Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Independent District

99 Iowa 556
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 26, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 Iowa 556 (Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Independent District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Independent District, 99 Iowa 556 (iowa 1896).

Opinion

Rothrock, C. J.

The above-entitled actions involve the same questions, and were consolidated in the court below, and tried as one case. They are presented in the same way in this court, and will be disposed of in one opinion.

The actions were commenced on the twenty-first day of* March, 1894. In the suit by the railroad company, it seeks to recover of the defendant about two thousand dollars, with interest, for school taxes paid upon the assessments and levies for the years 1888, 1890, and 1892. The said taxes were alleged to be void because the board of directors of the district did not pass the resolution levying or assessing the taxes until after the time fixed by law. In the year 1888, the resolution of the board making the levy was passed and certified on the seventeenth day of April, 1888. In the year 1890, the defendant made its levy of school taxes on the twentieth day of July. And in the year 1892, the levy was made on the fifteenth of August. All of the taxes were placed upon the tax [558]*558books, and were paid by the plaintiff before they became delinquent.

1 II. In the other action, in the name of F. Benjamin, he seeks to recover of the defendant for taxes which he paid on his own property, as well as on the property of some twenty-one other tax-payers, who assigned their claims against the plaintiff to said Benjamin. The petition in this last case is in fifty-seven counts. It is wholly unnecessary to make any further statement of the claims of the plaintiffs, further than to say that both cases involve the validity of the school tax for the years above named. In the last named case, Benjamin demands judgment for two thousand six hundred dollars. It is averred in both petitions that the plaintiffs had no knowledge that the taxes were levied after the time fixed by law, until after all the said taxes were paid. The defendant answered the petitions by setting up a legalizing act which was passed by the Twenty-fifth General Assembly. That act is entitled “An act to legalize the acts of the board of directors of the independent district of Avoca in the levying of taxes for school purposes.” The body of the act is as follows: “The action of said board in making said levy on the * * * 17th day of August, 1888, on the 22d day of July, 1890, and on the 15th day of August, 1892, instead of on, or before, the third Monday in May of each of said years, is hereby declared to be legal and valid, the same as if said tax had been levied on or before the third Monday in May aforesaid.” The plaintiffs demurred to the answer. The principal ground of the demurrer was that said curative, or legalizing act, was unconstitutional and void, in that it was “an attempt to accomplish by a special law that which should have been accomplished, if at all, by a law of general and uniform operation throughout the state, and affecting all [559]*559independent school districts in the state in the same manner under like circumstances.” This was the only-real ground of the demurrer. The other so-called causes of demurrer are in the nature of an argument by the pleader. The demurrer was overruled on the fifteenth day of August, 1894; and no other pleading was filed in the case until the twenty-seventh day of November, in the same year, when the plaintiffs replied by pleading that three other school districts in the state levied their school taxes for the year 1890 after the time required by law, and one other district made its levies for the years 1888 and 1892, after the proper time. These districts are named in the reply, and one of them is located in each of the counties of Wayne, Winneshiek, Sioux, and Pottawattamie. This is the only material avernnent in the reply. Other parts of it are, in substance, repetitions of the demurrer, or arguments of counsel, which are fully discussed in the printed argument on the submission of the case in this court.

III. The cause was submitted in the district court mainly upon an agreed statement of facts, some of which are claimed by appellants to be immaterial, and improper to be considered in deciding the case. It is conceded that the plaintiffs, including Benjamin’s assignors, did not know until after all the taxes in controversy were paid that the district did not make the respective levies until after the time fixed by statute within which the levies should have, been made. It is not charged, and there is no evidence tending to show, that any other irregularity in making the levies existed. No claim is made that the property of said taxpayers was not liable for school taxes, nor that the levies were excessive or unreasonable. It is admitted that the taxes in question were for the ordinary purposes of the district, and that the money was used by the district in payment of the teachers, and for [560]*560necessary contingent expenses in maintaining the schools in the district. No question was made as to the legality of the taxes until a short time before these suits were commenced, when a demand was made upon the district to repay the money. It will be observed that the taxes in question were voluntarily paid. It may be true, as claimed in behalf of appellants, that this fact is of no consequence, as the payments were made in ignorance of the fact that the levies were not made until after the time fixed by statute. The plaintiffs plant themselves upon their strict legal rights. It is apparent that there are no equitable grounds upon which they can demand relief. The policy of the law is that the burden of taxation shall be imposed with strict equality upon all taxpayers. The plaintiffs were, no doubt, moved to commence these actions because of the case of Standard Coal Co. v. Independent District of Argus, 73 Iowa, 304 (34 N. W. Rep. 870). They rely on that case as absolutely conclusive of their right to recover, unless it should be held that the curative act above cited is held to be valid. That was an action to enjoin the collection of a tax. The tax involved in that case and the taxes in the cases at bar were levied under the same statute, which provides that “no tax shall be levied by the board after the third Monday in May.” It was held that the tax was not simply erroneous, but that it was void, and that an injunction was the proper remedy. The plaintiffs in that case were aggrieved by the levy of an erroneous school tax amounting* to fifty mills, or five per cent, upon the assessed valuation of their property. It is not to be denied, however, that the opinion was founded upon the ground that the tax was void because it was levied after the time fixed by law. We need not further consider that decision, nor determine whether it is applicable under the conceded facts in these appeals. We will dispose of the case [561]*561upon other grounds, which we will now proceed to consider.

2 IY. As we have said, the curative act above referred to, is claimed to be unconstitutional for the. reason that it is a local or special law, and that a general law could have been made applicable and operative throughout the state, as required by section 30, article 3, of the constitution of this state. This is not a new or novel question in this court. Under the pleadings in the- case, when the ruling was made on the demurrer, there is no doubt that the court rightly held that the act was constitutional. The precise question has been determined by this court in many cases. The fact that the law was retrospective in its effect is no valid objection to its validity. In Boardman v. Beckwith,

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Bluebook (online)
99 Iowa 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-v-independent-district-iowa-1896.