Clark v. Maher

87 P. 272, 34 Mont. 391, 1906 Mont. LEXIS 87
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1906
DocketNo. 2,311
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 P. 272 (Clark v. Maher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Maher, 87 P. 272, 34 Mont. 391, 1906 Mont. LEXIS 87 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

Between the first Monday in March, 1904, and the 1st of July following, the assessor of Silver Bow county required from W. A. Clark & Brother, copartners engaged in business as private bankers, in Silver Bow county, a statement showing all their real and personal property subject to taxes for that year. They returned the list of property which showed real estate of the value of $127,610, which valuation was subsequently raised by the board of equalization to $132,610, and personal property listed substantially as follows:

Moneys on hand or in transit, $403,869.27;

Due from other banks, bankers, etc., subject to draft, $1,203,059.47;

[398]*398Bills and accounts receivable and other credits, $1,657,533.52;

Deposits made by other persons, $3,686,397.89.

They asked that the amount of debts (deposits) be deducted from the aggregate amount of moneys and credits, including money due from other banks, bankers, etc., and stated that the list was furnished pursuant to section 3695 of the Political Code. On July 9th following, Clark & Brother received from the assessor a copy of the list so furnished by them, with a statement by the assessor attached thereto, that under the law the only deductions which could be made from bills and accounts receivable are accounts payable other than current deposits, and, as no such accounts had been returned, he, the assessor, had assessed to them the amount of bills and accounts receivable, $1,657,550, less the value of real estate returned, $127,610, leaving the net value of personal property assessed to them, $1,529,940. Application was made to the board of equalization for relief, which was denied.

The taxes levied upon the real estate were paid before November 30, 1904; but the taxes levied upon the solvent credits, $1,529,940, were not paid, and, on December 19, 1904, the county treasurer published the delinquent tax list, including therein this item: “Clark, W. A. & Bro., Bankers — North 2214 feet, lot 1, block 29, Butte Townsite, sold for taxes on solvent credits, including deposits in bank, $27,937.20.” To this delinquent tax list was attached the usual notice by the treasurer that, unless the taxes were paid, the real estate upon which such taxes were a lien would be sold to satisfy the same on January 9, 1905. Prior to the last date this action was commenced.

An amended complaint was filed setting forth the facts herein mentioned and asking that the county treasurer be restrained from selling the real estate mentioned above. To this amended complaint the defendant county treasurer interposed a general demurrer, which was sustained by the court, and, the plaintiffs having elected to stand on their amended complaint, judgment was entered in favor of the defendant, from which judgment the plaintiffs appealed.

[399]*399Apparently W. A. Clark & Brother, in returning their list to the assessor, proceeded upon the theory that they could deduct their debts from moneys on hand under those provisions of subdivision 8, section 3695, above, allowing such deduction to be made, and the remainder of their debts they could deduct from their solvent credits under the provisions of section 3701 of the same Code, and thereby eliminate for the purpose of assessment all their personal property. The assessor and board of equalization apparently proceeded upon the theory that those provisions of subdivision 8, section 3695 above, only, were applicable to appellants’ case, and, therefore, their solvent credits were liable for taxation without allowing any deduction for debts due by them. In this court, however, appellants practically concede that the provisions of section 3701 only are applicable to this case.

This action was commenced prior to the enactment of the amendment to section 3695. (Session Laws 1905, p. 54, Chap. XXY.) It is to be observed that there is a direct conflict between the provisions of section 3701, above, and that portion of subdivision 8 of section 3695, which provides for a deduction of debts (deposits) from money on hand and in transit, and which further provides that only deposits other than current deposits may be deducted from bills and accounts receivable and other credits. Section 3701 authorizes any taxpayer to deduct or have deducted from his credits all debts then owing by him; but this section does not authorize the deduction of debts from money on hand, and, if it attempted to do so, would clearly violate the provisions of the Constitution.

In Daly Bank & Trust Co. v. Board of Commissioners, 33 Mont. 101, 81 Pac. 950, this court held that the provisions of section 3701 are general and applicable alike to all taxpayers, whether natural persons or corporations, and we see no reason for receding from that position now. This being so, and the provisions of section 3701 conflicting directly with those of subdivision 8 of section 3695 above, the provisions of section 3701 prevail, for there is not anything in such.a construction [400]*400inconsistent with the meaning of.the Chapter in which both sections are found. This is the rule of construction provided by section 5165 of the Political Code which reads: “If conflicting provisions are found in different sections of the same chapter or article, the provisions of the section last in numerical order must prevail, unless such construction is inconsistent with the meaning of such Chapter or Article.”

Furthermore, the attempt of the legislature to authorize private bankers to deduct their debts from moneys on hand is abortive. That portion of subdivision 8 of section 3695 above referred to is in direct contravention of sections 11 and 16, Article XII, of the Constitution of Montana.

These appellants, having made timely demand, were entitled to have their debts deducted from their credits (Daly Bank & Trust Co. v. Board of Commissioners, above), and this notwithstanding they mistakenly thought they could also deduct such debts from moneys on hand. The assessor could not have been misled by any statement of appellants attached to their list of property, respecting the particular provisions of the Code under which they assumed that their assessment would be made. The assessor’s duty was to make the assessment according to law, not according to what appellants may have thought the law was or ought to be.

But it is said that, adding together the amounts of the moneys on hand and in transit and the amounts due from other banks, bankers, etc., practically the same amount (though larger) is obtained as that upon which the assessment was made; and, as appellants did not pay the taxes on the greater amount they cannot complain that they are required to pay on the lesser amount. But such an argument, while it may have some foundation in morals, has none in law. In the first place, moneys due from other banks and bankers are credits within the definition of that term as given by section *3680 of the Political Code. In the second place, to say that, because one species of property which a man does own is not assessed, he may be made to pay taxes on property which he does not own, or on property [401]*401which he does own but which is not liable for taxation, violates almost every principle of the law of taxation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P. 272, 34 Mont. 391, 1906 Mont. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-maher-mont-1906.