McConnell v. State Board of Equalization

83 P. 494, 11 Idaho 652, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 73
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 83 P. 494 (McConnell v. State Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McConnell v. State Board of Equalization, 83 P. 494, 11 Idaho 652, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 73 (Idaho 1905).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

— This is an application for a writ of review to the state board of equalization requiring them to certify to this court for review all of their proceedings had and done at their August, 1905, meeting, which was held “for the purpose of equalizing taxation and assessments of the property for taxation throughout the state, and in the various counties thereof.”

[657]*657It is alleged in the petition that in addition to performing the duties devolving upon said board by law, in violation of the provisions of article 7 of the constitution of the state of Idaho, and especially of section 6 of said article, usurped and assumed the power to impose municipal taxes for county and school district purposes upon the various railway lines within the state and within each and all of the counties thereof, and in so doing, said state board of equalization was acting without its jurisdiction, and acting in a judicial capacity and performing judicial functions which are not vested in it by the constitution of the state.

The petitioner further states that he is advised and believes, and therefore avers, that the power to impose taxes necessarily includes and carries with it the power to fix the valuation of the property to be subjected to such taxation, and that the act of the legislature of the state of Idaho, relating to revenue and taxation, approved March 22, 1901, and sections 74 to 83, inclusive, in so far as they attempt to authorize said board of equalization to assess or fix the valuation of railways and other property, real and personal, in the different counties of the state for the purposes of municipal taxation, is unconstitutional and void. Then the petitioner proceeds to set forth some of the acts done by said board at said meeting, and also sets forth a schedule showing the assessment of the railway lines in this state for that year, and avers that he is advised and verily believes that said acts of said board are of no effect and made without authority or power and are void.

The petitioner thus attacks not only the acts of the board as being void, but also said act of the legislature as being unconstitutional, and further states “that should it be held that said act of March 22, 1901, is not void but valid and of binding force, which affidavit does not admit, but, on the contrary, denies, that then the said order and the whole thereof is void and of no effect for the reasons following, to wit: The said board wrongfully, unlawfully and without jurisdiction so to do, failed and refused to fix the full cash value of and upon the said railway lines and each and every of them as required by the provisions of the statute in such eases made and pro[658]*658vided, but, on the contrary, placed the valuation thereof at not to exceed one-eighth of the fair cash value of the same.”

The petitioner then avers that he is informed and believes that the value of the railway lines in the aggregate is $91,-000,000, and that the defendant board fixed the same at less than one-eighth of that amount, and then proceeds to give his opinion of the value of the said railway lines and of their marketable and commercial value, and proceeds to state the valuation placed upon cows, horses and sheep by the county assessors of the various counties and other property, and avers that the value placed thereon approximated nearer the actual cash value of the same than the value placed upon the railway lines by said board of equalization. Petitioner further alleges that the defendant board in like manner assumed and usurped the power to assess telegraph and telephone lines throughout the different counties of the state without jurisdiction.

The petitioner further avers that there is no appeal from the action of the said board of equalization, and that the petitioner has no other adequate remedy, speedy or otherwise, to correct the errors alleged to have been committed by said board. Petitioner demands that a writ of review be issued to said board, requiring them to certify all their proceedings in regard to said matters set forth in the petition, that the same may be reviewed by this court, and that the order fixing the valuation of the railway lines in the state be annulled and that said assessment of the railway, telegraph and telephone lines be held to be without the jurisdiction of said board, and that should this court hold that said act of March 22, 1901, is valid, that this court then hold and adjudge said order of the defendant board void for want of jurisdiction, in that it assesses for taxation the said railway lines at one-eighth of their actual cash value.

To this petition the state board of equalization appeared and demurred: 1. On the ground that said petition does not state facts sufficient to authorize the issuance of the writ of review ; 2. That the petition is ambiguous, unintelligible and uncertain; that it is ambiguous in asking primarily for a determination of the constitutionality of the act giving said [659]*659board its authority and declaring the acts void, and then alleging excess or want of jurisdiction in a board having, according to the petition, no legal existence or authority to do the acts complained of; 3. That it is inconsistent in alleging the authority of the said board and then denying it, and that it is uncertain in declaring but one of the several consistent allegations will be relied upon; 4. That it fails to set out the facts that would authorize the issuance of the writ; that the affidavit of the party making the oath to said petition is insufficient to show that he is entitled to the writ and that said petition is insufficient in form, as well as in substance.

The plaintiff presents two propositions in this case: 1. That sections 74 to 83, inclusive, of the revenue act of March 22, 1901 (Sess. Laws, 1901, pp. 257-261), in so far as the same attempt to authorize the state board of equalization to fix the valuation of railroad and telegraph lines and property belonging thereto, are unconstitutional and void; and 2. That if the said sections are constitutional and valid, then the board has exceeded its jurisdiction in assessing the property of railway and telegraph lines in this state, for the reason that said board has failed to assess the same at its full cash value, but, on the contrary, has placed a valuation thereon at not to exceed one-eighth of the fair cash value of the same.

Upon the threshold of our consideration of the first proposition, we are confronted with this question: Can the court upon a writ of certiorari sued out by a private party for the protection of his private property rights inquire into and pass upon the constitutionality of an act of the legislature 1 It has been heretofore determined by this court in Adleman v. Pierce, 6 Idaho, 294, 55 Pac. 658, that the jurisdiction of the court on writs of review is limited by the statute to the cases therein designated and cannot inquire into the action of the court, tribunal or board whose action is being reviewed in any re■spect beyond the scope prescribed by the statute.

The court, speaking through Justice Quarles, there said: ‘ ‘ The question of jurisdiction is to be determined by the terms of the statute. The authority cited to us from the common law, and from those states whose statutes are different from [660]*660ours, have no application here, and are entitled to no weight in determining the question before us. The legislature, having defined the case in which the writ will lie, have excluded all other cases.

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Bluebook (online)
83 P. 494, 11 Idaho 652, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-state-board-of-equalization-idaho-1905.