Board of State Tax Commissioners v. Kohler

159 N.W. 785, 193 Mich. 420, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 602
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1916
DocketCalendar No. 27,556
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 159 N.W. 785 (Board of State Tax Commissioners v. Kohler) 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 State Tax Commissioners v. Kohler, 159 N.W. 785, 193 Mich. 420, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 602 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Stone, C. J.

This is a petition for mandamus to require the defendants, who constitute the board of assessors of the city of Detroit, to turn over the assessment rolls of said city to plaintiff, the board of State tax commissioners, to enable it to review the same.

[421]*421An order to show cause having been made, and defendants having answered, we are met, at the threshold, with the objection that the plaintiffs petition is fatally defective because it does not set forth a state of facts such as is required by the statute to exist before an order looking to the review of assessments, such as the order referred to in the petition, Exhibit 1, may be issued. Paragraph 4 of plaintiff’s petition reads as follows:

“That it was made to appear to your petitioners, constituting and composing the board of State tax commissioners, that the assessments of real and personal property in the city of Detroit, and in the various wards thereof, as the same appear on said rolls, have been made so irregularly and so unlawfully that a review of said rolls by your petitioners, acting as the board of State tax commissioners aforesaid, in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided, was and is necessary and imperative in order that compliance with the law relating to the assessment and collection of taxes may be had.”

The preamble to the order issued by the plaintiff is, in part, as follows:

“Whereas, it has been made to appear to said board of State tax commissioners that property in said city has been so irregularly and unlawfully assessed that adequate compliance with law cannot be secured except by a review of said assessment rolls,” etc.

Paragraphs 4 and 5 of the answer of defendants are, in part, as follows:

“(4) Respondents have no knowledge as to what has been made to appear to relator, and therefore neither admit nor deny the allegation contained in paragraph 4 of said petition and leave relator to its proof.
“(5) Respondents admit that a document, purporting to be a valid order, was issued by relator, as described in paragraph 5 of its said petition, and admit that Exhibit 1 is a true copy of such document; but [422]*422respondents deny that such order was issued in conformity with any valid statute of the State of Michigan, and are advised and aver that such order issued without any authority in law, and contrary to the Constitution and laws of the State of Michigan, and especially of the charter of the city of Detroit.”

Section 152 of the general tax law, as amended by Act No. 153, Pub. Acts 1913, being the section of the act relied on herein by plaintiff, reads:

“After the various assessment rolls required to be made under this act or under the provisions of any municipal charter shall have been passed upon by the several boards of review, and prior to the making and delivery of the tax rolls, to the proper officer for collection of taxes, the said several assessment rolls shall be subject to inspection by said board of State tax commissioners or by any member or duly authorized representative thereof and in case it shall appear to said board after such investigation, or be made to appear to said board by written complaint of any taxpayer, that property subject to taxation has been omitted from said roll, or individual assessments have not been made in compliance with law, the said board may issue an order directing the assessor whose assessments are to be reviewed to appear with his assessment roll and the sworn statements of the person or persons whose property or whose assessments are to be considered at a time and place to be stated in said order, said time to be not less than seven days from the date of the issuance of said order, and the place to be at the office of the board of supervisors at the county seat or at such other place in said county in which said roll was made as said board shall deem most convenient for the hearing herein provided. * *

The remainder of the section is immaterial to the point under consideration.

Specifically stated, the objections of defendants to the sufficiency of the order and petition are as follows:

“ (1) Nowhere is it set forth in this order that, prior to its issuance, the assessment rolls had been inspected by the board of State tax commissioners, and that it [423]*423appeared to said board after such investigation, or by the written complaint of a taxpayer, that property subject to taxation had been omitted from the rolls, or individual assessments had not been made in compliance with the law.
“(2) Nowhere is it set forth in the petition that the order, Exhibit 1, was preceded by an inspection and an investigation by relator of the assessment rolls prepared by respondents, or by a written complaint of a taxpayer, and that such investigation or such complaint made it appear that property had been omitted from the rolls, or that assessments had been made in noncompliance with the law. The order of the commission and the petition both recite that ‘it was made to appear’ to relator that property in Detroit had been irregularly and unlawfully assessed.”

It is further urged by defendants that, in so far as the petition shows the alleged unlawful assessments may have been brought to the attention of the plaintiff by a verbal complaint of a taxpayer, or as the result of an inspection and investigation of the rolls made by some one other than the board of State tax commissioners, there are numberless conceivable mediums of information through which it “may have been made to appear” to plaintiff that assessments made by defendants were irregular or unlawful, but that there are only two mediums of information mentioned in the statute which would authorize the issuance of an order such as plaintiff attempted to make here; that the statute requires the happening of either one of two well-defined conditions precedent before an order, reviewing assessments and directing the assessor to appear with his. rolls, may be made. And it is claimed that the board of State tax commissioners, has no power under the statute to make such order, unless it is made to appear to it that property has been omitted from the rolls, or that assessments have been made in disregard of the law, after it has made its own inspection and investigation of the rolls, or upon receipt [424]*424by it of the written complaint of a taxpayer, and that the order and petition in the present case are defective for failure to show the existence of one or the other of these facts.

It is well that we note here the changes that have been made, from time to time, in said section 152 of the general tax law. As originally enacted in 1899, this section fixed no condition precedent to a review by the State board such as is contained in the present law. The relevant portion of that original act reads:

“* * * And in case it shall appear, or be made to appear to said board that property subject to taxation has been omitted from said roll, or individual assessments have not been made in compliance with law, the said board may issue an order,” etc. Pub. Acts 1899, No. 154, § 152.

It will be observed that the act did not specify how or from what source the irregularity should be made to appear to the State board.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 N.W. 785, 193 Mich. 420, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-state-tax-commissioners-v-kohler-mich-1916.