In Re Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co.'s Taxes in Eddy County

63 P.2d 345, 41 N.M. 9
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1936
DocketNo. 4154.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 63 P.2d 345 (In Re Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co.'s Taxes in Eddy County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co.'s Taxes in Eddy County, 63 P.2d 345, 41 N.M. 9 (N.M. 1936).

Opinion

SADLER, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an order entered in a proceeding instituted by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Railway Company, as petitioner, in the district court of Eddy county to secure a correction of the tax rolls of said county for the year 1933, by striking therefrom a certain levy against all the property of petitioner. No one is named as defendant or respondent in the petition filed, but upon filing of the petition an order to show cause was issued against the district attorney for Eddy county, the county treasurer, and the Board of County Commissioners of said county, directing them to show cause why the relief prayed should not be granted.

All of the officials named appeared by the district attorney in response to the order to show cause by filing a demurrer to the petition. No action was taken upon the demurrer. Thereafter an answer was filed to which the petitioner demurred. The demurrer being overruled, petitioner prosecutes this appeal from the ruling as an interlocutory order which practically disposes of the merits of the proceeding.

Enough appears to dispose of a matter, raised by respondents (appellees), not urged as a ground of affirmance, but decisive nevertheless, if meritorious. They suggest (though disclaiming intention to rely upon same if it can be waived) a want of jurisdiction in this court to entertain the appeal. The doubt expressed upon the question of jurisdiction is this. They say the proceeding is one under the provisions of 1929 Comp. §§ 141-306 to 141-308, to correct taxes, and, because the petition fails to show it was filed with the approval of the district attorney, this court is'without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. As stated above, they avow a willingness to waive the jurisdictional question, if it can be waived, and expressly consent to a hearing on the merits.

While this indulgence on respondents’ part is commendable, we find it unnecessary to rely upon same. If it be true, as they insist, that the proceeding is under the statute, we find in the statute (1929 Comp. § 141-308) express provision for an appeal. And, if approval of the district attorney be essential to initiating the proceeding, the failure to secure and show such approval would affect the original jurisdiction of the district court, not the appellate jurisdiction of this court. Actually, the statute makes it obvious that approval of the district attorney is not required through express provision for conducting the proceeding without such consent. It provides: “Should the district attorney refuse to permit the filing of any such complaint without cost to the taxpayer such taxpayer may proceed thereon in his own name and at his own expense.”

Viewed as a proceeding under the statute and in the absence of an affirmative showing to the contrary, we should have to presume, in support of the jurisdiction entertained by the trial court, that it became satisfied of the district attorney’s refusal to permit the filing of the petition without cost to the petitioner. The appearance of said official as a respondent below resisting the relief claimed by petitioner leaves no doubt of his attitude toward the claim.

Petitioner, apropos the jurisdictional question suggested by respondents, lays no claim, to benefit of the statute and the right of review provided thereby. It says its suit is equitable “in the nature of a suit to quiet its title or remove the cloud upon its title, by reason of the illegal tax remaining upon the assessment rolls.” If so conceived in the beginning, the petition is but little adapted in form to what it is claimed to be in substance. It is entitled as above indicated. No parties defendant or respondent are joined or named, either in the caption or the body o-f the petition. From its form, it strongly suggests a proceeding under the statute. But with its filing reliance on the statute either by court or counsel appears to cease. No copy of the petition nor of the order to show cause was directed to or served upon State Tax Commission as required by the statute. .

Regardless of the chameleonic qualities possessed by the proceeding in the beginning, it emerges prior to the order complained of as a suit in equity, disclosing a subject matter of equitable cognizance (indeed, this it had-in the beginning), with the parties necessary to an adjudication of the issue presented (petitioner and the county treasurer) before the court, properly aligned. Such a proceeding is a civil action (cf. Summerford v. Board of Com’rs, 35 N.M. 374, 298 P. 410) from judgments in which we may entertain appeals. Now to the merits.

The particular levy of which petitioner complains is a special one made for the purpose of satisfying two judgments rendered against the Board of County Commissioners of Eddy County in condemnation proceedings instituted for the purpose of acquiring rights of way for a state highway' Respondents’ answer discloses that the total levy for general county purposes for 1933 approximated the five-mill limitation and that the special levy of .000155 made for the purpose of satisfying said judgments was made in addition to the total levy for general county purposes. However, the district court, in its order directing said levy, expressly exempts the same from the statutory five-mill limitation for. all county purposes.

The sole question presented for determination, and raised by petitioner’s demurrer to respondents’ answer, is whether the special levy for the purpose mentioned is prohibited by the statutory limitation contained in 1929 Comp. § 141-1001. So far as material, said section reads: “The maximum rate of tax to be levied for all county purposes and uses, excepting special school levies, general school tax levies, and special levies, on specific classes of property, shall not exceed five (5) mills on the dollar; Provided, however, that a tax not exceeding two (2) mills on the dollar of the assessed valuation of all property subject to taxation in this state may be levied for the construction and maintenance of state highways, which said two (2) mills levy shall not be within the state or county limitations heretofore fixed. * * * The foregoing limitations shall not apply to levies for the payment of the public debt or interest (^.thereon.”

It is obvious that in condemning a right of way for the state highway in question ,'the Board of County Commissioners was proceeding under the authority and compulsion of 1929 Comp. § 64-313. A major portion of the damages carried into each judgment was consequential, although in each instance the judgment . covered damages for the taking. ^ The county apparently sought no review of the condemnation decrees, and it is here immaterial whether the statute mentioned renders the county liable for consequential damages suffered by a defendant for the taking of property which the statute authorizes. For the purposes of this case it must be assumed that it does-.

In Summerford v. Board of Commissioners of Dona Ana County, 35 N.M. 374, 298 P. 410, 412, we had before us the statute above mentioned. It provides that the several counties shall obtain and pay for rights of way for state highways.

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.2d 345, 41 N.M. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-atchison-t-sf-ry-cos-taxes-in-eddy-county-nm-1936.