City of Montpelier v. Central Vermont Railway Co.

93 A. 1047, 89 Vt. 36, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 10, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 93 A. 1047 (City of Montpelier v. Central Vermont Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Montpelier v. Central Vermont Railway Co., 93 A. 1047, 89 Vt. 36, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 183 (Vt. 1915).

Opinion

Haselton, J.

This is an action under §§644, 645, 646, of the Public Statutes as amended by No.' 52 of the Acts of 1910. It is brought to collect, in the manner therein provided, taxes assessed in 1911 on three pieces of railroad property separately set in the grand list, and collector’s fees. One piece is set in as about three-eighths of an acre of land leased to B. Blair, R. C. Bowers, and E. W. Bailey & Co., another piece is called the Langdon meadow, and is set in the list as 18 acres of land with buildings on Winooski Avenue. The third piece is called the Nicholas meadow and is described in the list as 24 acres of land and storehouse. There are farm buildings on the Langdon meadow, and there is a storehouse on the Nicholas meadow. The Langdon meadow and the Nicholas meadow adjoin • each other, and both belonged to the Langdon estate until October, 1910, when they were purchased by the defendant company.

[39]*39The defendant pleaded the general issue with notice of special matter in defence. Trial by jury was had, and verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff for the sum of $358.21, being the amount of the taxes claimed and collector’s fees. The defendant brings a bill of exceptions.

The defendant, under an exception taken in the course of the trial, claims that the city of Montpelier could not collect a tax by suit, in the manner here attempted, on the ground that the statute permitting a tax to be collected in such proceeding is applicable only to taxes imposed or assessed under certain chapters of the Public Statutes named in the act authorizing this procedure. Acts of 1910, No. 52, §1. But the chapters referred to are the ones under which the city of Montpelier and other cities, as well as towns, impose and assess taxes. These chapters contain the general tax law as to quadrennial appraisals and the making up of grand lists and the assessment of taxes thereon, and the city of Montpelier has no other authority under which it can impose and assess taxes. Minor details as to procedure do not affect the fact that the authority to impose and assess taxes is found in the chapters referred to. There is no doubt about the intent of the Legislature as derived from its legislative acts. Cities are not named because in this matter the word “towns” applies to cities. P. S. §22.

The defendant claimed and claims that the declaration was insufficient. But the statute says what shall be a sufficient declaration, and the declaration meets the statutory requirements. The defendant’s claim is that the declaration should show things which the statute says it need not show, and such a claim is without merit. The specifications filed were amended to the satisfaction of the defendant.

Before treating the exceptions to evidence and the other numerous exceptions we point out that, under the statute sued upon, we have no occasion to consider claimed grounds of the invalidity of the whole or any portion of the tax except in so far as the notice sets forth the “particular grounds” of the claimed invalidity, but that when such grounds are so set forth in the notice the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff “in so far as the validity of the tax is so put in issue. ’ ’ Acts of 1910, No. 52, §2.

On trial the plaintiff, under objection and exception, introduced in evidence a certified copy of the warning of the March [40]*40meeting for 1911. The eleventh article of the warning read: ‘‘ To see if the city will vote a tax for the payment of debts and current expenses of the city.” The defendant’s objection was that the article was so general that a valid tax could not be assessed by virtue of it. We think this article in the warning was admissible. The city council has rather extensive powers. The charter provides that it shall assess taxes upon the grand list of the city for such purposes as the city at a meeting warned for that purpose may vote; and one of the purposes, named among others, is,.“the payment of the debts and current expenses of the city.” Again the charter provides that the money raised by taxation, fines, and other lawful sources, except the sale of bonds, “shall constitute the entire sum from which appropriations and payments are to be made by the authority of the city council; but that the money raised by bonds shall be appropriated and paid out for the purposes for which the bonds were issued.” Acts of 1900, §§47, 55.

The city meeting does not have to vote separate and respective sums for the maintenance of the police, the support of the poor, the current expenses of the fire department, those of the water department, and so on; but appropriations for these various departments and purposes are to be made by the city council out of the tax raised to meet the current expenses of the city.

The plaintiff offered in evidence a certified copy of the records of the city meetings so far as it related to certain articles of the warning.

Article Nine reads: “To see if the city will make some provision for the payment of its bonded indebtedness.”

Article Ten was of the following tenor: “To see if the city will vote a tax sufficient to raise the amount of money estimated by the board of school commissioners. as necessary for school purposes. ’ ’

Article Eleven is that which has been quoted earlier in the opinion.

When Articles Nine and Ten were reached it was voted to pass them over.

The record as to Article Eleven relating to a tax for the payment of the debts and current expenses of the city is as follows: “Voted on motion of George L. Blanchard that a tax of $1.60’ on the grand list be voted to include the furnishing of the City ITall, and ten cents of the same to be applied on the in[41]*41debtedness of the city. This motion to cover Articles Nine, Ten, and Eleven.”

The defendant objected to the record of the city meeting on the following grounds: Because the action taken under Article Eleven was unintelligible in that it jumbled together three different things; because before the vote was taken under Article Eleven, Articles Nine and Ten had been passed over; and because the record does not show what the vote taken may have covered, and that the record does not declare the result of the vote if there was one. The objection was overruled and in this there was no error. By passing over Articles Nine and Ten the voters were able to see, by the vote taken on Article Eleven, more distinctly the aggregate tax which they were voting, while at the same time they could see what amount they were voting on the indebtedness of the city to which Article Nine related, and that the tax voted included the amount estimated by the school commissioners as necessary for school purposes, which under the charter became, upon the action of the school commissioners, a fixed sum which the city council was bound to raise by assessment. Acts of 1900, No. 162, §47.

The policy of the Legislature as expressed in the charter of the city of Montpelier is to commit to a board of school commissioners, having in charge the one matter of the management and control of the schools, the sole right to determine, within certain limits, the sum which shall be raised for the support of schools. Acts of 1900, No. 162, §§89, 93, 94, and 47.

These charter provisions are not in their essential character peculiar to the city of Montpelier, but are expressed in other city charters.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Addison County Community Action v. City of Vergennes
565 A.2d 233 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1989)
Oregon Short Line R. v. Ada County
18 F. Supp. 842 (D. Idaho, 1937)
Town of Brattleboro v. Carpenter Tr.
158 A. 73 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1932)
Town of Williamstown v. Williamstown Co.
144 A. 203 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1929)
Town of Bristol v. Bristol Railroad
100 A. 37 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1917)
Sears v. Dewing
96 Mass. 413 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1867)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 1047, 89 Vt. 36, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-montpelier-v-central-vermont-railway-co-vt-1915.