Missoula Rural Fire District v. Missoula County

720 P.2d 1170, 222 Mont. 178, 1986 Mont. LEXIS 949
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1986
Docket86-019
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 720 P.2d 1170 (Missoula Rural Fire District v. Missoula County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missoula Rural Fire District v. Missoula County, 720 P.2d 1170, 222 Mont. 178, 1986 Mont. LEXIS 949 (Mo. 1986).

Opinion

*179 MR. JUSTICE GULBRANDSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Plaintiffs, Van Tarr, the Missoula Rural Fire District, and the Missoula Rural Volunteer Fireman’s Association appeal a Missoula County District Court order granting summary judgment to respondent Missoula County. No facts are disputed and the sole issue on appeal is whether Section 7-33-2314, MCA, exempts volunteer firefighters from paying the general road tax authorized by Section 7-14-2501, MCA. We hold that there is no such exemption and, accordingly, we affirm.

Appellant Van Tarr is a volunteer firefighter for the Missoula Rural Fire District. He owns real property in Missoula Comity which is subject to ad valorem road taxes. In 1985 Tarr presented a claim to Missoula County requesting a refund of ad valorem road taxes paid by him since 1980. He based his claim on Section 7-33-2314, MCA, which provides:

“The officers and members of regularly organized unpaid fire companies and exempt firefighters are entitled to the following privileges and exemptions:

“(1) exemption from payment of poll tax, road tax, and head tax of every description;

“(2) exemption from military duty except in case of war, invasion, or insurrection.”

Tarr seeks an exemption from the Section 7-14-2501, MCA, tax. That statute, entitled General road tax authorized, allows each board of county commissioners to levy a general tax upon the taxable property in the county. All money collected under that section belongs to the county road fund.

Missoula County denied Tarr’s claim for a refund. In July 1985 Tarr, joined as a plaintiff by the Missoula Rural Fire District and the Missoula Rural Volunteer Firemen’s Association, filed a complaint in Missoula County District Court seeking a declaratory judgment exempting all qualified volunteer firefighters from road taxes in Missoula County. The complaint also sought a refund of the road taxes paid by those qualified volunteer firefighters.

The county filed an answer to the complaint alleging that the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. In October 1985 the county filed a motion for summary judgment. In December of that year the District Court issued its opinion and order granting the county’s motion for summary judgment. The Dis *180 trict Court found the exemption statute, Section 7-33-2314, MCA, to be riddled with ambiguity. The court further found that the exemption statute referred to an archaic, fixed sum, per capita road tax previously codified at Section 2640, Political Code of 1895. The court denied that the exemption statute was intended to exempt firefighters from the ad valorem, property road tax now in existence. This appeal followed.

As stated the only issue is whether the District Court properly granted summary judgment in respondent's favor in ruling that certain firefighters have no exemption from the Section 7-14-2501, MCA, general road tax on property.

“The standard of review is clear. Summary judgment is only proper under Rule 56(c), M.R.Civ.P., where the record discloses that no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”

Mutual Service Cas. Ins. Co. v. McGehee (Mont. 1985), [219 Mont. 304,] 711 P.2d 826, 827, 42 St.Rep. 2038, 2039-40.

The statute at issue, Section 7-33-2314, MCA, provides certain volunteer firefighters with an “exemption from payment of poll tax, road tax, and head tax of every description . . .” This section was originally enacted in 1895. The road tax at that time was codified at Section 2640, Political Code of 1895, and provided:

“There must be levied and collected on all taxable property in the county not less than one mill nor more than two mills on the dollar for road purposes, also a special road tax of three dollars on each able-bodied man over the age of twenty-one years residing in each road district. Said special road tax shall be due and payable to the county assessor before July first, of each year, and the county assessor shall collect such special road tax on or before July first of each year in the manner provided by law for the collection of a poll tax. All special road taxes collected by him must be paid into the county treasury monthly, and placed to the credit of the road fund of the road district in which the same is collected.

“The county assessor shall, on or before the first day of July of each year, deliver or mail to each road supervisor a list of the names of all male persons in each supervisor’s road district who have failed to pay their special road tax for the year, and from whom, to the assessor's best knowledge and belief, said tax cannot be collected in cash.

“Any person whose special road tax is unpaid by July 1st of each year, and who has no property subject to seizure, or other means of *181 paying cash, shall perform one day's labor of eight hours on the public highways or bridges at any reasonable time and place designated by the road supervisor.”

The poll tax was imposed by Section 3960, Political Code of 1895; “Every male inhabitant of this State over twenty-one and under sixty years of age, except paupers, insane persons, and Indians, not taxed, must annually pay a poll tax of two dollars.” This Court declared that poll tax unconstitutional in 1922 in State v. Gowdy (1922), 62 Mont. 119, 203 P. 1115.

The exemption statute also refers to a head tax, which at the time this statute was enacted was authorized by Section 4230, Political Code of 1895. That statute authorized counties to impose a $2 per capita tax to provide for the care and maintenance of the indigent, sick and poor. In 1967 the Montana Legislature amended that statute to eliminate the possibility of a per capita tax for the county poor fund.

In construing a statute, the intent of the legislature controls. Section 1-2-102, MCA; State v. Hubbard (Mont. 1982), [200 Mont. 106,] 649 P.2d 1331, 39 St.Rep. 1608.

“The intention of the legislature must first be determined from the plain meaning of the words used, and if interpretation of the statute can be so determined, the courts may not go further and apply any other means of interpretation. [Citations omitted.] Where . . . the language of the statute is plain, unambiguous, direct and certain, the statute speaks for itself and there is nothing left for the court to construe.” [Citation omitted.]

Hubbard, 649 P.2d at 1333.

The exemption statute at Section 7-33-2314, MCA, refers to two per capita taxes, Section 4230 and Section 3960 of the Political Code of 1895, which are no longer in existence. Consequently, we hold that the exemption statute is ambiguous, unclear and in need of statutory construction.

The 1889 Montana Constitution was in effect at the time that the exemption statute was passed. Article XII, Section 2 of the 1889 Constitution provided that:

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Bluebook (online)
720 P.2d 1170, 222 Mont. 178, 1986 Mont. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missoula-rural-fire-district-v-missoula-county-mont-1986.