Lowden v. Caddo County Excise Board

1936 OK 214, 55 P.2d 472, 176 Okla. 213, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 3, 1936
DocketNo. 26308.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1936 OK 214 (Lowden v. Caddo County Excise Board) 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
Lowden v. Caddo County Excise Board, 1936 OK 214, 55 P.2d 472, 176 Okla. 213, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 152 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This appeal from the Court of Tax Review seeks to reverse that court’s order overruling certain tax protests relating to the general fund of six separate school districts in Caddo county for the fiscal year 1934-35.

On October 6, 1934, the excise board of Caddo county filed with the State Auditor, as provided by law, the complete appropriation and tax levies for these school districts. No protest concerning same was made within 40 days from the filing thereof. On December 21, 1934, the excise board, joined by the county attorney, presented to the Court of Tax Review its motion for permission to withdraw the budgets and levies for the purpose of increasing the appropriations. This motion was presented before that court had heard any of the Caddo county protests for that year. This motion was granted, and the budgets and levies - were withdrawn, the increase made and the same were refiled on December 26, 1934. Upon refiling of the budgets and levies the same were redocketed and renumbered by the State Auditor, the same as an original fil--ing.

On January 9, 1935, the protestants here filed their protests, which we now have under consideration. The sole basis of the protest is the contention that the budgets and levies filed on October 6, 1934, having-remained on file for a period of 40 days without withdrawal by the excise board, the same could not thereafter be withdrawn for the purpose of increasing the appropriations, and therefore became final and exclusive.

The trial court in denying the protest held as follows:

“* * * We have discussed your argument and examined the authorities submitted, and in view of the fact that error was evidently made in the estimate and the further fact that leave was given by the court to withdraw the estimates and make the corrections and refile them under a new number and giving any persons who were aggrieved 40 days from that date, time within which lo protest, we do not fee, that the protestants in this case have anything more than a technical objection or have been in any way aggrieved, — they have no vested rights that have been affected, and the court finds that the protest should be overruled, and so ordered.”

The protestants call particular attention to that part of section 12306, O. S. 1931, as follows:

“If no protest is filed by any taxpayer as to the levy of any county or municipal subdivision thereof within said 40-day period *214 all appropriations and levies of said county and municipal subdivisions thereof not protested shall be deemed to be leg’al, and all proceedings for refunds or suits for refunds or recovery of taxes or to contest the validity thereof in any manner shall be barred.”

And they assert that thereunder the excise board is precluded after the 40 days therein named has expired from increasing-appropriations theretofore made, or making additional appropriations, or from increasing the tax levy.

We find no such prohibition therein contained. The office of the quoted statutory provision is to limit the¡ time on the part of the taxpayer in which pretests may be filed a'gainst the appropriations or tax levies theretofore made. Thereunder, according to the facts here, the budget and levy filed by the excise board on October 6, 1934, levying 4.88 mills and appropriating $7,265.20 became final and legal at the end of the 40-day period, in the sense that no protest against legality thereof could be made in the Court of Tax Review, the time therefor having expired. The quoted provision is essentially a limitation of time for the filing of tax protests against illegal levies.

Our attention is directed to the last paragraph of section 12306, supra, which provides as follows:

“The excise board may reconvene at any time within 60 days after the filing of the budgets and levies with the State Auditor and reduce any protested budgets and levies which the excise board deems to be illegal.”

It is urged that here is found the only authority appearing in the act, which is a portion of Initiative Petition No. 100 adopted August 7, 1928, providing specifically for the reconvening of an excise board for any purpose, and that under the maxim designate-unius est exclus-io alterius, the excise board is precluded from acting in any other man' ner.

We do not agree with such suggestion. The paragraph of the statute under consideration has a very useful purpose when considered in connection with the preceding provision of the same section. As we have pointed out, this same section of the statute provides that an appropriation and levy become legal after 40 days from its filing if no protest is filed. Section 12315, O. S. 1931, is a legislative amendment to the initiative act defining specifically what appeared to be the general intent of the act in the first instance, to the effect that when a protest is filed and thereby the legality of an appropriation or levy is put in issue, the appropriation or levy will not become legal by virtue of the expiration of the 40-day period, but its status as to legality then depends upon final determination of the tax protest, unless the question is sooner determined by correction by the excise board to remove the question. It will thus be seen that by virtue of the last-quoted paragraph of section 12306, supra, in the case of a protest which the excise board might recognize as being meritorious, such board is thereby authorized within a 60-day period to reduce an appropriation or levy in accordance therewith, an,d in such manner avoid a possible delay in awaiting the action of the' Court of Tax Review, and permit the local officials to proceed in the conduct of the municipal affairs- without such possible delay. In the absence of such provision, protest might be filed putting in issue the entire appropriation for a municipality, causing delay pending final determination of the issue in the courts, when with this provision the issue could be disposed of by the excise board in reducing the appropriations and levies in conformity with a valid and justified protest. It is to be seen from the act itself, and particularly from section 12306, supra, that the same does not purport to grant authority generally to the excise boards, or to deal expressly with that board’s power to properly withdraw the levies and budgets. It does, however, specifically provide that such appropriations and levies, if not protested, shall become legal and free from protest at the end of 40 days after filing. It provides for the filing of protests, which when filed would necessarily give the Oouri of Tax Review jurisdiction to examine into the appropriations and1 levies, and which would in effect pass the questioned items- to the judges of the Court of Tax Review for consideration and judgment. Such a situation then should doubtless operate to restrict the free right of the excise board, without permission of that court, and for any reason the board deemed proper, to withdraw and change the budgets. However, even in such a situation the act, by ihe terms of the last-quoted provision of section 12306, supra, specifically gives the excise board power and authority over the 'appropriations and levies to- the extent of permitting it to reduce the same in accordance with the protest, if the protest appears to be meritorious, thus providing a prompt method for disposing of the controversy and releasing the remaining appropriations fo-'-needful use by the municipal officers.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 214, 55 P.2d 472, 176 Okla. 213, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowden-v-caddo-county-excise-board-okla-1936.