Kinsey v. Bower, Aud.

68 N.E.2d 317, 147 Ohio St. 66, 147 Ohio St. (N.S.) 66, 33 Ohio Op. 250, 1946 Ohio LEXIS 265
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1946
Docket30628
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 N.E.2d 317 (Kinsey v. Bower, Aud.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinsey v. Bower, Aud., 68 N.E.2d 317, 147 Ohio St. 66, 147 Ohio St. (N.S.) 66, 33 Ohio Op. 250, 1946 Ohio LEXIS 265 (Ohio 1946).

Opinion

Turnee, J.

The only question briefed or argued by either side is what effect is to be given Section 5548-2, General Code, and, if applicable, what is meant by the phrase, “additional levies for specific purposes,” as used in such statute.

We proceed with the decision of this case by assuming, without deciding, that appellants had no administrative remedy. The petition contains the allegation:

“Plaintiffs say they have no adequate remedy through any administrative proceeding for the matters and things herein complained of.” This has not been challenged in brief or argument.

The trial court’s journal entry contains the following paragraph:

*70 “The court further finds that there is no issue of fact in this action but that it presents only the issue as to the proper construction of General Code Section 5548-2 and its application to the facts set up in the petition and answer.”

In the course of the opinion of the Court of Appeals it is said:

“There is presented for determination by this court only one question: vis., Was the levy in question for a specific purpose, or for a general purpose (as held by the trial court) ? ’ ’

Appellant board was created under Section 2976-1 et seq., General Code, and by Section 2976-6, General Code, constituted a body politic and corporate, capable of suing and being sued. Under Section 2976-10, General Code, such board has the “power to levy taxes upon all the taxable property within such district in an amount not in excess of one-tenth of one mill upon each dollar of the assessed value of the property in the district in any one year, subject, however, to the combined maximum levy for all purposes otherwise provided by law. After the budget commission of the county in which said district is located shall certify such levy, or such modification thereof as they deem advisable to the county auditor, it shall be by him placed upon the tax duplicate.” (Italics ours.)

Under Section 2976-lOi, General Code, “the board of park commissioners, by resolution, may^ submit to the electors of the district the question of levying taxes for the use of the district. Such resolution shall declare the necessity of levying such taxes, shall specify the purpose for which such taxes shall be used, the annual rate proposed, and the number of consecutive years such rate shall be levied.” That section also contains the provision: “If a majority of the electors voting upon the question of such levy shall vote in favor thereof, such taxes shall be levied and shall be in addition to *71 the taxes authorized by Section 2976-10 of the General Code, and all other taxes authorized by law; provided that the rate submitted to the electors at any one time shall not exceed one-tenth of one mill annually upon each dollar of valuation.” (Italics ours.)

The act containing the foregoing section was filed in the office of the Secretary of State on the 16th day of January 1920 (108 Ohio Laws, pt. 2, 1099), and was held to be constitutional by two judges in the cases of State, ex rel. Bryant, v. Akron Metropolitan Park District and State, ex rel. Wadsworth, a Taxpayer, v. Zangerle, Aud., 120 Ohio St., 464, 166 N. E., 407. See, also, McNab v. Bd. of Park Commrs., 108 Ohio St., 497, 141 N. E., 332.

Section 5548-2, General Code, was passed March 5, 1925, as Section 3 of an act entitled: “To amend Section 5548 of the General Code relative to the assessment of property for taxation, and adjusting the amount of levies previously voted by the people to conform thereto.” (Ill Ohio Laws, 420.) Such Section 3 provides:

“When the people of any taxing subdivision have voted additional levies for specific purposes in the year of reassessment or any year prior thereto, and said additional levies are effective in the year of reassessment or thereafter and are to be calculated on a total valuation of property higher than that of the year before reassessment, the rate of said additional levy shall be reduced in the same proportion in which the total valuation of property in said taxing subdivision is increased by the reassessment ■ over the total valuation of the year preceding the reassessment.”

Under Section 342-1, General Code (101 Ohio Laws, 144), when an act of general and permanent nature was passed by the General Assembly it became the duty of the Attorney General to give each section of such act a sectional number. The Attorney General *72 did not give to Section 3 of the act any code section 1 number. In the case of Southern Surety Co. v. Standard Slag Co., 117 Ohio St., 512, 159 N. E., 559, Judge Robinson said at pages 516 and 517: “Whether the Attorney General gave these numbers to the several sections of the act because he believed that the act applied only to buildings, or whether he gave the act these numbers as a mere matter of routine, is not significant, since the power conferred upon him by the legislature to number does not attempt to confer upon him any po.wer to legislate, and could not if it did so attempt.”

The editor of Page’s Ohio General Code, not agreeing with the Attorney General, gave the section the number 5548-2 and placed this number in brackets. However, the General Assembly has twice recognized the editor’s numbering of 5548-2 as official and the section as of a permanent and general nature. See 113 Ohio Laws, 260, Section 7595-1, General Code, and 114 Ohio Laws, 849, Sectiori 7595-1, General Code (since further amended).

Appellants claim that Section 5548-2, General Code, was repealed by implication by the later enactment of Section 5625-1 et seq.j General Code, being the Uniform Tax Levy Law, effective August 11, 1927 (112 Ohio Laws, 391).

We repeat here the language of Judge Zimmerman at page 451 in the case of State, ex rel. Draper, v. Wilder, Recorder, 145 Ohio St., 447, 62 N. E. (2d), 156:

“The rule is too well established to require discussion that the repeal of statutes by implication is not ■ favored in law; and the presumption is always against the intention to repeal an existing statute where express terms indicating that intention are not employed. ’ ’

In 37 Ohio Jurisprudence, 395, Section 135, it is said:

“If an act is so repugnant to, or so contradictory of, *73 or so irreconcilably in conflict with, a prior act that the two acts cannot be harmonized in order to effect the purpose of their enactment, the later act operates, without any repealing clause, as a repeal of the first to the extent of the irreconcilable inconsistency.”

Section 5625-23, General Code, provides:

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73 N.E.2d 86 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.E.2d 317, 147 Ohio St. 66, 147 Ohio St. (N.S.) 66, 33 Ohio Op. 250, 1946 Ohio LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinsey-v-bower-aud-ohio-1946.