State Ex Rel. Johnson v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

275 S.W. 932, 310 Mo. 587, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 858
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 932 (State Ex Rel. Johnson v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.) 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. Johnson v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 275 S.W. 932, 310 Mo. 587, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 858 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

*591 GRAVES, C. J.

Action by the Collector of Clark County to recover from the defendant the sum of $11,-165.46, claimed to be due for taxes for the year 1921. Defendant refused to pay on the ground that under the law of 1921 (Laws 1921, p. 677), the levy for 1921 for county purposes in Clark County exceeded the levy for like purposes in 1920 by more than ten per cent. On December 31, 1921, before such taxes became due, there was a tender of $10,144.03, which the defendant claimed was all that it legally owed. In January there was a second tender of $10’,245'.48, which included the amount of the first tender ($10,144.03) plus $105.45', 'being a penalty of one per cent for the month of January, 1922. There was a third tender, the purpose of which is stated in appellant’s statement of the case thus: “Appellant then discovered that the amount tendered did not equal the full amount of taxes legally due the county from appellant for the year 1921, after deducting appellant’s proportion of the excess over the ten per cent increase for the previous year, and, on February 10; 1922, appellant made a tender of $10,245.48’, and an additional *592 tender of $179.62, being the difference between the amount already tendered and the amount which appellant owed after deducting the excess over and above the ten per cent increase of the amount of taxes for the preceding year, plus two per cent penalty. The said Louis Johnson, relator herein, refused to accept each of the several tenders and claimed and demanded the said sum of $11,165.46. The last of these three tenders was made after this action had been commenced.”

The real contention here involves only the sumí of $841.81 or even less, but as the case involves the construction of the revenue laws of the State, this court has jurisdiction.

Appellant contends that excluding a judgment levy, the total county levy for 1920, was only $83,789'82, and that the total levy for county purposes in 1921 was $110,713.26, and that the latter exceeds ten per cent of the former by $18,544.47.

The petition says: “That there was legally assessed and levied against such property for the year ending June 1st A. D. 1920, for state, county, school and other municipal purposes, the aggregate sum of $11,-165.46; that of the taxes so assessed and levied, there is now due and unpaid for state purposes, the sum of $1,197.46; for county purposes, the sum of $5,322.57, of which said county tax $2,394.92 is denominated the county fund tax; the sum of $1,131.46 of said county tax is denominated road fund tax; the sum of $1,436.95, of said county tax is denominated special road-and-bridge fund tax; the sum of $359.24 of said county tax is denominated special-levy-judgment-fund tax; for school purposes in said county, the sum of $4,550.35'; for city, town and other municipal purposes .the sum of $95.08, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $11,165.46, which sum the defendant has failed to pay as required by law.

“The plaintiff is entitled to recover from defendant, a penalty of two per cent per calendar mionth on the amount so due and unpaid, from the 1st day of January *593 A. D. 1922 uiitil the same shall be paid; together with the collector’s commission of two per cent on the whole amount.”

The answer pleads the following provision in the Act of 1921 (Laws 1921, p. 678), which reads:

“Provided, however, the county court shall not have power to order a rate of tax levy on real or personal property for the year 1921 which shall produce more than ten per cent in excess of the amount produced, mathematically, by the rate of levy ordered in 1920', and in no subsequent year may any county court, or any officer or officers acting therefor, order a rate of tax, levy that will produce, mathematically, more than ten per cent in excess of the taxes levied for the previous years.”

Relator, the county collector, challenges this provision of the law as being violative of the State Constitution, giving the provisions of the Constitution alleged to have been violated in the enactment of such provision.

The court rendered judgment as follows:

“Now at this day this cause coming on for hearing both plaintiff and the defendant appearing by counsel; upon the pleadings, evidence and counsel before the court both parties waiving jury and the court being duly advised in the premises the court finds that the allegations contained in the plaintiff’s petition are true, that all the funds sued on therein are due the plaintiff from the defendant, except as to the sum of $161.65, which the court finds has been excessively taxed against the defendant on the Clark County revenue fund.

“Wherefore it is ordered, considered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiff have judgment for the sum of $11,165.46, less $161.65 and that plaintiff’s judgment is therefore for the sum of $11,003.81; together with interest thereon from January 1, 1922, in the sum of $660.23, and that plaintiff have judgment in the sum of $223.28 collector’s commission on said taxes sued on in plaintiff’s petition, and that plaintiff have judgment *594 in the sum of $200' attorney’s fees for plaintiff’s attorney in managing and conducting his suit, taxed as costs, and that plaintiff have judgment in toto including the taxes sued on, interest thereon and plaintiff’s commission thereon and plaintiff’s attorney fee therein, aggregating the sum of $12,097.32; that same he a lien against defendant in favor of the State of Missouri and costs; and that plaintiff have special execution therefor.”

Further specific admission and pleas in the answer can he noted, if necessary, in the opinion. The judgment of the trial court cut down the claim of $841.81 by over $165, as will be seen.

I. The first question is as to the validity of the Act of 1921 (Laws 1921, p. 677) in so far as it undertakes to limit the taxes of 1921 to ten per cent more than those levied for the year 1920. The lawmakers in 1921 passed a series of laws having similar restrictions. The law we are dealing with applies to counties. We, however, have dealt directly with a law applying to one class of cities, which law contains the same proviso, as to the limitation of city taxes. [State ex rel. City of Sedalia v. Weinrich, 236 S. W. 872.] Section 11 of Article X of the Constitution is a limitation on the power of a county court in levying taxes for county purposes, but this does not exclude the Legislature from further limiting the tax levy. To be more explicit, if the constitutional provisions limit the tax to fifty cents upon the $100; such limitation does not preclude the lawmakers from limiting it to forty cents on the $100. The constitutional purpose was to fix a limit beyond which the lawmakers could not go, and not that the lawmakers could not further limit the levy, or increase a former levy, so long as the increase was within the constitutional limit. The Constitution, at this point, is not dealing with limitations upon assessments, but is only dealing with the limits of taxation, upon the property, whatever the assessed value *595 may be, upon which the tax is to be levied.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Emerson v. City of Mound City
73 S.W.2d 1017 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
State Ex Rel. Covington v. Wabash Railway Co.
3 S.W.2d 378 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1928)
State Ex Rel. Kersey v. Pemiscot Land & Cooperage Co.
295 S.W. 78 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 932, 310 Mo. 587, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-johnson-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-mo-1925.