Snetzer v. Gregg

196 S.W. 925, 129 Ark. 542, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 670
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 25, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 925 (Snetzer v. Gregg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snetzer v. Gregg, 196 S.W. 925, 129 Ark. 542, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 670 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The General Assembly of 1917 enacted a special statute creating an improvement district designated as the Newport Levee District, for the purpose of constructing a levee to protect property in the city of Newport and vicinity from inundation by water overflowing "White river. The city of Newport constituted mainly, although not wholly, the territory embraced in the boundaries of the district. The territory is described by metes and bounds, and appellant, who is the owner of real estate in the district, instituted .this action to restrain the hoard of commissioners from proceeding according to the terms of the statute.

It is contended that the statute is void because it authorizes the assessment of personal property, as well as real estate, to raise funds with which to pay for the construction and maintenance of the levee. The statute is novel in this respect, for the attempt to tax per- ’ sonal. property for a local improvement has never been ‘undertaken in this State. The statute provides that the assessors of the district “shall at once proceed to assess the benefits accruing to the lands, lots and parts of lots, railroad tracks and rights-of-way and tramroads in said district, by reason of the construction of such improvement, and also' the benefit accruing to the personal property in said district by reason of such improvement.” It also provides that the assessors “shall make a list of such lands, lots and parts of lots, railroad tracks and rights-of-way and tramroads, and a separate list of such personal property in books to be provided by said board of directors for that purpose, showing a 1 description of the same, the name of the owner or owners ' of such lands, lots and parts of lots, railroad tracks and rights-of-way and tramroads, and the name of the owner of such personal property, and the amount of the benefit assessed thereon by said board of assessors, and shall file said list with the secretary of said board of directors.”

The question is, therefore, squarely presented whether or not personal property can be subjected to taxation for local improvement. This has not heretofore been attempted in this State, as- we ■ have already said, -nor can wé find in the books any example of an attempt in other States to tax personal property as such for the purpose of defraying the expenses of local improve.■ments. In the State of Louisiana a tax on cotton per bale grown on lands in a levee district for the purpose of maintaining' the levees which protected the land, and also a special tax on oysters taken from beds protected 'by an improvement for the maintenance of which the tax is levied, has been upheld by the courts of that State. Excelsior Planting & Manufacturing Co. v. Green, Collector, 39 La. Ann. 455; Board of Commissioners v. Mialegvich, 52 La. Ann. 1292. In one of those cases, however, the tax was sustained on the principle that the subject-matter was the product of the land, and in the other, on the principle that the State had the power to prescribe the terms and conditions upon which oysters should be removed from lands of the State, the oysters being protected in the beds, as it was shown by the proof in the case, and in that sense was a product of the land; and the cotton grown on the land being a product, was taxed as such. In the case upholding the tax on cotton (Excelsior Planting & Manufacturing Co. v. Green, Collector, supra) The court said: “The Legislature, doubtless, concluded that the cotton produced on land would be as reasonable and fair a measure of the extra benefit derived by such land as any other, and that this cotton, having been protected during the whole season of its growth by the levee,:, had enjoyed a benefit which formed a just basis for its assessment. In this the Legislature certainly acted within the range of its power and in thorough conformity with the principles of special assessment. The only question was how and when to apportion and collect the assessment on such cotton. The simplest and most practical method was evidently that adopted, towit: to apportion it on the ginned bale, which is the mercantile form to which all cotton is reduced for marketable purposes.”

In the other case cited, in which the tax on oysters was upheld, the court said: “Another objection to the assessment is that oysters are not the produce of alluvial lands, and that if they are they are not the produce of lands which are subject to taxation, for the reason that they are cultivated on land belonging to the State. We may, without deep research, find marked analogy between the cultivation of the oysters and that of crops. Their beds are on submerged lands, and they require as much, or nearly as much, care and cultivation as crops. It is true that the fisherman need know nothing of the labors of the plow, and the cultivation of the ground, but his work is among the oyster beds laid very near the shore and his oysters, if not produced directly by the land, are very much aided by the favorable situation in which they are placed, that is, in territory protected by the levees, as before stated. We agree with counsel that they are not the produce of the land in the sense that plants are by it given life, but we are, as we take it, justified in holding that from the very fact that these lands are owned by the State, and as such, not subject to taxation, gives rise to the right specially to assess them. Being the property of the State, she may well impose the condition that those who occupy them .shall pay an assessment tax for public improvement. The defendant is not in the position of a fisherman who occupied and owns land. He can not prevent the State from imposing such condition, in so far as he is concerned, and such assessment on her own lands, as may be deemed to the interest of all concerned.”

(1) • It is thus seen that tax on the products of the land is treated as an indirect tax on the benefit accruing to the land by virtue of the improvement, and if it be conceded to be reasonable and lawful to impose the tax on that theory, this is far from upholding a tax on personal property independent of its connection with the real estate, for the purpose of defraying the expenses of a local improvement. We are clearly of the opinion that it could not be done. It is said in many decisions that the right to levy a special tax on property to pay the cost of local improvements can be justified only on the theory of special benefit to the property thus taxed. That doctrine has been repeatedly announced in the decisions of this court. Kirst v. Street Improvement District No. 120, 86 Ark. 1.

(2) It follows that personal property can not be taxed, for the reason that it can not be specially benefited by a local improvement. The owner may be benefited in the enjoyment of the use of his personal prop-’ erty in that locality, but the property itself derives no benefit. A horse has the same value situated, for the time béing, within the bounds of an improvement district, or outside of it. Money deposited in a bank, or commercial paper, is of the same value whether held in a city embraced in an improvement district or elsewhere, and a stock of merchandise is worth its market value wherever situated, regardless of a local improvement. The construction of the improvement may result in increased conveniences for handling the personal property, but the benefit, after all, is to the owner and not to the property. The situs of personal property follows the domicile of the owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 925, 129 Ark. 542, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snetzer-v-gregg-ark-1917.