mich-1914.