Louisiana A. Ry. Co. v. School of Webster Parish

103 So. 318, 157 La. 1046, 1925 La. LEXIS 2005
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 2, 1925
DocketNo. 26593.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 103 So. 318 (Louisiana A. Ry. Co. v. School of Webster Parish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisiana A. Ry. Co. v. School of Webster Parish, 103 So. 318, 157 La. 1046, 1925 La. LEXIS 2005 (La. 1925).

Opinions

OVERTON, J.

These consolidated suits were instituted by plaintiffs for the purpose of annulling a special tax of 2 mills on the dollar, voted by the duly qualified property tax payers of a school district, composed of the entire parish of Webster, on the assessed value of all property subject to taxation therein.

The first suit instituted was the one filed by the Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Company. This suit seeks to annul the tax on the ground that it increases the special taxes on property in the Heflin School district, beyond 25 mills on the dollar, in violation of section 10 of article 10 of the Constitution of 1921, and moreover, that said tax, in said district, and also in the Doyline school district, and in Hortman school district A, makes the special taxes for additional support to the public schools, in said districts, exceed 8 mills on the dollar, in violation of said section of the Constitution. In the alternative, plaintiffs ask that, should said special tax of 2 mills on the dollar be de *1049 dared legal, then a spedal tax of 5 mills, voted in said Hortman school district A on the same day that said 2-mill tax was voted, be declared null, as being in violation 9f the same section of the Constitution.

The Gulf Befining Company of Louisiana, in its suit as originally filed by if, sought to annul the 2-mill tax on the ground that the school board had no right to call an election throughout the entire parish fo!r the voting of the fax, and hence, as it exercised a right which it did not have, that the tax is null. Later, the Gulf Refining Company adopted the allegations of the petition of the Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Company, though it still insists on the alleged ground of nullity first asserted by it. Both suits were put at issue.

With respect to what may be termed the first phase of the case, the evidence introduced shows that, in 1919, the school- board of Webster parish made the entire parish a school district, and gave it the name of the Webster parish school district, and that, in April of that year, the property tax payers of the newly created district voted a 5-mill táx for the support of the public schools thereof. This is the only special tax which had been voted and was being levied by the district at the time it voted and levied the 2-mill tax, in controversy. Adding the 2-mill tax to the 5-mill tax makes the total tax, voted- by the taxpayers of the district and now being levied for the support of the public schools thereof, 7 mills on the dollar.

The evidence also shows that in June, 1922, the property tax payers of road district No. 2, which district, we infer, includes the Heflin school district, voted a special tax of 5 mills on the dollar on all property subject tp taxation in said road district, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining roads and bridges therein. The evidence further shows that the property tax payers of the Heflin school district in January 1920, voted a tax of 5 mills on the dollar, to run for a period of seven years, for the purpose of building a schoolhouse in said district, and that in July of the same year, when there was no restriction on the millage that could be voted for school purposes, they voted a tax of 10 mills on the dollar, to run for a period of 10 years, for the purpose of constructing and equipping a school building in said district. If we add to the 15 mills voted by the district, which plaintiffs contend we should, the 7 mills voted by the Webster Parish school district, and to the sum thus obtained, the 5-mill road and bridge tax voted by road district No. 2 the sum will show, including the tax in controversy, a total of special taxes, which are being levied by various political subdivisions on property in the district, voted under section 10 of article 10 of the Constitution of 1921, and under the corresponding article of the Constitution of 1913, of 27 mills on the dollar.

Section 10 of article 10 of the Constitution of 1921, under which the 2-mill tax in controversy was voted, in so far as pertinent, reads:

“For the purpose of constructing or improving public buildings, school houses, roads, bridges, levees, sewerage or drainage works, or other works of permanent public improvement, title to which shall be in the public, or for the maintenance thereof, any political subdivision may levy taxes, in excess of the limitations otherwise fixed in this Constitution, not to exceed in any year five mills on the dollar for any one of said purposes, and not to exceed in any year twenty-five mills on the dollar, on any property, for all of said purposes; and for giving additional support to public schools, any parish, school district or sub-school district, or any municipality, which supports, or contributes to the support of, its public schools, may levy taxes, in excess of the limitations otherwise fixed in this Constitution, not to exceed, in the aggregate, on any property, in any year, eight mills on the dollar; provided, no special tax authorized by this section shall run for a longer period than ten years, and, provided further, that the rate, purpose and duration of any such special tax shall have been submitted *1051 to the resident property tax payers qualified to vote in the subdivision in which the tax is to be levied, and a majority of those voting, in number and amount, shall have voted in favor thereof. The provisions of this section shall not affect the validity of any tax levied by authority of an election held prior to the adoption of this Constitution. * * * ”

Plaintiffs’ first position is that the limitation of 25 mills on the dollar, prescribed in the foregoing section of the Constitution, is a limitation for all purposes, and even includes the 8-mill limitation prescribed in the section for additional support to the public schools, and plaintiffs therefore argue that, as the total of the special taxes, which are being levied on the assessed valuation of property in the Hortman school district by the several political subdivisions named, when the 2-mill tax in controversy is included, exceeds 25 mills on the dollar, the levy of said 2-mill tax contravenes said limitation, and is therefore null and void.

Plaintiffs commit two errors, in our view, when they take the foregoing position. The first is in assuming that the taxes, levied by the several political subdivisions named, should be added together in order to ascertain whether or not the limitation of 25 mills, contended for by them, has been exceeded in levying the 2-mill tax. The section of the Constitution which we have quoted, in so far as it is pertinent, does not contemplate that such a course should be pursued in ascertaining whether the limitation has been reached. To the contrary, the section contemplates that each political subdivision authorized to levy the tax provided by it shall be treated as a distinct entity throughout, and that the limitations imposed shall apply to each subdivision as a distinct entity, and hence that each subdivision shall remain unaffected in its right by the taxes imposed under the section by other political subdivisions in the same territory. See Hinton v. Winn Parish School Board, 155 La. 666, on page 673, 99 South. 523, on page 525.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 So. 318, 157 La. 1046, 1925 La. LEXIS 2005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-a-ry-co-v-school-of-webster-parish-la-1925.