Board of Education v. State Tax Commission

288 N.W. 331, 291 Mich. 50
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1939
DocketDocket No. 74, Calendar No. 40,725.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 288 N.W. 331 (Board of Education v. State Tax Commission) 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
Board of Education v. State Tax Commission, 288 N.W. 331, 291 Mich. 50 (Mich. 1939).

Opinions

This is certiorari to review action of the State tax commission in reallocating the mill tax between units in Kent county contrary to that made by the Kent county allocation board.

Article 10, § 21, of the Constitution, adopted in 1932, provides:

"The total amount of taxes assessed against property for all purposes in any one year shall not exceed one and one-half per cent. of the assessed valuation of said property."

This limitation caused the legislature to provide methods and means for allocation in counties.

Act No. 62, § 5, Pub. Acts 1933, as amended by Act No. 30, Pub. Acts 1937 (Stat. Ann. 1939 Cum. Supp. § 7.65), created a county tax allocation board for each county in the State. Such a board exists in the county of Kent, with power to apportion the millage tax to be levied for the county of Kent, the city of Grand Rapids, and the Grand Rapids board of education, styled local units.

Act No. 62, § 9, Pub. Acts 1933, as amended by Act No. 30, Pub. Acts 1934 (1st Ex. Sess.) (Comp. Laws Supp. 1935, § 3551-29, Stat. Ann. § 7.69), provides: *Page 52

"Each local unit as defined in this act shall prepare each year a budget containing an itemized statement of its proposed expenditures and estimated revenues, covering all its departments and activities. Such budget shall cover that fiscal year of the local unit, the expenditures of which year are to be met wholly or partly from the next tax levy."

Section 10 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1935, § 3551-30, Stat. Ann. § 7.70) provides:

"Such local unit shall file its budget and statements provided for in the preceding section with the board on or before the second Monday in May of each year. * * * If any local unit shall fail to file its budget and statements by such date, the board shall proceed with its duties and act on the basis of such information with respect to such local unit as it may derive from other sources."

Section 15 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1935, § 3551-35, Stat. Ann. § 7.75), requires the county board to make, on or before the first Monday of June, a preliminary order approving a maximum tax rate for each local unit and give notice thereof to each unit, and the date for final hearing and — "at such final hearing any local unit may object by its duly authorized officers or agents to the maximum tax rate as ordered by the board and request a redetermination thereof." Section 17 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1935, § 3551-37, Stat. Ann. § 7.77) provides:

"Within fifteen days after the giving of notice of such final order any aggrieved local unit may appeal in writing to the State tax commission. The State tax commission shall give at least ten days' written notice to all interested parties of the time and place for a hearing on such appeal, and at the time set for such hearing shall give all such parties an opportunity to be heard. The State tax commission shall apply the method provided in section eleven hereof *Page 53 for the division of the net limitation tax rate, and shall have power, in case it shall find a material mistake of fact, fraud or an error of law in the proceedings under this act, to make an order increasing or decreasing the maximum tax rate of any local unit as ordered by the board, and adjusting the tax rates of other local units affected by such action. The State tax commission shall give written notice of its order to all interested parties within fifteen days after such hearing. The order of the State tax commission, or of the board in case of no appeal, shall be final and shall not be reviewable in any court by mandamus, certiorari, appeal or any other method of direct or collateral attack, nor shall any court of this State issue any injunction to prohibit the carrying out of any order made under this act."

The mentioned local units presented their budgets to the county board and that board, by final order, approved the maximum tax rate as follows: city of Grand Rapids, 5.7 mills; board of education of the city of Grand Rapids, 5.7 mills; county of Kent, 3.6 mills.

The city of Grand Rapids appealed from such allocation to the State tax commission. The State tax commission held hearings, heard evidence and made the following allocation: city of Grand Rapids, 6.2 mills; board of education, 5.3 mills; county of Kent, 3.5 mills. Thereupon the board of education of the city of Grand Rapids applied to this court for leave to appeal in the nature of certiorari, and such leave was granted.

The State tax commission takes the position that no court review is permissible because its action was purely administrative, and points to the ban placed by the legislature in section 17 above quoted.

The Constitution (1908), art. 7, § 4, provides:

"The Supreme Court shall have a general superintending control over all inferior courts; and shall *Page 54 have power to issue writs of error, habeas corpus, mandamus,quo warranto, procedendo and other original and remedial writs, and to hear and determine the same. In all other cases it shall have appellate jurisdiction only."

The power of this court to issue original writs of certiorari is vested in the Constitution and cannot be divested by legislative action.

The review here, in the nature of certiorari, is to determine whether the State tax commission has, on the record of its proceedings, exceeded statutory bounds.

The proceedings of the State tax commission in the instance at bar, even if purely administrative in character, are subject to review under the certiorari powers of this court to the extent of examining whether in the record of its action it exceeded its statutory jurisdiction.

Where the legislature has fixed the jurisdiction within which the State tax commission may act, its jurisdiction is limited thereto and departure therefrom is action without power, wholly void and reviewable by certiorari. On appeal the State tax commission may not make review de novo, for its jurisdiction is limited to consideration of material mistakes of fact, fraud, or errors of law on the part of the county board in matters presented to and acted upon by that board. Unless the material mistake of fact, fraud, or error of law on the part of the county board is found and expressly so noted by the State tax commission, it may take no action contrary to the determination of the county, board.

In the case at bar no fraud is claimed. The county board made allocation upon the budgets presented, and no mistake of fact on the part of that board is alleged or proven. *Page 55

July 5, 1939, the State tax commission made the following order:

"After hearing arguments from all interested parties at the time and place aforesaid on the tax allocation made, and giving due consideration to the respective claims of all interested parties, it is ordered that the following tax allocation be made to the following local units:

"Schools, 5.3 mills;

"County of Kent, 3.5 mills;

"City of Grand Rapids, 6.2 mills."

This order on its face does not disclose any finding of mistake of fact, fraud or an error of law in the proceedings of the county board and is no more than an assumption of power to act de novo.

The notice of the order, given by the State tax commission to the local units, stated:

"The allocation made by the State tax commission gives consideration to legislation passed by the 1939 legislature which places part of the burden for the care of afflicted children on the county.

"Second.

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Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 331, 291 Mich. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-state-tax-commission-mich-1939.