Excise Board of Tulsa County v. City of Tulsa

1937 OK 269, 68 P.2d 823, 180 Okla. 248, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 637
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 20, 1937
DocketNo. 27620.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1937 OK 269 (Excise Board of Tulsa County v. City of Tulsa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Excise Board of Tulsa County v. City of Tulsa, 1937 OK 269, 68 P.2d 823, 180 Okla. 248, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 637 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This is an appeal from an *249 order of the district court of Tulsa county granting a writ of mandamus requiring the excise board of that county to allocate or apportion the limit of ad valorem tax levy under, the provisions of the' 1933 amendment to section 9, article 10, of the Constitution. The trial court ordered the excise board to so adjust its order of allocation that the limits allowed to Tulsa county, the Tulsa school district, and the city of Tulsa would equal a total of 15 mills, and the excise board has appealed from such order.

The material facts are that on August '3, 1936, the excise board, by general order, allocated to Tulsa county 5.386 mills, to the city of Tulsa 4.581 mills, and to the Tulsa school district 4.392 mills, the effect of which appears to have been intended to limit the three subdivisions of government to not to exceed 14.359 mills. The record discloses that at the time and in the manner provided by law the three subdivisions of government had duly filed their several estimates of current needs, which, if allowed in full, would require a total levy of more than 15 mills.

The sole question presented to the trial court was whether or not it was the duty of the excise board, by reason of the provisions of the 1933 amendment to section 9, article 10, of the Constitution, to* divide the total 15-mill limit of levy provided therein among the various subdivisions of government, or whether that board is authorized by virtue of the constitutional provisions to limit said subdivisions of government to a total less than 15 mills. Incidentally with this question there also arose the question of the! power and authority of the courts to inquire into or review any action which might be taken by the excise board in connection therewith.

Section 9, article 10, of the Constitution, before amendment, provided as follows:

“Except as herein otherwise provided, the total taxes, on ad valorem basis, for all purposes, state, county, township, city or town, and school district taxes, shall not exceed in any one year thirty-one and one-half mills on the dollar, to be divided as follows:
“State levy, not more than three and one-half mills; county levy, not more than eight mills; Provided, that any county may levy not exceeding two mills additional for county high school and aid to the common schools of the county, not. over one mill of which shall be for such high school, and the aid to said common schools shall be apportioned as provided by law; township levy, not more than five mills; city or town levy, not more than ten mills; school district levy, not. more than five mills on the dollar for school district purposes, for support of common school; Provided, That the aforesaid annual rate for school purposes may be increased by any school district by an amount not to exceed ten mills on the dollar valuation, on condition that, a majority of the voters thereof voting at an election, vote for said increase.”

That part of the 1933 amendment here involved provides as follows:

“Except as herein otherwise provided, the total taxes for all purposes, on an ad valo-rem basis, shall not exceed, in any taxable year, fifteen (15) mills on the dollar, to be apportioned between county, city, town and school district, by the county excise board, until such time as the regular apportionment is otherwise provided for by the Legislature.”

The provision before amendment was a limitation of levy not to exceed 31% mills. The language of the amendment is a clear limitation of levy not to exceed 15 mills, the amendment changing the limit from 31% mills to 15 mills.

We observe that in the provision before amendment the framers of the Constitution themselves assumed the duty of particularizing or dividing the 31%-mill limit of levy between the various subdivisions of government, and they did so in the manner and by the language quoted.

The amendment, after providing for the total 15-mill limitation, continues as follows :

“* * * to be apportioned between county, city, town and school district, by the county excise board, until such time as the regular apportionment is otherwise provided for by the Legislature.”

We take it this language was employed in recognition of the fact that, some further details of the 15-mill limitation might be and should be added thereto. The people themselves did not specifically provide how the 15 mills should be divided or apportioned, as did the framers of the original constitutional provision. In the amendment the people delegated authority to the excise board to “apportion” or particularize the amendment by further apportioning or dividing the fixed total limit. The words of the amendment last above quoted grant authority to the excise board to divide or apportion the 15-mill limit, *250 and that authority was fully upheld in Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Excise Board of Washington County, 168 Okla. 619, 35 P. (2d) 274.

Webster’s International Dictionary defines the word “apportion” to mean “to divide and assign in just proportion. To divide and distribute proportionately.” It is thus seen that the power delegated to the excise board is to divide the 15-mill limit between county, city, town, and school districts. To divide a thing between three municipal subdivisions of government necessarily excludes the idea of withholding any part of the thing. The power to divide, apportion or distribute a thing does not include the power to withhold any portion of the same.

The excise board contends for the right to withhold from apportionment as much of the 15-mill limit as such board may desire, thereby further reducing the limit of levy and fixing it at any desired number of mills less than 15, by merely declining to apportion all of the 15-mill limit.

The amount here withheld from apportionment was only a fraction of one mill, but it is readily apparent, and is admitted in oral argument, that if this authority is with the excise board, then the authority exists to withhold 12 mills of the 15-mill limit and apportion only three mills; or to apportion only such portion of the 15-mill limit as is desired and withhold the balance from any apportionment.

We cannot conceive that it was the intention of the people of the state, when adopting such amendment, to place in the hands of any board authority to materially change the primary purpose and object of the amendment itself, that object being as heretofore noted, a limitation to 15 mills. It would in our opinion be a strained construction of the specific wording of the amendment itself. The words of the amendment lead more readilyl to the conclusion that it was the intention of the people for the time therein provided to permit the excise board to complete or add to the amendment a necessary or desirable element: of detail, that of apportionment or division of the limit.

The excise board contends not only for the right and power above stated, but contends further that when it has acted and apportioned any desired number of mills less than 15, its action in that regard is the exercise of a final legislative power, conclusive upon the courts, and hot reject to any judicial review.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 269, 68 P.2d 823, 180 Okla. 248, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excise-board-of-tulsa-county-v-city-of-tulsa-okla-1937.