Jefferson County Excise Board v. Stanolind Pipe Line Co.

1937 OK 584, 72 P.2d 805, 181 Okla. 102, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1937
DocketNo. 27211.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1937 OK 584 (Jefferson County Excise Board v. Stanolind Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson County Excise Board v. Stanolind Pipe Line Co., 1937 OK 584, 72 P.2d 805, 181 Okla. 102, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 55 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Court of Tax Review sustaining the protest of defendants in error against a levy to produce funds with which to pay one-third of a judgment rendered against independent school district No. 14, in Jefferson county. The levy so involved was made under a writ of mandamus issued out of the district court of Jefferson county after the judgment against the school district had been appealed to this court, and while said appeal was pending. Said cause was appealed by the school district without giving a supersedeas bond.

Benton, the party in whose favor the judgment had been rendered, then asserted his right to have a tax levy made sufficient to pay one-third of the judgment. The county excise board refusing to make the levy, Benton filed an action in the district court asking a writ of mandamus to require the excise board to make the levy. Upon issues joined, the court, upon a hearing, issued the writ. That judgment, not being appealed from, became final.

The levy was made and the protest herein is against said levy. The Court of Tax Review sustained the protest, and this appeal is from said order. The record here shows merely a stipulation of facts before the Court of Tax Review and the writ issued in the district court.

Plaintiffs in error contend that section 543, O. S. 1931, is applicable to school districts, and that section 5977, allowing the county attorney to appeal in certain cases without the consent of the board of county commissioners and without bond, is not applicable.

Section 543, supra, provides that no proceeding in error to reverse, vacate, or modify a judgment, except as otherwise pro■vided, shall operate to stay a judgment unless an undertaking provided for in said section, generally termed a supersedeas bond, is given.

Said section does not apply to judgments against school districts. The right to appeal does not depend upon the giving of a *103 supersedeas bond. Starr v. McClain, 50 Okla. 738, 150 P. 668; Hutchings v. Winsor, 92 Okla. 37, 217 P. 1044. In both of these cases and others it is said that the only purpose and effect of 'a supersedeas bond is to stay execution or other proceedings to enforce the judgment pending appeal. This being the sole purpose and effect of a supersedeas, it would follow that if no execution may issue, no supersedeas bond is required.

Section 6823, O. S. 1931, provides:

“Whenever any final judgment shall be obtained against any school district, the district board shall provide for a tax on all taxable property in the district for the payment thereof; such taxes shall be collected as other school district taxes, but no execution shall issue on such judgment against the school district.”

No execution being permissible as against a school district, there is no place for a supersedeas bond to stay execution. The same section provides what shall be done in order to satisfy a judgment against a school district. The district board shall provide for a tax on all taxable property in the district for the payment thereof. The section provides when such proceedings shall be taken, viz., whenever any final judgment shall be obtained.

So far as the district court was concerned, the original judgment in that court was final, that is, it was final within the meaning of final judgments or orders from which an appeal would lie. But proceedings in error having been instituted in this court, the judgment was not final in the sense that the party in whose favor the judgment was rendered was then entitled to collect same.

Other proceedings to enforce said judgments were not proper at that time, and therefore the levy was premature and improperly made.

It is urged, however, that, inasmuch as the levy was made in obedience to the writ, the same cannot be successfully attacked in the Court of Tax Beview, even though the levy was unauthorized by the statute; and that the attack on this levy in such manner is an unauthorized collateral attack upon a final order and judgment. The rules of law urged .in support of such contention are general and well known, but the controlling question is whether those rules have application here, in view of our special or specific statutory provisions as to tax protests.

The provisions of Initiative Petition No. 100, adopted by vote of the people, and other related statutory provisions, establish a comprehensive and exclusive method of finally fixing the legality of ad valorem tax levies as against taxpayers. These laws gfant taxpayers the specific right to protest any ad valorem tax levy made by the excise board, and to have the legality of the levy and tax rate determined by the Court of Tax Beview. That court was created and given this specific jurisdiction by these laws; see sections 12305-12314, O. S. 1931. The taxpayers cannot proceed otherwise or in any other court to test the legality of any such levy made by the excise board, but may so proceed by protest against any levy made by that board.

These provisions of law, creating these rights and creating this court and fixing its jurisdiction, were attacked on numerous constitutional grounds in State ex rel. Babb v. Mathews et al., 134 Okla. 288, 273 P. 352. But the act was upheld as against all contentions.

Prior to the adoption of this act, the method of attack of an ad valorem levy asserted to be illegal was to pay the tax under protest and immediately sue for return of the money under section 9971, C. O. S. 1921 (12665, O. S. 1931). That was then the specific right of taxpayers, and the exclusive remedy, as was held in Bradford v. Snell, 80 Okla. 56, 193 P. 982; Black v. Geissler, 58 Okla. 335, 159 P. 1124, and Atchison, T. & S. F. B. Co. v. Eldredge, 65 Okla. 317, 166 P. 1085. However, that specific right was destroyed and that section was repealed, in so far as concerns questions of illegality of levy or tax rate, by the adoption of Initiative Petition 100. as this court held in Protest of First National Bank of Guthrie, 136 Okla. 141, 276 P. 766.

In view of the provisions of these laws, and the cited decisions, and the opinions in the many cases appealed from the Court of Tax Beview it seems now thoroughly settled that the taxpayers have the specific right to protest any ad valorem tax levy made by the excise board, and to present such protest to the Court of Tax Beview, whether such levy was made by the excise board of its own volition or pursuant to persuasion or compulsion. And in line with *104 the reasoning of this court in the former opinions in Black v. Geissler, Bradford v. Snell, and Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Eldredge, supra, it would seem clear that this is now the exclusive remedy of taxpayers since the repeal of section 9971, C. O. S. 1921 (12665, O. S. 1931), in those particulars, as above noticed.

We, therefore, hold th'at this taxpayer had the right to protest this levy and to present the question of the legality thereof to the Court of Tax Review.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 584, 72 P.2d 805, 181 Okla. 102, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-county-excise-board-v-stanolind-pipe-line-co-okla-1937.