Pryor v. Bryan, County Treasurer

1901 OK 44, 66 P. 348, 11 Okla. 357, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1901 OK 44 (Pryor v. Bryan, County Treasurer) 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
Pryor v. Bryan, County Treasurer, 1901 OK 44, 66 P. 348, 11 Okla. 357, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 42 (Okla. 1901).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Burwell, J.:

Case No. 1042 is an action commenced' by I. T. Pryor and others against G-. T. Bryan, county treasurer of Noble county, and others, to enjoin the collection of' certain taxes levied' against the property of the plaintiff' for the year 1899, -which property during that year was located in the Ponca and Otoe Indian reservation. Case- *359 No. 1046, The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company v. G. T. Bryan, County Treasurer, and others, is for the same purpose ; and as the law questions are the same in each ease we will consider them together.

By article 6 of chapter 43 of the Session Laws of 1895, it is provided:

“That section 13, article 2, chapter 70 of the Oklahoma statutes relating to revenue, be and the same is hereby amended so as to read as follows: Section 13. That when any cattle are kept or grazed, or any other personal property is situated in any unorganized country, district or reservation of this territory, then such property shall be subject to taxation in the organized county to which such country, district or reservation is attached for judicial purposes, and the board of county commissioners of the organized. county or counties to which such unorganized' country, district or reservation is attached, shall appoint a special assessor each year, whose duty it shall be to assess such property thus situated or kept; such special assessor shall have all the powers and be required to perform all the duties of a township assessor, and shall give a similar bond and take the same oath as required of such township assessor, and receive the same fees as a township assessor, and the officer whose duty it shall be to collect the taxes in the organized county to which such country, district or reservation is attached, shall collect the taxes, and is vested with all the powers which he may exercise in the organized county, and his official bond shall cover such taxes, etc.”

The right to tax property in these reservations, when located within the boundary lines of • the territory, is no longer an open question. (Gay v. Thomas, 169 U. S. 264) But in 1899 the territorial legislature enacted the following statute, which will be found on page 218 of the Session Laws of 1899:

*360 “That from and after the passage and approval of this act, no taxes shall be assessed, levied or collected in any unorganized country, district or reservation which shall be or which may hereafter be attached to any county for judicial purposés, except taxes for1 the territorial and court funds. All acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.”

The question now presented is, Has the territorial legislature the power to tax the property in these reservations for territorial and court funds, and not for other county purposes? The plaintiffs in error insist that the Ponca and Otoe Indian reservations, although attached to Noble county for taxing purposes, form a separate taxing district, and therefore the rule of uniformity throughout the taxing district does not apply. Without determining at this time as to whether under our organic law the legislature must adopt a uniform rule for taxing all property within the taxing district, we will consider briefly the effect of attaching these reservations to Noble county for taxing purposes.

When the law of 1895 was first enacted, we were under the system of township assessors; therefore the legislature provided that the county commissioners of the county to which any Indian reservation was attached for taxing purposes should appoint a special assessor each year, whose duty it should be to assess the property in such reservation, and that such special assessor should have all of the powers and should be required to perform all of the duties of a township assessor, and that he should give a similar bond and take the same oath as required of such township assessors, and receive the same fees. And by this same *361 section it was provided that the officer whose duty it was to collect the taxes in the organized county to which such country, district or reservation was so attached, should collect such taxes, and was vested with all the powers which he might exercise in the organized county, and his official bond by the act was made to cover all such taxes which might come, into his possession. From the provisions of the act of 1895 it will be seen that the legislature treated these reservations as it did the townships in the same county, and they were under the same rule; and while they were not, in fact, a part of Noble county, that is, the county lines were not extended around them, still they were attached to Noble county and became a part of the same taxing district; and the legislature provided for the' appointment of a special assessor each year for these reservations, so that they might, as nearly as possible, be placed under the same system as the townships; and when the legislature in 1897 did away, with the township assessors, and provided one assessor for each county, the act repealed the other statute regarding special assessors for these reservations, and the county assessors in the counties to which the different reservations were attached for taxing purposes were thereby empowered to assess all of the property in their respective counties, and this power was not necessarily limited to the territory within the county lines, for the law which directs the county assesor to assess the property in his county, means also that he shall assess the property in the Indian reservation attached to his county for taxing purposes; and while such reservations, may, in fact, be clear outside the lines of the county, it is by law placed under the same jurisdiction, and subject to the same rules. Once a reservation is attached to a county for tax *362 ing purposes, it thereby becomes a part of the county taxing district to which it is attached.- (Gay v. Thomas 169 U. S. 277 and Russell v. Green, [Okla.] not officially reported, 62 Pac. 817.) It therefore necessarily follows-that, if the law .in question is to be upheld, it must be upon some theory other than that the Ponca and Otoe Indian reservations form a separate taxing district.

This brings us to the consideration of the power of the legislature to exempt the property in these reservations, from certain taxes which are imposed upon the property within the limits of the organized county to which they are attached for-taxing purposes.

The power of taxation is a legislative power, and the right to select certain classes or species of property for taxation, and the right to exempt from taxation other classes of property is unrestricted except by constitutional inhibitions. Therefore, while many cases have been cited on- behalf of both appellants and appellee in these cáse?, the great majority of uhem are of little assistance to us, as they are interpretations of constitutions which very materially differ from our organic act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1901 OK 44, 66 P. 348, 11 Okla. 357, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pryor-v-bryan-county-treasurer-okla-1901.