Locke v. L. N. Dantzler Lumber Co.

81 So. 175, 119 Miss. 783
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1919
DocketNo. 20535
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 81 So. 175 (Locke v. L. N. Dantzler Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Locke v. L. N. Dantzler Lumber Co., 81 So. 175, 119 Miss. 783 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

Sykes, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

Tbe appellee lumber company filed suit in the circuit court of Stone county against the tax collector of that county to recover tbe sum of two hundred, sixty dollars and ninety-six cents taxes paid by it under protest to tbe tax collector. This tax was an acreage tax of two cents an acre levied on all tbe land in Stone county. Appellee owns thirteen thousand and forty acres in this county. Tbe declaration alleges that tbe board of supervisors has levied this acreage tax as a special road tax under tbe authority of chapter 172', Laws of 1916, amending chapter 258, Laws of 1912, and chapter 150, Laws of 1910. Tbe declaration challenges the constitutionality, under section 112 of tbe Constitution, of this acreage tax for road purposes. There was a demurrer interposed to tbe declaration which was overruled by tbe lower court. Tbe defendant declining to plead further, judgment final was ren[785]*785dered in favor of the lumber company, from which judgment this appeal is here prosecuted. .

Chapter 172, Laws of 1916, sections 7155-7157, inclusive, of Hemingway’s Code, provides an additional method for working the public roads of a county or beat thereof. Section 2 provides how the board may raise funds for working the roads and building bridges, and, among other things the board is authorized to have collected by the tax collector an ad valorem tax on the assessed valuation of the property, or an acreage tax, or both.

It is contended by the appellee that this acreage road tax is unconstitutional because it is violative of section 112 of the Constitution, in that it is not uniform and equal, and that the property is not taxed in proportion to its value. The contention is urged that this is not an ad valorem tax and therefore violates section 112 of the Constitution. Reliance is had by the appellee on the cases of Thompson v. Kreutzer, 112 Miss. 165, 72 So. 891, and Thompson v. McLeod, 112 Miss. 383, 73 So. 193, L. R. A. 1918C, 893, Ann. Cas. 1918A, 674. The taxes attempted to be collected in these two cases were taxes for general revenue purposes, and were held to be violative of this section of the Constitution. In this case, if section 112 of the Constitution were applicable, then this acreage tax would be unconstitutional because property is not here taxed in proportion to its value. The difference, however, between the cases relied upon by the appellee and the case under consideration, is that this is a special road tax for a road district. The county in this case is the road district. It is a tax for a local improvement of this road district. It is not a tax for the purpose of raising the general revenue of the county to defray its expenses, but a special tax going to defray the improvements made on the roads in this district. Or it may be termed a tax for a local betterment or improvement. It is a tax similar in all respects to the levee tax held con[786]*786stitutional in the ease of Daily v. Swope, Guardian, 47 Miss. 367. In that ease the- court, speaking through Sime all, J., fully discusses the question of taxation for raising revenue generally, and taxation for local better-ments or improvements.

Section 20, art. 12, of the Constitution of Mississippi' of 1869, is similar to section 112' of the present Constitution. In the Daily Case the court says:

“ ‘Taxation/ as used in the twentieth section, means such taxation as is imposed by the legislature for the uses of the- state at large, or the county. . . . The convention sought to devise a rule by which taxation, imposed for the general and ordinary expenses of the state, county administrations, should operate equally in all parts of the state. No discriminations shall be made which would disturb uniformity.”

Again:

“There has grown up in this and the other states a species of taxation which is quite distinguishable from that meant in the twentieth section. It is the imposition on property of an assessment, in a defined locality, 'to make some local improvement supposed by the legislature to be specially beneficial to a class of property. The property thus benefitted is charged with the expense, whilst other property is exempt. Such legislation proceeds on the theory that the burdened property is enhanced in value, and the owners are bene-fitted over and above the other inhabitants. If the constitutional restriction applies to such local assessments, it is plain that they cannot be sustained. . . .
“We find that, going back to the earliest colonial times, and thence through the history of these states, there have existed two distinct systems of taxation; one, the more general, referring to the impositions and assessments, for the general, usual, and ordinary purposes of the state and the county and municipal bodies ; the other, more confined and special, imposed for the object of accomplishing some local improvement or [787]*787amelioration (too large for private enterprise and means), and in which the lesser community are especially interested. ... It would not he a wise rendering of the Constitution to so construe it as to interrupt and destroy this old and established order of things, unless we can discover a plain and manifest purpose to do so. To hold that the twentieth section must apply to these local and district assessments would utterly abolish the system. To confine it to those taxes which are for the usual and ordinary revenues of the state and counties would accomplish no such result.”

The court in this opinion then, after stating that this section of the Constitution is a literal transcript of the Constitution of California, states that the supreme court of California (Burnett v. City of Sacramento, 12 Cal. 76, 73 Am. Dec. 518) held:

“That the section only applied to that charge or imposition upon property to raise funds to defray the expenses of the state government, or of some county or town. It has no reference to special assessments for local improvements, in which individuals are benefited by the increased value of their lands, and in which the public has only a limited interest.”

On page 385 the court further says:

“The result reached, followed by a great many of the states, is that the constitutional restriction does not apply to assessments to defray the expenses of local improvements, and that it is competent to apportion the assessment, according to the benefits received, and that any general plan of apportionment may be adopted by the taxing power that it may deem just and equitable.”

The scheme of the road law under consideration is that all real property in the taxing district, whether it be beat or county is benefited by the improvement of the public roads, and that this improvement is local to the district. Consequently, the assessment of the acreage tax in the district follows. In speaking of the [788]*788apportionment of this local tax, the opinion, on page 386, states:

“It is not to be supposed, therefore, that it was the intent of the legislature to discriminate in favor of the property of one citizen at the expense of that of another, when both properties are in a like situation.

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Related

Huston v. Mayo
82 So. 334 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 175, 119 Miss. 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/locke-v-l-n-dantzler-lumber-co-miss-1919.