Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Company v. Goslin
This text of 300 So. 2d 483 (Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Company v. Goslin) 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.
Opinion
LOUISIANA & ARKANSAS RAILWAY COMPANY et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
James M. GOSLIN, Sheriff, Defendant-Appellee,
Red River Waterway Commission, Intervenor-Appellee.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*484 W. Scott Wilkinson, Wilkinson, Carmody & Peatross, Shreveport, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Robert G. Pugh, Pugh & Nelson, A. Mills McCawley, Asst. Atty. Gen., Clarence L. Yancey, Cook, Clark, Egan, Yancey & King, Shreveport, for defendants-appellees.
TATE, Justice.
The plaintiff railroad companies sue to recover property taxes paid by them under protest. We previously reversed the dismissal of the suit on an exception of no cause of action. 258 La. 530, 246 So.2d 852 (1971). On the remand, the district court rejected the plaintiffs' claims on the merits, and they again appeal.
The plaintiffs attack as invalid a two-mill ad valorem tax levied by the Red River Waterway District pursuant to constitutional and legislative authorization. See La.Const. Art. XIV, Section 30.5 (1964) and La.R.S. 34:2301 et seq. (1965). The district was created to establish and maintain a navigable waterway system extending from the Texas line to the Mississippi River, mostly through channel-improvement and realignment of the Red River. The governing commission of the district is authorized to and did levy a two-mill tax, the one here attacked, on the assessed valuation of all taxable property within the district.
The district includes the seven parishes of Caddo, Bossier, Red River, Natchitoches, Grant, Rapides, and Avoyelles, all bordering on or traversed by Red River. The district omits the three other parishes (Winn, Catahoula, and Concordia) which also border the river in this state. The plaintiff railway companies operate railroad lines or own properties in some or all of the parishes of the district.
The plaintiff railroads allege that the assessment and collection of the waterway district tax are unconstitutional, illegal, and discriminatory for two principal reasons, in essence: (1) the waterway district omits three parishes (Winn, Catahoula, and Concordia) along the Red River, but allegedly these parishes will receive the same potential benefits as the other seven bordering parishes within it; yet, the seven included parishes will pay the entire burden of the taxation; and (2) the parishes within the district assess and collect taxes on varying and unequal percentages of the actual cash value of the property in each of the said parishes, all of which percentages are less than that upon which the plaintiff railroads' assessment and tax levy are based.
(1) Does omission of three parishes constitute discriminatory treatment of seven others included in the district?
The first contention was discussed in the prior appeal. We there held that the petition stated a cause of action requiring an evidentiary merit-trial. The contention essentially raises the issue of unfair discrimination resulting in a denial of the equal protection of the laws required by the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution.
We there summarized the principles applicable as follows (citations omitted):
"`The constitutional right to the equal protection of the laws means that every *485 one is entitled to stand before the law on equal terms with, to enjoy the same rights, as belong to, and to bear the same burdens as are imposed upon others in a like situation.' * * * This protection is equally applicable to the taxing power of the State or its subdivisions. * * * [246 So.2d 854.]
"The constitutional restriction, however, does not operate so as to prevent a variety of classifications, or remove from the discretion of the State Legislature its right to provide a number of differences in the selection or classification or persons or property (geographical, or otherwise) so long as the discrimination is not invidious, unreasonable, or oppressive, but founded on just and equitable distinctions. In cases such as this one, where it is asserted that certain classifications or exemptions therefrom, are discriminatory and violative of the principles of `equal protection', the function of the courts is to determine whether the distinction is arbitrary or is based on practical and reasonable grounds with relation to the public purpose sought to be achieved by the legislation. * * * [246 So.2d 854.]
"Of course, there exists the presumption of constitutionality, that the legislature created the classification in good faith, and that any exclusions made therefrom were for valid reasons. From this it follows that the parties attacking the statute must bear the burden of proving the facts which would render it invalid. * * *" [246 So.2d 856.]
The evidence at the trial on the merits overwhelmingly proves practical and reasonable grounds for excluding Winn, Catahoula, and Concordia Parishes from the tax burden imposed by the district. Essentially, none of these parishes will receive any substantial navigational benefits from this river improvement project, with its primary purpose of affording navigational benefits.
The project involves the realignment, improvement (constructing a navigational channel, etc.), and bank stabilization of approximately three hundred miles of waterways, mostly the Red River, between the Mississippi and the Texas border. The primary economic benefits will flow from affording water-navigation access to areas previously without it.
Concordia and Catahoula already have substantial navigable river frontage: Concordia, 59 miles along the Mississippi and 25 along portions of the Red River previously made navigable as a result of an earlier project; Catahoula, 96 miles as part of the earlier Red River-Black River-Ouachita River navigational project. Winn Parish presently borders the Red River for only three and one-half miles of river frontage, which will be shortened to one mile when the river is realigned; and this slight river frontage is bordered by a national forest area at least eight miles deep and is not readily susceptible to economic development as a result of water-navigational access.
The plaintiff railroads have failed to bear their burden of proving that the exclusion of these three non-benefitted parishes from the taxing district amounted to unfair discrimination against the parishes included. Thus, their exclusion did not constitute an unreasonable or arbitrary classification.
(2) Does the varying and unequal assessment of non-utility property in the seven parishes constitute prohibited discriminatory treatment of the plaintiff utilities?
Our state constitution provides that property taxes "shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects throughout the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax." La.Const. Art. X, Section 1 (1921). The plaintiff railroads allege both that this provision is offended by the varying and unequal assessment practices in the parishes included within the district and, also, that such unequal assessments deny the plaintiffs due process and the equal protection of the laws.
*486 The actual cash valuation and assessment of railroads and most utilities is fixed directly for all purposes by the state tax commission. La.R.S. 47:1979 et seq. (1950); Sherman, Public Utility Property Assessment in Louisiana, 4 La.L.Rev. 502 (1942). The state commission accepted the valuation of their properties by the plaintiff utilities. The latter valued their properties at original cost less depreciation.
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300 So. 2d 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-arkansas-railway-company-v-goslin-la-1974.