Hallo v. Helmer

10 N.W. 568, 12 Neb. 87
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 10 N.W. 568 (Hallo v. Helmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hallo v. Helmer, 10 N.W. 568, 12 Neb. 87 (Neb. 1881).

Opinion

Lake, J.

This action was brought to enjoin the execution of a tax deed to three lots in the city of Lincoln, on the ground of the illegality of the taxes for which they were sold.

In the district court the case was sent to a referee, who found all of the material facts on which the relief was sought in favor of the plaintiffs, and recommended a decree accordingly, which was rendered. Therefore the material inquiry here is whether the facts alleged, and found by the referee, entitle the plaintiffs to the judgment which the court rendered. Referring to the petition, these facts are found to be. 1st. That the assessment was invalid for the reason that the assessor did not take and subscribe an oath, and attach the same to the assessment roll, as required by See. 12, Ch. ■66, Gen. Statutes. 2d. That the county commissioners, as a board of equalization, without notice to the plaintiffs, increased the valuation of all city property, as returned by the assessor, twenty per cent., as a basis for the levy of taxes for the year 1875. 3d That the assessment for, and the levy of, city taxes for said year were not made until about the 16th of July, whereas they should have been made much earlier. 4th. That a portion of the taxes for which said lots -were sold were [90]*90for city purposes, and it is contended that these were illegal for the reason that they were levied in violation of a certain ordinance of the city, which, in terms had exempted said lots from all such taxes from the year 1873 to 1877, inclusive, in consideration of certain private valuable improvements made thereon, which ordinance had been formally ratified and confirmed by an act of the state legislature. If these facts entitled the plaintiffs to the relief prayed, then the judgment of the court below is right and must be affirmed, but otherwise it must be reversed, and the ease dismissed for want of equity.

It should be borne in mind that this is an action which must be governed by equitable principles; and the success of the plaintiffs depend upon the bringing of their case within some one of the rules of equitable cognizance. In such dn action, a showing which, possibly, might be successful against the holder of a tax deed, in an action for the recovery of the land; may be totally inadequate as a ground for affording affirmative relief of the character here sought.

As to the oath which the statute requires the assessor to attach to his return of property for taxation, and the want of which is made the first ground of complaint, it appears that instead of uniting real and personal property, as the statute evidently contemplates, he kept the two kinds separate, thereby making, nominally, two parts of what should have been in form, as it was in legal effect, but a single assessment roll. To that part containing the list of personal property the required oath was actually attached, but to the other there was none. And this circumstance alone, it is now insisted, renders the assessment, and consequently the levy of taxes as to the realty, absolutely void. But we think this result does not follow. íáuch a ruling would be much too technical. Without the least doubt the oath which the [91]*91assessor made and attached to one division of his return was intended by him, as its terms, fairly construed, really import, to apply to his entire assessment for that-year, and to cover all of his official duties under the law. This being so, suppose for instance, that it had not been attached to either of the two parts, but instead simply returned with them, and filed in the proper office, would the entire assessment have been vitiated, and the taxes depending thereon uncollectible ? In no case, as yet, has this court gone so far as that, and we could not so hold with our present understanding of the law.

It must be conceded that in Morrill v. Taylor, 6 Neb., 236, language is used from which, perhaps, it may be-reasonably inferred that this court approved the doctrine that an actual corporeal attachment of the oath to the-assessment roll is- essential. That was a case in which the purchaser of a lot at tax sale having taken possession thereof, sought to defend it by his tax deed against the delinquent owner, in an action of law for its recovery. On the trial two very important facts stood undisputed— in fact conceded; 1st. That no assessors oath was-attached to the assessment returns; and 2d., that the county clerk having made due search could find none in his office, theplace where they ought to have been, if ever made, and then in existence. In addition to this search, no effort was made on the trial, nor was there anything in the case tending to show that the required oath had in fact been taken. From such evidence it was a legitimate inference, doubtless, that the assessor had neglected his duty in this particular, .and so the court-held.

It is apparent from this that the facts upon which that case was decided were quite different from those of the one now before us. In that, according to the evidence, no oath was in fact taken. In this, not only was one [92]*92taken in due form, but it was returned with, and actually ■attached to one section or part of the'assessment roll. There the court was not called on to decide what would be the effect of an oath really taken, returned with, but not attached to the roll, but merely as to the consequence of omitting the oath altogether. As to the necessity of the oath, this language was used in that case, and we now repeat it as a sound statement of the law: “It seems to us very clear, both upon principle and authority, that a substantial compliance with the requirements of the statute prescribing the oath to be taken and ■subscribed by the assessor, is an essential pre-requisite— a jurisdictional fact — that must exist before the board of •commissioners can exercise any powfr in the taxation of property, and that without such oath there is in law no assessment.” Clearly as there was “ in law no assessment,” of the lot there in dispute, neither was there any warrant for the levy of taxes upon it, and consequently no authority for the tax sale under which the defendant there claimed ownership, and a right to the possession he was defending. It is clear, therefore, that the decision in that case is by no means decisive of the point raised in this one as to the legality of the assessment.

■Without now determining what our holding would be in an action for the possession of the land under a tax deed resting on an assessment in the condition of this one, we aro full}1, satisfied that in a proceeding to enjoin the collection of a tax, or as here, the execution of a tax ■deed, this irregularity respecting the oath is not sufficient to warrant the court in interfering. There is at least a formal assessment, and no complaint that it is unjust. Every step that the statute requires in making it, save the actual attachment of the oath to that portion of the roll containing the description of real property, was taken, and following our decision in Lynam v. Anderson, 9 Neb., 367, we must hold that this failure to attach the [93]*93oath furnishes no just ground of complaint. A formal' assessment, even if it do not in every respect conform precisely to the requirements of the statute, will, in an equitable proceeding, support a levy of taxes, otherwise-legal. South Platte Land Company v. Crete, 11 Neb., 344. And on this point see also Wood v. Helmer, 10 Neb., 65.

The second point, that the county commissioners raised the valuation without notice to the plaintiffs is fully met ■by our decision in the case of Dundy v.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W. 568, 12 Neb. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hallo-v-helmer-neb-1881.