Board of Com'rs of Atchafalaya Basin Levee Dist. v. C. Lagarde Co.
This text of 120 So. 25 (Board of Com'rs of Atchafalaya Basin Levee Dist. v. C. Lagarde Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
This was originally a very complicated and much-involved case, as is evidenced by the fact that, although there is not a single disputed fact in the case, nevertheless it required 83 typewritten pages of transcript and 184 printed pages of brief merely to state the issues and develop the propositions advanced on one side or the other.
But during the argument before this court it ultimately developed that the case involved only a few comparatively simple issues which this court would be called upon to decide.
The trial judge held that, because the board failed to provide the manner in which said taxes should be collected and to prescribe regulations for their collection, therefore said taxes could not be collected at all.
We do not agree with this. It is true that, since the board failed in its duty, no one was at fault for not collecting the taxes. But that does not mean that the taxes themselves were not due by the produce on which they were levied; for in fact the taxes were levied, and thus became due.
The object of the Legislature in providing that the taxes should be collected "in such manner and under such regulations as the board may direct" was merely to allow the board to prescribe a direct and summary manner of collecting such taxes without recourse to the courts. But, where the board has failed to provide such direct and summary process, then the ordinary civil process might have been resorted to, in case the tax was not voluntarily paid, and a judgment "in rem" obtained against the property liable for *Page 615
the tax. Barber Asphalt Co. v. Watt, 51 La. Ann. 1345, 26 So. 70; Fristoe v. Crowley,
(1) First of all, because defendant as a manufacturer of sugar (taxed as sugar) has no interest whatever in the question whether or not sugar cane be taxed or not taxed at all; no more than he, or a producer of sugar cane or cotton or potatoes (all taxed) has a right to complain that tobacco and corn and cabbage are not taxed.
(2) There is a good reason for taxing sugar cane shipped out of a levee district to a place where it will not be taxed as sugar, and not taxing sugar cane which is shipped into another district where it will be taxed as sugar. In the one case it eventually contributes its full share towards maintaining the levee system, and therefore should not be taxed where produced; in the other case, it would contribute nothing to the building of the levees unless taxed where it is raised. *Page 616
(3) Any producer of sugar cane may ship his cane whithersoever he pleases, and thus pay or avoid the tax thereon at his pleasure. All have the same privilege; that is to say, all producers of sugar cane may, at their option, pay the tax thereon in the parish where produced, or in the parish where it is converted into sugar. All are treated alike.
But it operated its factory during the years 1919, 1920, and 1921; and for those years it owes taxes on sugar and molasses amounting to $2,682.87 (i.e., $549.82, plus $902.80, plus $1,230.25; see calculations in plaintiff's brief, pp. 38 and 39).
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
120 So. 25, 167 La. 612, 1928 La. LEXIS 2092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-of-atchafalaya-basin-levee-dist-v-c-lagarde-co-la-1928.