Horton v. Driskell

77 P. 354, 13 Wyo. 66, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 23
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 77 P. 354 (Horton v. Driskell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton v. Driskell, 77 P. 354, 13 Wyo. 66, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 23 (Wyo. 1904).

Opinion

Corn, Chief Justice."

This was a suit to enjoin the collection, by the County of Weston, of taxes upon 1,500 head of range cattle. A temporary injunction was allowed and upon the hearing the court found in favor of the plaintiff and rendered judgment making the injunction perpetual. The plaintiff (defendant in error here) alleged in his petition that he paid taxes upon all his cattle in Crook County, where his home range was located, and that he had no cattle in Weston except such as had drifted there off their home range and were not subject to taxation in the latter county. The defendant, after a general denial, answered that the home range of plaintiff was in both Crook and Weston; that the 1,300 head in question were ranging, kept, herded and located in Weston, and plaintiff did not pay taxes upon them in Crook; that he did not list them to the assessor of Weston and the latter failed to assess them, but they were added to the assessment roll by the Board of Equalization.

A third defense set out, in substance, that the 1,500 head, upon which the tax in controversy was levied, were brought into the County of Weston by defendant in error after the regular annual assessment, and, not having been listed by him or assessed by the assessor, were added to the assessment roll by the Board of Equalization, the claim of plaintiff in error being that they were subject to taxation under Sections 1798 and 1799, Revised Statutes. Plaintiff in -error also annexed to his answer a list of interrogatories which he prayed that the plaintiff be required to answer.

The defendant presented a motion that the. plaintiff be non-suited in. the action because of his failure to answer the interrogatories annexed to the answer of the defendant. [73]*73which motion the court denied. This ruling is assigned as error.

The statute (Sec. 3575) provides that “answers to interrogatories may be enforced by non-suit, judgment by default or by attachment, as the justice of the case may require.” There is nothing in the statute which requires that a plaintiff be non-suited for a failure to answer interrogatories, but the provision is that they may be enforced by non-suit or otherwise, “as the justice of the case may require.” This commits the matter to the sound discretion of the court. The record in no way discloses by what facts or circumstances the court was guided in the exercise of its discretion, and we are, therefore, unable to say that it was abused. (Longstreth v. Halsey, 4 C. C. (Ohio), 307; Newburg v. Weare, 44 O. St., 604; Railway Co. v. Construction Co., 49 O. St., 681.)

Upon the motion of the plaintiff, the court required the defendant, over his objection, to elect whether he would rely upon the first and second defenses, or upon the first and third defenses, stated in his answer. The defendant thereupon elected to rely upon his first and second defenses. This ruling is also assigned as error.

Upon what principle the defendant was required to elect is not very clear. The defenses were not inconsistent even if that would justify the court in requiring an election between them. It might be that the plaintiff had that number of cattle ranging in the county on April 1st, and also that he brought into the county an equal number after that date and prior to the assessment by the Board of Equalization in June. Or it might well be that a portion of the number assessed were in the county and subject to taxation at the time of the annual assessment on April 1st, and that the remainder were brought in and became taxable subsequent to that date and prior to the assessment. In either case he had the right to plead the facts, and he had the right to so plead them as to cover whatever state of circumstances might be developed by the evidence. The [74]*74ruling, in effect, struck out the third defense and deprived the defendant of that right, and we think it was clearly erroneous. As the evidence is not brought up in the bill .of exceptions, we are unable to determine how far it operated to the prejudice of the defendant, but we are not at liberty to presume that he had no evidence to support the allegations.

But, at the conclusion of the hearing, the court found, as conclusions of fact, that the plaintiff, on and after the 1st of April, had some cattle ranging in Weston County; that they were not listed for taxation by him nor assessed by the assessor; that the assessor returned an assessment roll, but entirely failed to attach to it the oath required by statute, and the Board of Equalization added the cattle in question to such roll.

The court further found as conclusions of law, first, that the failure of the assessor to attach the statutory oath rendered the assessment roll and the levy of taxes thereunder wholly invalid; second, that the assessment made by the Board of Equalization was invalid for the reason that no property whatever was assessed by the assessor against the plaintiff, and, third, that the plaintiff was entitled to a perpetual injunction as prayed. There was no finding whether the property in question was subject to taxation in Weston County, and the effect of the decision of the court, as we understand it, is that the remedy by Injunction is available, upon a failure of the assessing officers to comply with the requirements of the statute, without regard to the question whether the property was legalfy subject to taxation in the particular jurisdiction or not. We do not understand this to be the law.

It is true that where it is sought to sustain tax titles or sales for taxes, it is generally held that the requirements of the statute must be substantial^ complied with, and not only the sale, but the lev)’- and assessment, must be made in the manner required; and when the oath of the assessor is required to be attached to the assessment roll and the as[75]*75sessor fails in this duty, the omission renders the assessment roll void as a basis for the proceedings of sale and invalidates the sale. But when equitable relief is sought, the maxim is applied that he who seeks equity must do equity, and an injunction will not be allowed on account of the mere failure of the taxing officers to fulfill the requirements of the statute in the levy and assessment, but it must appear that the tax itself is inequitable, for the reason that the property was not taxable or that it was not the property of the complainant, or the like.

The Supreme Court of Illinois early laid down the rule that it is only in extraordinary cases that the writ of injunction is properly invoked, and that the exceptions are confined almost, if not entirely, to cases where the tax itself is not authorized by law, or if the tax itself is authorized, it is assessed upon property which is not subject to the tax. (C. B. & Q. R. R. Co. v. Frary, 22 Ill., 37.)

The doctrine announced by the Wisconsin court is that a court of equity will not interfere to declare a tax invalid and restrain its collection, unless the objections to the proceeding are such as to go to the very groundwork of the tax and necessarily affect materially its principle and show that it must necessarily be unjust and unequal; that it is not enough to show that the tax proceedings are irregular or void,-but it must also appear that they are inequitable, and that it will be against conscience to lgt them go on. (Hixon v. Oneida County, 82 Wis., 531.) When a taxpayer undertakes to stop the officers of the law from collecting a tax charged against his property by a proceeding in equity, he should be required to demonstrate by his complaint that his property is not legally or equitably chargeable therewith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 P. 354, 13 Wyo. 66, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-driskell-wyo-1904.