State ex rel. Hamilton v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad

21 S.W. 14, 113 Mo. 297, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 23, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 21 S.W. 14 (State ex rel. Hamilton v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hamilton v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, 21 S.W. 14, 113 Mo. 297, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 1 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Maceablahe, J.

The suit is prosecuted by the collector of Linn county to recover taxes for the years 1883, 4, 5, 6 and 7, alleged to have been levied by the county court for payment of interest upon railroad aid bonds of Jefferson township, in Linn county, and for creating a fund with which to pay the principal at their maturity. The petition contains five counts, one for the taxes of each year, and is drawn substantially after the form prescribed for such suits by what is now section 7742, Revised Statutes, 1889. In each count it is charged that the tax became delinquent January 1, 1888.

Defendant, by its answer, admitted its incorporation, pleaded charter exemption from taxation, and that, by a former judgment of the circuit court of Linn county, rendered in 1879, the county court had been restrained from levying a tax to pay either principal or interest on said bonds. In this plea defendant stated the date of the alleged indebtedness to have been August 3, 1868. The plea was stricken out, on motion of plaintiff, and defendant saved no exception thereto.

[302]*302At the trial plaintiff read, over defendant’s objection, a certificate of the collector of the county, setting forth the taxes for each year separately, the kind of taxes, and a description of the property taxed, with the name of the owner thereof, and declaring that “the amounts of back taxes remain delinquent in favor pf the several funds for the several years” on defendant’s railroad “situate in Jefferson township, Linn county, Missouri.”

Plaintiff then read the several certificates of the state auditor, showing the valuation at which the property was assessed for each year.

To support the first four counts plaintiff read an order of the county court of Linn county, dated July 5, 1887, requesting the prosecuting attorney of the county to apply to the judge of the circuit court for an order directing the levy of the taxes. This order recited as a reason for the levy that said county court “undertook to, and did levy a tax, on all taxable property in the township,” for said years, but stated further that it was “satisfied that said levies herein before mentioned, and each of them, was illegally and erroneously made by this court because of the failure of this court to comply with the requirements” of the statute making a levy for such taxes conditional upon an order of the circuit court or judge. In pursuance of this order the prosecuting attorney petitioned the circuit judge who, under date of July 6, 1887, made the order requiring the county court to make the levy. The petition and orders were read in evidence.

Plaintiff then read in evidence an order of the circuit judge March 23, 1887, reciting a petition of the prosecuting attorney, and directing the levy of a special tax to pay interest on said township bonded indebtedness, and to create a sinking fund for the year 1887. At the August adjourned term, 1887, of said county [303]*303■court and on the fifth day of September, 1887, the court levied the tax for the year 1887. On the fifth day of November 1887, the county court pursuant, as recited, to the said direction of the circuit judge made a levy of the taxes for the years 1888 to 1886 both inclusive.

Defendant read section 24' of its charter which provides that the “stock of said company shall be ■exempt from state and county taxes.”

The court refused to declare the law as requested by defendant that “the order of the county court dated November 5, 1887, read in evidence purporting to levy taxes for the years 1883, 4, 5, 6, is unauthorized in law and void as a levy of taxes for those years,” but did declare the law to be, that upon the pleadings and’ evidence the judgment must be for plaintiff.

Judgment was rendered for plaintiff on each count ■and defendant appealed.

I. The objection, urged by the defendant in the circuit court, that the township tax, sued for in this action, is really and in law a part of the county tax, and as such could not be charged against its property under the exemption therefrom contained in its charter, was settled in a recent decision of this court adversely - to defendant’s contention, and is not. seriously insisted upon here. State ex rel. v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 149. In this decision it was distinctly held that a township tax to pay bonds issued in aid of a railroad was not a county tax within the meaning of the exemption from county taxation contained in defendant’s charter.

II. The question of most serious difficulty in the •case respects the effect of the order of the county court in levying the taxes for the years 1883 to 1886, both inclusive, under the direction of the circuit judge, given long after the time srithin which the levy should have been made under section 6879 of the statute of 1879. .It was recently held by this court in State ex rel. v. [304]*304Railroad, 97 Mo. 297, that, “there is nothing in this section which professes to give the connty court the power to go back and levy or relevy a tax, which it then had no power to levy. Nor does the order of the circuit judge help the matter. The statute giving him the power, on the petition of the prosecuting attorney, to direct and order the county court to levy the specified tax is prospective only. It furnishes him no power to direct the county court to make levies for by-gone years.” If the order of the circuit court or judge was necessary to vest in the county court authority to levy the tax, and the statute furnished the judge “no power to direct the county court to make levies for by-gone years,” then it would be clear that the levy in this case was a nullity.

Since the foregoing decision, however, the statute (sec. 6799, et seq.) which requires the order of the circuit court or judge to authorize the county court to levy taxes for paying this class of indebtedness, has been declared unconstitutional by the supreme court of the United States, at least so far as they apply to a levy of taxes to pay township bonds issued prior to 1879, the date at which said sections were enacted. Seibert v. Lewis, 122 U. S. 284; see also State ex rel. v. Railroad, supra.

The evidence in this case gives no intimation of the date of the bonds of Jefferson township for the payment of which this levy was made. The plea of estop-pel made by defendant, it is true, fixed the date at a period long prior to the date of the statute, but this plea was stricken out on motion of plaintiff, and the statements contained in it were not read in evidence or preserved by exceptions, and cannot therefore now be used as an admission. We think, however, that courts can presume that an act was done prior to a period after which it could not lawfully have been done. The [305]*305constitution, which was adopted in 1875, took from the legislature the power to authorize any township in the state to lend its aid to any corporation whatsoever, or to become a stockholder therein. Since the adoption of the constitution these townships, or the counties in their behalf, have no authority to lend their credit to railroad companies, or to issue their bonds, in furtherance of a purpose to do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.W. 14, 113 Mo. 297, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hamilton-v-hannibal-st-joseph-railroad-mo-1893.