Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Wright

139 S.E. 890, 165 Ga. 1, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 304
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1927
DocketNos. 5539, 5540, 5574, 5575
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 139 S.E. 890 (Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Wright, 139 S.E. 890, 165 Ga. 1, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 304 (Ga. 1927).

Opinions

Russell, C. J.

By an agreement between the parties all issues of law and fact were submitted to the judge of the superior court, who was empowered to hear and determine all issues, either in term or vacation, with right of appeal by either party.

The State tax for 1924 was $5 per $1000, or five mills, and the valuation of the property of the Central of Georgia Railway Company in Spalding County in 1924 was $584,025. In 1925 the State tax was $5 per $1000, and the taxable value of the property in 1925 was $624,052. The Central of Georgia Railway Company paid all its taxes for 1925, except $8237.48, which represents a tax of $13.20 per $1000 on the assessed value of the property in Spalding County. There were grand , juries empaneled and organized at first or spring term in both 1924 and 1925 of the superior court of Spalding County. The treasurer did not submit a statement of the financial condition of the county and the amount [4]*4of tax required to discharge the county liabilities for either of the years 1924 or 1925. Neither grand jury refused to recommend the levy of a tax sufficient to discharge any judgment which had been obtained against the county or any debt for the payment of which there was a mandamus or the necessary expenses of the year. Neither grand jury had been requested to make any such recommendation, and both grand juries adjourned without making any recommendation concerning the levy of county taxes for either year. There were no final judgments outstanding against the county at that time, nor had any mandamus been granted requiring the county to pay any debt. No grand jury of Spalding County has recommended a tax levy for that county for at least twenty years. On January 1, 1924, Spalding County had outstanding warrants totaling the sum of $34,154.26, issued during the year 1923, for general county purposes including the payment of some principal and interest on county bonds lawfully issued and for warrants issued during 1924. Likewise, for general county purposes and including payment of principal and interest on like county bonds, the county, on January 1, 1925, had outstanding warrants issued during 1924, totaling the sum of $37,451.89. In both instances these warrants were in effect purchased by the Griffin Banking Company from the holders. There were no funds available to meet them, but the warrants were not charged against the county’s account at this bank, but were held by said bank until the county, had deposited sufficient funds to meet them, when they were paid and charged against the county’s account. The assessed valuation of all property in the county for 1924 was $7,657,310, and it would have required a levy of $4.46 per $1000 to discharge the total indebtedness referred to, provided there were no uncollected taxes coming over from the year 1923. The tax of $3.95 per $1000, referred to in item 1 of the levy, was expected to raise $30,246.37, and the balance was carried over to be taken care of in the future. In 1925 the assessed valuation was $7,774,215, and it would have required a levy of $4.83 per $1000 to discharge the total indebtedness of $37,451.89, provided there were no uncollected taxes coming over from the year 1924. The tax of $3.95 per $1000 in item 1 of the levy was expected to raise $30,708.15, and the balance was carried over to be taken care of in the future.

The proceeds of the levy made in items 3, 4, and 5 of the [5]*5order were intended to be used to discharge the ordinary, regular, annual, current expenses of the county during the year for which the tax was levied and for the purposes named in said items. The levy of .40 per $1000, made in item 8, “to pay any other lawful charges against the county,” was intended to provide funds for discharging the ordinary incidental current expenses of the county not otherwise provided for in the levy, and also for taking care of expenses which could not be anticipated. The tax of $1 per $1000 in 1924 and of $2.50 per $1000 in 1925 (each levied in item 10 of the orders) to pay salaries of county agent and for educational purposes, as provided by Acts 1922, p. 81, was a county-wide tax levied upon the recommendation of the board of education upon all property in the county subject to taxation, including property in the independent school district of Griffin, and was to be turned over to the board of education to b.e used as follows: (in 1924) $1140 to pay the salary of a home demonstration agent, and $2400 to pay the salary of the county farm agent. It was expected that the tax would raise $7667.31; and the balance of $4117.31, after paying the said salaries, was used to maintain the county school system as a supplement to the sum raised by the 5-mill school tax levied in item 11 of the order. The demonstration agent and the county farm agent were employed for the calendar year on an annual salary, and their services could be dispensed with at the end of any twelve-months period. The City of Griffin is the only independent school system in Spalding County. The tax of $1 per $1000 in item 10, levied upon the property of the Central of Georgia Eailway Company which is within the independent school system of Griffin, will raise $150.42 on a valuation of $150,424. The agreed statement of facts as to the tax of $2.50 per $1000, levied in item 10 of the order of 1925, is identical with that concerning 1924 as set forth, except as to amounts. The salaries are the same, but in 1925 the tax was expected to raise $19,435.54; and the balance of $15,895.54, after paying said salaries, was used to maintain the county school system as a supplement to the sum raised by the 5-mill school tax, as in 1924. Spalding County has adopted a system of county public schools maintained by county-wide taxation, and the tax of $5 per $1000, levied in item 11 upon the recommendation of the board of education, was levied for that purpose in pursuance of the authority granted in art. 8, sec. 4, par. 1, of [6]*6the constitution of Georgia, as amended November 2, 1920. The tax levied in item 6, “to pay expenses incurred in supporting the poor, and as otherwise prescribed by the Code of Georgia,” is intended to provide funds for the support of the poor farm and for the care of the patients at a hospital owned and maintained by the city and county. In 1920 Spalding County established and has since maintained a regular force of county police appointed by the commissioners of roads and revenues for a term of one year. The salaries and expense of said police force are a part of the regular annual expense of the county, and to pay them the board has levied a tax of .50 per $1000 in item 9 of the levy.

In the affidavits of illegality and exhibits it is alleged: (a) The railway company has paid all taxes lawfully levied for 1924,. except $846.83, which represents a tax of $1.45 per $1000 upon its property. The board of commissioners of roads and revenues levied a total tax of $22.20 per $1000 in 1924, levying a total of $6.45 per $1000 in items 1, 3, 5, and 8, for the payment of accumulated debts and all ordinary current expenses of the county, which levies are illegal and void to the extent of $1.45 per thousand, for the reason that 100 per cent, of the State tax is the maximum amount which a county can lawfully levy for the payment of its accumulated indebtedness and its current expenses.

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.E. 890, 165 Ga. 1, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-of-georgia-railway-co-v-wright-ga-1927.