State, Ex Rel. Herrick v. Jones

24 N.E.2d 632, 62 Ohio App. 474, 16 Ohio Op. 157, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 436
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 24 N.E.2d 632 (State, Ex Rel. Herrick v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Ex Rel. Herrick v. Jones, 24 N.E.2d 632, 62 Ohio App. 474, 16 Ohio Op. 157, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 436 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Nichols, P. J.

In the Court of Common Pleas of Mahoning county two proceedings in mandamus were instituted by the state of Ohio, on relation of J. R. Herrick: One against the county auditor to compel him to prepare and certify for publication and cause to be published in’ accordance with the requirements of *475 the laws of the state of Ohio, a copy of the delinquent personal and classified tax lists and the delinquent land list and duplicate as described in Sections 5694 and 5704, General Code; and the other against the Board of County Commissioners to compel them to make provision for the proper and necessary expenses of publishing the delinquent tax lists and display notices provided for by the same sections of the General Code.

The prayer of each petition of relator was granted upon hearing in the Common Pleas Court, the cases having been submitted together upon the petitions and answers thereto and an agreed statement of facts. The defendants prosecute separate appeals to this court on questions of law, both appeals being submitted together upon briefs without oral argument, the sole claim of defendants being that the judgment in each case is contrary to law. In this connection it is urged that the issuance of the writs was an abuse of discretion upon the part of the Common Pleas Court for the following reasons:

1. The county commissioners had not made any appropriation therefor.

2. The county commissioners have no funds for this purpose and if an appropriation were made for such purpose there would be insufficient funds left with which to carry on relief and the ordinary administrative and judicial county functions.

3. Taxpayers will pay their taxes if they are able to do so.

4. The taxing district is now collecting more than the amount of delinquent taxes anticipated.

5. The cost of such advertising would be approximately fifty thousand dollars.

6. The only purpose of such advertisement would be to shame delinquents who are, to their sorrow, well aware of their delinquency without any fault of theirs.

7. It will not reach thousands of property owners *476 whose property does not appear in their own names, where the title is held by an allotment company.

8. It will neither reach, nor shame, thousands of landowners living outside of this county.

9. It will not shame stockholders of commercial and industrial corporations who so largely own valuable property in the downtown and business districts.

10. Mass advertising in two newspapers of this county, where there is only one newspaper having a large and a general circulation, is wasteful, costly and unnecessary.

Many of the reasons enumerated by counsel for appellants are argumentative to the point that the legislation requiring publication of the delinquent tax lists is unwise, ineffective, expensive and unwarranted, and all of these reasons are such as could be legitimately considered by the law making body in determining whether such legislation should be adopted or should remain upon the statute books, but this court is not a legislative body and its only province is to determine whether the legislation is mandatory in character.

It may be said that there is no evidence in the record as to the amount of the cost of advertising the delinquent lists, nor any evidence indicating whether taxpayers will pay their taxes when able to do so without publication of the delinquent tax lists. Whether the costs of publishing the tax lists will be excessive or will serve no other purpose than to shame delinquents and will not reach all of the property owners whose taxes are delinquent are matters which the Legislature is presumed to have considered in adopting the provisions of Sections 5694 and 5704, General Code. These reasons are not material to a determination of the question whether the provisions of these sections of the' code are mandatory.

It is conceded that the county commissioners have not made any provision for payment of the cost and expense of publishing the delinquent tax lists and the *477 display notices provided for, but we find and hold that this fact has no bearing upon the question whether the auditor shall prepare and publish the delinquent tax lists, for the reason that Section 5704-3, General Code, provides that if the county commissioners fail to make such appropriation, or if the appropriation is insufficient to meet such expense, any person interested may apply to the Court of Common Pleas of the county for an allowance to cover such expense and the court shall issue an order instructing the county auditor to issue his warrant upon the county treasurer for the amount deemed necessary, and the order by the court shall be final and shall be complied with forthwith. This same section provides that the proper and necessary expenses of publishing the delinquent tax lists and display notices provided for by Sections 5694 and 5704, General Code, shall be paid from the county treasury as county expenses are paid, and it shall be mandatory upon the county commissioners to make provision therefor in the annual budget of the county, submitted to the budget commission, and to make the necessary appropriations therefor.

True, the provisions of Section 5704-3, General Code, in terms, mandatorily require the county commissioners to make provision for the proper and necessary expenses of publishing the delinquent tax lists and display notices, but the mandatory character of this section is destroyed by the subsequent provisions therein providing for the manner of payment of such expenses in ease the county commissioners have failed in their duty to make such appropriation. Since mandamus lies only to require the performance of some act specifically enjoined upon a public officer, where there is no other adequate remedy provided by law, it must be held that the writ should have been denied by the Common Pleas Court as against the board of county commissioners, for the reason that there is an adequate means provided by law for the payment of the *478 proper and necessary expenses of publishing the delinquent tax lists and display notices in the event the county commissioners fail to provide therefor. It follows that the judgment of the Common Pleas Court wherein that court allowed the writ of mandamus to issue against the county commissioners must be, and the same is, reversed as contrary to law, and in that case final judgment is entered herein for the county commissioners.

Without attempting to set forth the provisions of Sections 5694 and 5704, General Code, as adopted effective October 26, 1936, 116 Ohio Laws (Pt. 2), 261, these sections, by express language, mandatorily require the auditor to cause a copy of the delinquent personal and classified property tax list and duplicate and a list of the lands oh the delinquent land list and duplicate to be published twice, within sixty days after delivery of such lists and duplicates to the county treasurer, in two

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Related

State Ex Rel. Harris v. Quigley
17 N.E.2d 912 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E.2d 632, 62 Ohio App. 474, 16 Ohio Op. 157, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-herrick-v-jones-ohioctapp-1939.