Idaho Power Co. v. Three Creek Good Roads District

390 P.2d 960, 87 Idaho 109, 1964 Ida. LEXIS 221
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1964
DocketNo. 9182
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 390 P.2d 960 (Idaho Power Co. v. Three Creek Good Roads District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Idaho Power Co. v. Three Creek Good Roads District, 390 P.2d 960, 87 Idaho 109, 1964 Ida. LEXIS 221 (Idaho 1964).

Opinion

KNUDSON, Chief Justice.

The appellant Three Creek Good Roads District (hereinafter referred to as “District”) was created and organized by order of the Board of County Commissioners of Owyhee County, Idaho, on August 13, 1926. The area comprising the district is located in the southeast part of Owyhee County and extends approximately 35 miles from north to south and 24 miles from east to west.

Respondent, Idaho Power Company, is a public utilities corporation engaged in intrastate and interstate generation, transmission and distribution of electrical power through portions of Idaho, Nevada and Oregon. Within said district respondent company owns and operates approximately 27 miles of transmission line and 13 miles of distribution lines.

[112]*112During the year 1959 there were 42 taxpayers, including respondent, within the district. The assessed valuation of the taxable property in the district during 1959 was $1,550,947, of which amount $1,324,434 was the assessed valuation of respondent’s property, much of which was attributable to the allocation to its transmission lines of assessed valuation of its dam and power plant situate outside the boundaries of the district.

In the year 1959, and pursuant to plans of the district to improve and blacktop 7.8 miles of a road within the district known as the “Three Creek Road” extending from the east boundary of the district westerly to the Three Creek Store, the district levied and certified to the Board of County Commissioners of Owyhee County a levy of $1.16 per $100 of assessed valuation to provide moneys for the following items:

Expenditures to November 1, 1959 $ 3,258.00

Estimated Expenditures November 1, 1959 to December 31, 1959:

Cost of Survey $ 8,800.00

Deposit — Test Soil 1,000.00

Culvert 700.00

'Miscellaneous Expenses 700.00

Backhoe Rental 500.00

Equipment Repairs 500.00

Repairs on N E road 800.00

Incidental Expenses 1,000.00

Withheld Taxes — P R 200.00

$14,200.00

TOTAL $17,458.00

It is stipulated by the parties that the items

Cost of Survey $8,800.00

Deposit — Test Soil $1,000.00

were for the improvement of said 7.8 miles of road preparatory to the blacktopping thereof.

Said levy of $1.16 per $100 .of assessed valuation was extended on the tax rolls of Owyhee County and resulted in a tax levy upon respondent’s property within the district in the amount of $15,363.43, which respondent paid under protest. $8,523.02 of said levy was attributable to the two items last above mentioned, to prepare said 7.8 miles of road for oil mat, and such sum was disbursed and distributed by the county treasurer to appellant district.

[113]*113Respondent commenced this action to recover from appellant that portion of its tax payment which was levied and collected to pay for the cost of surveying and testing preparatory to blacktopping said 7.8 miles of roadway and to enjoin and restrain the district from making or certifying any future levy for such purpose. Two principal contentions were presented by respondent, to-wit:

(1) That the levy and assessment of taxes by the district to prepare the road for blacktopping, and for blacktopping, are contrary to the provisions of I.C. § 40-1506 (as it existed during 1959) and therefore illegal and void ;
(2) That the tax levy for blacktopping the 7.8 miles of road constituted an arbitrary, discriminatory and confiscatory levy against the property of respondent, contrary to the provisions of Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and contrary to the provisions of Article 1 Section 13 of the Constitution of the State of Idaho.

Appellant filed its answer to respondent’s complaint and thereafter the cause was submitted to the trial court upon an agreed stipulation of facts.

Upon such stipulated facts the trial court concluded that the tax levy complained of did not constitute a discriminatory and arbitrary levy against respondent and did not violate the due process provisions of the Constitution of the United States or the Constitution of the State of Idaho. However, the trial court did conclude that the applicable statutes of this state did not authorize the district to make unrestrained tax levies for “extensive” or “major” improvements such as oiling or blacktopping roads within the district; that the portion of the tax levy by the district for the year 1959 for such purpose was void and respondent was entitled to judgment in the amount of $8,523.02. The court further ordered that the appellant be restrained and enjoined from making any future levies for the purposes of oiling or blacktopping a road within the district. Judgment was entered accordingly and this appeal is taken from such judgment

One of the principal issues to be resolved is whether or not the levy by the commissioners of the district for the purpose of preparing the Three Creek Road for blacktopping, was authorized under the laws of this state existing at the time of such levy.

It is fundamental that the levy and collection of the tax here challenged must be accomplished pursuant to legislative au[114]*114thority. It is stated in 84 C.J.S. Taxation § 7, p. 51, that:

“The taxing power of the state is exclusively a legislative function, and taxes can be imposed only in pursuance of legislative authority, although the general charge, control, and conduct of taxation are an executive function. In other words, the power to tax must be drawn from express statutory authority, there being no such thing as taxation by implication, and the legislative authority must be positive and not negative in nature. All doubts will be resolved against the taxing power.”

Kelsey v. Taft (1953), 72 Wyo. 210, 263 P.2d 135; Board of County Commissioners of Montgomery County v. Allen (1953), 175 Kan. 460, 264 P.2d 916. In State ex-rel. Hoover v. County of Minidoka, 50 Idaho 419, 298 P. 366, this court stated:

“All the decisions recognize that the . power of taxation is a sovereign power delegatory to local taxing districts to raise funds for one public purpose or another, but always in behalf of sovereignty for the public good.”

In Ripley v. Trinity River Canal and Conservancy Dist. (Tex.Civ.App.), 88 S.W. 2d 752, the court had under consideration the authority of the defendant district, which was created by an act of the legislature, to levy a tax against the property owners of the district. In reviewing the authority of the defendant to levy a tax, the court said:

* * * “A political subdivision of a state, such as the district in question, has no inherent power to levy taxes, and if the power exists at all, it must be expressly granted. Local taxation involves two distinct acts of legislation: (1) That by the State Legislature conferring the power to tax (absent in the instant case), and (2) that by the local body levying the tax under the authority previously given.”

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Bluebook (online)
390 P.2d 960, 87 Idaho 109, 1964 Ida. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/idaho-power-co-v-three-creek-good-roads-district-idaho-1964.