Petition of the Town Council

28 A. 608, 18 R.I. 417, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 9, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 A. 608 (Petition of the Town Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of the Town Council, 28 A. 608, 18 R.I. 417, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 79 (R.I. 1893).

Opinion

Stiness, J.

In April, 1892, the town of Cranston voted to abolish the school district system and to adopt the town system. Thereupon, pursuant to Public Laws, cap. 447, the title to all the school property vested in the town, subject to an appraisal to be made by a commission to be appointed by this court. The act provides for the payment of such property as follows: “At the next annual assessment of taxes thereafter, a tax shall be levied upon the whole town equal to the amount of said appraisal; and there shall be remitted to the taxpayers of each district their proportional share of the appraised value of the school property in such district; provided that if any district be in debt, and said debt be assumed by the town, the amount of such debt shall be deducted from the whole amount to be remitted to the taxpayers of said district. ” A commission was appointed and a report made, which was confirmed September 12, 1893. Upon these facts the following questions are presented to the court for an opinion :

1. “Is so much of section 1 of said chapter 447 of the Public Laws as requires that ‘ At the next annual assessment of taxes thereafter, a tax shall be levied upon the whole town equal to the amount of the said appraisal; and there shall-Le. remitted to the taxpayers of each district.U2.eLv''proportionai share of the appraised value of. the school property in such district,’ constitutional?”

XV b It is suggested that -tiie statute violates the provision in Art. I. § 2, of the^ Constitution, that “the burdens of the state ought to b/e fairly distributed among its citizens.” The argument is/that taxation is a public burden; that the statute provides, for a tax for other than a public purpose ; and that it i?s oppressive and unequal in that it does not apply to the Astrict taxed ; or, in other words, that the citizens of one istrict, having a small school property, are taxed for the benefit of other districts having more school property. We vdo not think the statute is open to the objection of unconsti\tutionality. School districts haye been recognized by this *420 court as quasi corporations. Bull v. School Committee, 11 R. I. 244. As such, corporations they are respectively the owners of their school houses. Under the act these were to become the property of the town, and to be paid for by the town by way of a proportionate remission of tax. It is true that the taxpayers in a particular district may not, at the present time, be the same persons who paid the tax from which a school house was built; and yet it is fair to presume that purchasers of property have indirectly paid for the same in an enhanced value of land and property by reason of the erection of a school house within the district ; and they are the present corporators of the district.

The apportionment may not be absolutely just, but it is evidently as nearly so as practicable. The remission provided for is not a tax raised for the benefit of individuals, but in payment of property which is virtually purchased by the town. Neither is it a tax for the benefit of one part of the town at the expense of another part, for school houses are for the benefit of all and not for a part. Some sections may have required and built larger and more expensive buildings than others, but this may be so under direct taxes to build school houses, and surely no one can question the right of a town to do the same thing. ' The increased expense in such cases is xeá&yaily offset by the increased, number and amount of contributing'fasses -..The .compensation for the more costly buildings under this act is therefore as nearly equitable as it can be made. The tax and remission, is virtually a. tax paid into the town for the school houses purchased and paid back again to the members of the respective school vdjstricts in proportion to their interest in the same.

But here comes the objection that, becaus'e none of the money goes into the town treasury, it is a tax for the sbenefit of individuals and not a tax for a public purpose. This objection was disposed of In the Matter of Dorrance Street, 4 R. I. 230, 243, where the court says : Certainly, it proaches very near an absurdity, if he (an owner of land constitutionally liable, on the one hand, to pay a sum o^ money to the public for the benefits he has received from tbfe *421 improvement, and the public is constitutionally liable, on the other hand, to pay him in money for the damages which he has sustained by the improvement, to say that he is constitutionally wronged, because in such a case the public, instead of clumsily collecting the money due from him, and putting it into the treasury with one of its numerous hands, and then taking it out again and paying him for his damages with another of its numerous hands, — pays him the balance due him, if his damages exceed his benefits, or exacts from him the balance due to them, if his benefits exceed his damages. It is a mere mistaking of words for'things to say, in such case, that he is compensated contrary to one clause of the constitution, by benefits instead of money, — if under the general power of the government, and in accordance with the spirit of another clause of the same constitution, he is liable to pay money for those benefits.” There is no difference in principle between that case and the case at bar. Here all the taxpayers would be liable to pay for school houses built or purchased by the town, and, as members of the school district, the act recognizes that some payment should be made by the town for the property taken from the districts. This much 'certainly is equitable and within the general principles of taxation. It is not compensation in the strict sense of the term, as when private property is taken, although it resembles that. It is rather an attempted equalization as between the taxpayers of the town, as members of one corporation, and the taxpayers of the districts, as members of other corporations ; and we fail to see that the adjustment of debit and credit is not fair and reasonable. A similar statute has been sustained in Massachusetts. Whitney v . Stow, 111 Mass. 368; Rawson v. Spencer, 113 Mass. 40. The case of Freeland v. Hastings, 10 Allen, 570, is similar in principle.

The cases cited by counsel opposed to this view stand upon very different grounds. In Hanson v. Vernon, 27 Ia. 28, it was held that.an act to enable towns and cities to aid in the construction of railroads was not a legitimate exercise of the taxing power. Hooper v. Emery, 14 Me. 375, related to *422 money received from the United States Government, which it was pi’oposed to divide among inhabitants of a town according to families. Allen v. Jay, 60 Me. 124, denied the power of a town to loan its credit to individuals for manufacturing purposes. In Lowell v. Boston, 111 Mass. 454, the city of Boston proposed to issue bonds to loan the proceeds on moi’tgages to sufferers by the fire of 1872. In Bright v. McCullough, 27 Ind.

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Bluebook (online)
28 A. 608, 18 R.I. 417, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-the-town-council-ri-1893.