City of Crystal Springs v. Copiah County

42 So. 2d 188, 207 Miss. 257, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 335
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1949
DocketNo. 37193.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 188 (City of Crystal Springs v. Copiah County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Crystal Springs v. Copiah County, 42 So. 2d 188, 207 Miss. 257, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 335 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

*261 Smith, J.

This case comes to us from a final decree dismissing appellant’s original bill of complaint, upon its refusal to plead further after the Chancery Court had sustained a general demurrer. Therefore we must have recourse to the averments of the bill for the facts on which appellant relies to sustain its contention.

The bill of complaint was filed by appellant, the City of Crystal Springs, in the Chancery Court seeking to obtain from Copiah County one-half of the ad valorem “road and bridge taxes collected on property situated in the municipality for the years 1940-1946”, to quote from appellant’s brief. On the other hand, it is stated in appellee’s brief that appellant is “seeking to recover $22,698.38 alleged to be the municipality’s share of ad valorem taxes collected for bridge purposes by the County for the yeai’s 1940 to 1945 inclusive”.

The specific prayer of the original bill is, “1. That the Board of Supervisors of Copiah County be held to have made its annual levy for ‘bridges’ as an annual ad valorem levy for general road and bridge purposes pursuant to the provisions of Section 6390, Mississippi Code 1930, and the same section as brought forward in the Mississippi Code of 1942 as Section 8358; and that the proceeds of such levies for the years 1940, 1941, 1942, *262 1943, 1944, 1945 and 1946 were part and parcel of the general road and bridge funds of the county; 2. That complainant be decreed to be entitled to one-half of all such taxes collected on property situated within its corporate limits for the years herein above mentioned; and that it shall have a decree adjudging that complainant do have and recover of and from defendant one-half of all such ad valorem taxes collected for said years on property within the corporate limits of complainant and in the total sum of $26,904.55 with lawful interest thereon from the respective due dates”, together with costs. And general relief.

The original bill charges that appellant is a Code municipality in the Fifth Supervisor’s District of Copiah County, and that its streets have been and are worked at the expense of the City Treasury, and by municipal authority. On December 4th, 1928, the Board of Mayor and Aldermen regularly adopted a resolution notifying Copiah County Board of Supervisors to that effect and that it would claim one-half of the ad valorem taxes assessed and collected for road purposes by the county on property situated in the City of Crystal Springs for the fiscal year 1928-1929 and each year thereafter. It was further averred that a certified copy of this resolution or order was immediately served on the board of supervisors and has not since been amended or appealed. Payments were made accordingly prior to the year 1940.

It was also alleged by the complainant that the appellee County “maintains its roads and bridges out of funds derived from an annual ad valorem tax levy on the taxable property of the county, and from gasoline taxes and motor vehicle fees apportioned and allocated to the county by state authority, and motor vehicle fees collected by the tax collector of the county”.

A copy of the municipal resolution served on the board of supervisors is filed as an exhibit to the bill of complaint. So are “copies of the tax levy for each of the *263 years above referred to, as published by the clerk of the said Board of Supervisors as required by Section 9890, Code of 1942, (Section 3228, Code of 1930) . . . and made a part hereof”.

¡Turning to the exhibited tax levies we find that each of them contains the following levy: “Bridges”, so many mills. None of them contain any levy for “roads”, except that for 1946-1947, which particular claim was never submitted to the Board of Supervisors for payment.

There is set forth in the original bill a detailed and itemized statement of the amounts collected by the County from its ad valorem taxation of the property in appellant’s corporate limits for the years 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945, with one-half thereof claimed as due the City of Crystal Springs.

However, complainant concedes that for the years 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, and 1944, that the only ad valorem tax levy for “road and bridge” (as it is put in its brief) purposes made by the board of supervisors was a county wide levy for the maintenance and construction of bridges, furthermore averring that for 1945 it was only for bridges; that from 1940 to 1944 such funds were set up on the county’s books separately as “Bridge Funds”, but were used indiscriminately for general road purposes along with other road funds; and in 1945 this separate account was discontinued and commingled such collections with other road and bridge funds, making no effort to use them exclusively for bridge purposes.

It is then charged that Section 6390, Code 1930, Section 8358, Code 1942, required the board of supervisors to levy an annual ad valorem tax for road and bridge purposes. The position is then taken in its bill that “since only one ad valorem tax levy for any road purpose has been annually made, during the years herein mentioned, by said board of supervisors, complainant charges that said board should be held to have made such annual *264 levies under the mandatory statute referred to and the complainant has become and is entitled to recover of and from defendant one-half of all such taxes collected on property'situated in said municipality, in accordance with the order of the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of Crystal Springs dated December 4, 1928, Exhibit A hereto, and the provisions of Section 6417, Mississippi Code 1930, and Section 8367, Mississippi Code of 1942.”

In view of the intricate, albeit intriguing, complaint of the appellant it is believed to be helpful to quote its averments, charging appellees- with a fraudulent scheme to deprive the municipality of its share of the ad valorem taxes at issue. Says the appellant: “Complainant further charges that the board of supervisors aforesaid and for the years aforesaid has undertaken to defeat the right of complainant to its part of the taxes collected for road purposes which were assessed against property within its corporate limits by refusing to make any tax levy annually for road purposes in name, but has such levy in each year by referring to the levy as one for ‘Bridges’, and has then used the proceeds therefrom for general road purposes. Complainant further charges that such administrative device so adopted by said board was fraudulently devised to deprive complainant of its-rights under the law to its lawful share of ad valorem tax collection as herein above set out; that defendant’s continuous course of conduct in the use of the taxes so levied and collected during the years mentioned demonstrates the intent of the said board of supervisors to deprive complainant of its said right; and that defendant should be held by this Court to have done that which the law required it to do, towit: that it has made its annual levy each year under the mandatory provisions of the statute referred to.”

Inasmuch as the appellee ignored the notice to it from the Board of Mayor and Aldermen of appellant for the years involved in the suit, demand was made upon it, by *265

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 188, 207 Miss. 257, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-crystal-springs-v-copiah-county-miss-1949.