Branch v. Oklahoma County Excise Board

1938 OK 443, 82 P.2d 225, 183 Okla. 295, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 258
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 3, 1938
DocketNo. 28448.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1938 OK 443 (Branch v. Oklahoma County Excise Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branch v. Oklahoma County Excise Board, 1938 OK 443, 82 P.2d 225, 183 Okla. 295, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 258 (Okla. 1938).

Opinions

WELCH, J.

The plaintiff in error protests and seeks to eliminate the entire ad valorem tax levy made for the general fund of Oklahoma City for the fiscal year 1937-38; his protest was denied, and he appeals to this court.

Using the figures given us in the brief of protestant, and assuming the correctness of the amount thereof and their application as by him suggested, we observe the following:

The total of the appropriations requested by the proper officials of the city was $3,-563,135.60, and it was the duty of the excise board to make such appropriations in the amount requested if they could be financed by the income and revenue provided for the fiscal year. In re Tax Levies of City of Woodward, 143 Okla. 204, 288 P. 458.

If such total requests could not be so financed, the excise board must reduce such appropriations, but may not reduce the same more than sufficient to bring the appropriations within such limitations. *296 Morley v. Board of Education, 171 Okla. 46, 47 P.2d 170.

The total cash surplus is $973,344.24; the total estimated income from other sources is $2,411,740.63; the authorized tax levy of 1.7907 will produce $184,762.95. The three items of finance total $3,569,947.81, and if it were not necessary to add at least 10 per cent, for delinquencies as provided hy chapter 85, S. L. 1933, it would have been the duty of the excise board to approve all requested appropriations in full. However, in Hines v. Dalton, 90 Okla. 239, 217 P. 168, and Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co v. Myers, 114 Okla. 240, 246 P. 395, and Excise Board of Oklahoma County v. Cooper, 183 Okla. 388, 82 P.2d 824, this day decided, it was held that it is necessary to add the statutory percentage.

When the 10 per cent, is added to such total requests, as provided hy law, it will be observed that it would require a total of $435,929.86 to be raised by ad valorem taxation, which cannot be done because that would exceed the millage rate of levy allocated by the excise board.

It is therefore necessary to reduce the requested appropriations to come within the income and revenue provided. Section 12677, O. S. 1931, as amended by article 13, chapter 66, S. L. 1935. ‘Such total appropriations then could not exceed the total sum of $3,333,802.04, and the calculations would properly appear as follows:

Total appropriations $3,333,802.04
Deduct Cash Surplus 973,344.24
$2,360,457.80
Add ten per cent, for delinquencies 236,045 78
$2,506,503.58
Estimated receipts from sources other than ad val-orem taxation $2,411,740.63
Balance necessary to be raised by ad valorem taxation $184,762.95

It therefore follows that the protestant is in error when he asserts that the total appropriations could not exceed the sum of $3,310,968.68, under the facts and figures given us by him. He is also in error when he asserts that the total appropriations authorized by law could have been fully financed without an ad valorem levy Appropriations are not fully financed as provided by statute, except when there has been provided a margin of safety for delinquencies in collections of items of finance to be collected in the future, which include estimated income from sources other than ad valorem taxation and income to be derived from the present tax levy. This margin of safety must be provided by adding the percentage for reserve to all of the appropriations, that is, to the portion of the appropriations financed by anticipated income from sources other than ad valorem as well as the part financed by ad valorem levy as was expressly held in Hines v. Dalton, supra, and Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Myers, supra.

Protestant herein asserts that the appropriations are excessive and applies the rule in Hines v. Dalton, supra, and other cases to the effect that 10 per cent, must be added to the appropriations for delinquencies in arriving at the conclusion that the appropriations should be reduced and the amount of such reductions. When properly calculated the appropriations must be reduced to the sum of $3,333,802.04, as shown above.

After having arrived at 'the proper amount of appropriations by adding 10 per cent, to the entire amount thereof in the above manner, and by application of the rule that the 10 per cent, must be added when a tax levy is made, he then points out that the reduced and correct appropriations, so computed, can be financed without a tax levy if the 10 per cent, reserve is eliminated, and asserts the rule in the case of El Reno Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Taylor, 87 Okla. 140, 209 P. 749, to the effect that where the appropriations exclusive of the 10 per cent, reserve can be equaled by the cash on hand plus the estimate of income to be received from other sources, the 10 per cent, for delinquencies cannot then be added; nor any levy whatever made. (Observe from the above figures that the financing items of cash surplus and anticipated income from sources other than ad valorem taxation exceed the appropriations as reduced.)

There would seem to be merit in protestant’s argument and contention in that regard were it not for the fact that the opinions relied upon are inherently inconsistent, as protestant’s argument shows.

Eor the purpose of reducing the appropriations he applied the rule that 10 per cent, must be added to the appropriations as a reserve or margin of safety. Then-addressing himself to the appropriations as reduced, he urges that under the other rule *297 the 10 per cent, must not be added, and follows to the conclusion eliminating and prohibiting the entire tax levy.

If this protest is sustained, the city will be in this position: Its appropriations and levy are protested. Its appropriations are reduced on the ímotest theory that the 10 per cent, reserve must be added, then its entire levy is destroyed on the protest theory that the 10 per cent, reserve must not be added. And all this is based upon the former decisions of this court. -

Thus we find ourselves in this case in this position: If we follow the Hines v. Dalton and Atchison, T. S. & F. Ry. Co. v. Myers Cases, supra, we must hold that the 10 per cent, reserve must be added to the aggregate appropriations of the city for current expense. This necessarily results in a reduction of the aggregate sum appropriated, due to the limit of levy allocated by the excise board for city purposes, and the tax levy made for this fiscal year for the city will stand, as was held by the Court of Tax Review. But if we follow the rule of the El Reno-Taylor Case, supra, we must completely eliminate the tax levy because the aggregate of the appropriations as reduced is less than the aggregate of the cash on hand plus the probable or anticipated income from sources other than ad valorem taxation.

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Related

Lowden v. Seminole County Excise Board
1939 OK 299 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)
Champlin Refining Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission
25 F. Supp. 218 (W.D. Oklahoma, 1938)
Excise Board of Oklahoma County v. Cooper
1938 OK 444 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 443, 82 P.2d 225, 183 Okla. 295, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-v-oklahoma-county-excise-board-okla-1938.