Harwood v. Case

37 Iowa 692
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 Iowa 692 (Harwood v. Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harwood v. Case, 37 Iowa 692 (iowa 1873).

Opinion

Day, J.

I. The third ground of demurrer, and which the court sustained is as follows:

i. taxation. The petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in this: That it does not state that the president or managing director of the Cedar Falls an(} Minnesota Bailroad Company has drawn an order on the treasurer, defendant, for the amount of said tax, and that such order has been presented to said treasurer for payment, accompanied with estimates of the engineer in charge of the work on said road, showing that an amount equal to the amount of the tax has been expended by said company in Floyd county, in the construction of said road.”

Section 3, chapter 48. Laws 1868, provides as follows: “ That so soon as such tax lists are prepared, the tax herein provided for shall be due and collectible in the same manner as the county tax is collected; and it shall be the duty of the treasurer of the county to proceed by himself or deputy to collect [696]*696the same, and to pay it into the treasury of such county, and the same shall be paid out by such treasurer upon the order of the president or managing director of the railroad company whose road such tax is voted to aid; which order shall be accompanied by estimates of the engineer in charge of the work on such road, showing that an equal amount has been expended for the construction of such work within such county.”

It is clear under this section that as soon as the tax lists ai’e prepared the tax is due and collectible, and that it is then the d/wby of the treasurer to proceed to collect the same. This is the positive declaration of the statute. A failure of the treasurer to thus proceed to collect, is a failure to discharge a duty positively enjoined. It does not, however, follow, that whenever the treasurer is thus derelict, the corporation in whose aid the tax is voted may stimulate him to a discharge of his duty by a mandamus.

The writ of mandamus is granted upon the petition of a private party aggrieved. Rev., § 3761.

The word aggrieve here means to oppress or injure in one’s rights.

Now, whilst it is the duty of the treasurer to collect the tax and to pay it into the county treasury, the same is to be paid out by the treasurer, only upon the order of the president or managing director of the railroad company, accompanied with estimates of the engineer, showing that an equal amount has been expended within the county. Until the railroad company presents such order, accompanied with such certificates, it is not entitled to the. tax. And until it becomes so entitled it is difficult to see how it can be aggrieved, oppressed or injured in its rights by the failure of the treasurer to collect.

Certainly the treasurer should not be compelled to collect the tax and to pay it into the county treasury, when the party on whose behalf the proceeding is had is not entitled to the tax, and when it cannot be certainly known that he ever will be so entitled.

Further, section 3, chapter 2, Laws 1872, provides as follows : “ That all taxes now levied, or that may hereafter be [697]*697levied, under the provisions of chapter 48 of the acts of the twelfth general assembly, and also under the provisions of chapter 102 of the acts of the thirteenth general assembly of the State of Iowa, shall draw no interest, be subject to no penalty, nor shall the property on which such taxes are now levied, or may hereafter be levied, be sold for said taxes until the railroad company shall have been entitled to receive said taxes under the provisions of the aforesaid acts.”

This statute does not expressly provide that the tax shall not become delinquent until the railroad company is entitled to receive it, but its provisions are equivalent to such a declaration.

Chapter 48, Laws of 1868, provides when taxes are due, but it has no provision respecting their delinquency. Under the general revenue statute taxes are due on the second Monday in November, and they are delinquent on the first'dayof February following. Rev., §§ 751, 759. The consequences of this delinquency, and all the consequences thereof are, that the taxes draw a stipulated interest, and it becomes the duty of the treasurer to make the amount of the tax by distress and sale of personal property, except such as is exempt from taxation. Rev., § 756. Now the act of 1872 provides that these consequences of delinquency shall not exist until the railroad company is entitled to the tax. It certainly involves a contradiction to say that a tax is delinquent, and, at the same time, that none of the consequences of delinquency exist.

Hence, when the act of 1872 declares that the tax shall draw no interest, and that the property upon which it is imposed shall not be sold until the railroad company is entitled to the tax, it in fact declares that the tax shall not, until then, become delinquent.

Besides, it would be a vain thing to require the treasurer, by mandamus, to collect the tax, and at the same time to deny him the use of all practical means of obeying the order.

II. It is claimed, however, that as to the order of $4,000, drawn upon the treasurer in favor of O. P. Harwood, the petition does allege that a certificate of the engineer in charge [698]*698of the work was filed with, the treasurer, showing that the sum called for had been expended in the county, and that, at least to the extent of this order, the relief asked should be granted. It follows, we think, from the views already expressed that this position is unsound. We have already seen that the tax becomes delinquent, so as to draw interest and be collectible by distress of property, when the railroad company, in whose aid it is voted, becomes entitled to it.

But there is no authority anywhere for the position that a tax may become delinquent in installments. The difficulty of adjusting the amount of delinquency to each tax payer, and the great labor which would be imposed upon the treasurer, involving much expense to the county, not to mention the many complications which would arise, but which naturally suggest themselves, forbid that we should, by construction, give to the law such effect.

It is clear that if each time an order is presented, accompanied by the certificate of the engineer, a portion of the tax voted, equal to the amount of the order, becomes delinquent and subject to interest, the labor and expense of collecting the tax would be largely increased, and the confusion would become interminable.

III. It is claimed, however, that if the act of 1872 is allowed to operate retrospectively upon taxes voted under the act of 1868, it impairs the obligation of a contract and is unconstitutional.

This view we believe also to be unsound. The act of 1868 provides that the tax shall be collected when conditions do not exist that would entitle the railroad company to it when collected.

The effect of the act of 1872 is to suspend the collection until the company becomes entitled to the tax.

In other words, under the act of 1872 the same steps must precede the right to the compulsory collection of the tax, that under the act of 1868 preceded the right to have the tax paid over.

It invades no substantial right that a railroad company shall [699]

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37 Iowa 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harwood-v-case-iowa-1873.