Greer County Excise Board v. Lowden

1936 OK 361, 57 P.2d 612, 177 Okla. 7, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 28, 1936
DocketNo. 26962.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1936 OK 361 (Greer County Excise Board v. Lowden) 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
Greer County Excise Board v. Lowden, 1936 OK 361, 57 P.2d 612, 177 Okla. 7, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 715 (Okla. 1936).

Opinions

.WELCH, J.

On October 16. 1935, the excise board of Greer county filed its 1935-36 county budgets with the State Auditor. There was included in this budget an item of $10,000 appropriated for the “construction of bridges” and financed by an ad va-lorem tax levy. This item appears not to have been properly itemized as provided by law, and protest on that ground was filed on November 18, 1935.

On December 2, 1935', the board of county commissioners of Greer county passed the following resolution:

“Whereas the board of county commissioners of Greer county, Okla., made a financial statement for the fiscal year 1934-35 and an estimate of needs for the fiscal year 1985-36, and filed the same with the excise board of Greer county, Okla., September 14, 1935, and
“Whereas, in above referred to estimate of needs for the county highway fund, in account No. 34, the county commissioners certified to the excise hoard a sum of $10,-000, listed for the purpose and reflected in said estimate for the construction of bridges, and
“Whereas, said $10,000 so listed as above set forth was not for the construction of bridges, but was in truth and fact, estimated for maintenance of roads and bridges:
“Whereas, the excise board of Greer county approved the above referred to $10,000 as requested and certified to them by the county commissioners;
“Therefore, the county commissioners request that the excise board reconvene for the purpose of correcting said estimate by striking the words ‘Construction of Bridges’ and (15) inserting the words ‘Maintenance of Roads and Bridges.' ”

On December 6, 1935, the excise board met and in pursuance of the aforesaid resolution of the board of county commissioners passed the following resolution :

“We, the excise board of Greer county, Okla., being in called session this 6th day of December, 1935, pass the following resolution :
“Be it resolved, by the excise board of Greer county, Okla., that the words ‘Construction of Bridges’ be stricken from the 1935-36 budget and the words ‘Maintenance of Roads and Bridges’ inserted in lieu thereof ; and we hereby approve the said $10,000 litem for the purpose of maintenance of roads and bridges. This $10,000 correction is added to and approved in addition to $18,615.38, which has heretofore been approved by the excise board, making a total sum of $28,615.38, approved and allowed for the purpose of maintenance of roads and bridges in Greer county, Okla.”

Notice of the contemplated action of the excise board was published in apparent conformity of law, and this action of the excise *9 board was properly made a matter of record in the office of the State Auditor and clerk of ike Court of Tax Review.

Upon hearing by the Court of Tax Review that court sustained the protest upon the grounds that the item for construction of bridges was not sufficiently itemized, and ordered the same stricken and the tax levy reduced accordingly. The judgment of that court apparently ignored this action of the excise board upon the theory that such board was without authority to so act.

It is urged by the taxing officials that it ■was the legal right and duty of the excise board to correct the items of appropriation, in the manner shown.

The protestants assert that the approprV ation for construction of bridges was not properly itemized (and this appears to be conceded), and assert further that the taxing officials were without authority to alter or change the budget as was here done.

Whatever may have been the original intention on the part of the taxing officials as to the purpose of this $10,000 appropriation, it is urged that the original item of appropriation, ,as actually made by the excise board, was in reality an appropriation for construction of bridges, and that it was not itemized as required by statute, and that the action taken by the taxing officials on December 2d and 6th, respectively, although termed by the taxing officials a correction, was legally equivalent to the striking from the budget of the $10,000 appropriation for construction of bridges and the levy originally made therefor, and the adding to the budget of an additional item of $10,000 for the maintenance of roads and bridges with the levying or relevying of a tax for same. It is not questioned but that the item of $10,000 is sufficiently itemized under the classification of maintenance of roads and bridges, nor that the total tax finally levied or sought to be levied is in excess of any constitutional or statutory limit otherwise.

Section 12306, O. S. 1931, provides :

“The excise board may reconvene at any time within 60 days after the filing, of the budgets and levies with the State Auditor and reduce any protested budgets and levies which the excise board deems to be illegal.”

This provision of the statute specifically grants authority to the excise board to convene at any time within 60 days after the filing of budgets and reduce any protested budgets and levies. In the instant case the excise board did convene or reconvene within 60 days after the filing of the budget, and reduced the specific item protested by entirely striking the same from the budget. This it -was specifically authorized to do by statute, aside from what might have been its incidental power or authority. See Prank O. Lowden v. Caddo County Excise Board, 176 Okla. 213, 55 P. (2d) 472.

Strictly speaking, it might be said that the striking of this $10,000 item from the budget, which was the specific item protested, effectively disposed of the protest in the exact form as filed. In view of the fact, however, that an additional appropriation was made in an amount equal to the amount stricken, and the tax relevied or a new tax levied in the same amount, the subsequent act of the taxing officials is of considerable public importance, and we must determine whether or not the local taxing officials could in December, 1935, and under the fact situation .as here presented, add the sum of $16,000 to its appropriation properly itemized and levy a tax to finance the same. We observe that the former attempt to levy the tax in dispute was ineffective by reason of the'fact that the appropriation item for which it was levied was not properly itemized. We then inquire whether or not the original attempt to levy the - tax exhausted the power of the local taxing officials to levy the same. On this subject we find the following statement in Cooley on Taxation, 4th Ed., vol. 3, p. 2097, par. 1035:

“The taxing power once conferred is presumptively continuous, and to be exercised again and again as often as may be required by the exigencies of government and as often as may be consistent with the act of delegation. But custom has much to do with the construction of such powers, and sometimes a single exercise must be deemed to exhaust the power for the time being, when the custom is to tax but once within a certain period of time; as for instance, within the year. And this is the general custom in the case of local taxes. If the amount of tax which by law can be imposed for the year is already levied, the authority is of course exhausted, and a further levy under any pretense is void.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 361, 57 P.2d 612, 177 Okla. 7, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-county-excise-board-v-lowden-okla-1936.