State Ex Rel. Johnson v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

10 S.W.2d 918, 321 Mo. 35, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 843
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 3, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 10 S.W.2d 918 (State Ex Rel. Johnson v. St. Louis & San Francisco 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. Johnson v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 10 S.W.2d 918, 321 Mo. 35, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 843 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

This is a suit upon a tax bill to recover a balance alleged to be due from defendant under a levy, made in 1920, by the County Court of Cass County, of fifty cents on the $100 upon the assessed valuation of all property in said county, for interest and sinking fund purposes, on account of the bonded indebtedness then existing against said county.

In 1908 Cass County funded its then existing indebtedness, and issued bonds in the sum of $390,000, bearing four per cent interest. In May, 1920, the time when the general levy was made, there were outstanding and unpaid of said bonds, the sum of $76,000 of which, bonds in the sum of $30,000 had been called for payment. There was at that time a balance of $23,686.17 belonging to the bonded debt fund, remaining from previous levies; but this fund, with other county funds, had been on deposit with the Bank of Harrisonville, *Page 39 the county depository, which, about the first of February, 1920, had been taken in charge by the State Finance Department as an insolvent bank, and the fund was not then immediately available. The Bank of Harrisonville, the depository, had given a bond as such, with thirteen individuals as sureties. Through cooperation of the individual depositors of the failed bank, and the sureties upon the depository bond, there was a reorganization, and the incorporation of a new bank, the State Bank of Harrisonville, through which all the county deposit, including the bonded debt fund, was paid in full. In this transaction the sureties on the depository bond of the old bank raised and paid into the new bank the sum of $150,000. This transaction was completed, and the restoration of all the county moneys made complete on July 12, 1920. Afterward, on August 9, 1920, and after receipt of the certificate of the State Auditor showing action of the State Board of Assessment and Equalization, and as provided by Section 13030, Revised Statutes 1919, the county court made the levy of fifty cents on the $100 of assessed valuation upon the property of defendant, and other railroad companies. The total assessed valuation on which the levy was made, including defendant's property, was $18,238,111, and the total tax levied for bond purposes was therefore $91,190.55. Under that levy, the tax against defendant's property was $2306.41. On December 29, 1920, the defendant paid upon this tax the sum of $1522.23, which would have been the amount of defendant's tax had such tax been levied at the rate of thirty-three cents on the $100 valuation, the contention of defendant being that the tax resulting from a levy of thirty-three cents on the $100 for bond purposes, with the fund already on hand, would have been ample for the redemption of all the outstanding bonds.

The cause has been tried twice and this is the second appeal. Upon the first trial there was judgment in favor of the defendant. The determination of the issues presented upon that appeal may be seen in the former opinion, 315 Mo. 430. The cause was submitted upon the second trial upon the same pleadings as at the first trial. Upon the first trial, three defenses were made. The first was, that a levy of fifty cents on the $100, in addition to the other county taxes which were levied, exceeded the maximum rate as fixed by the Constitution. This defense was determined against the defendant. The next defense was that the county court, at the time of the issuance of said funding bonds, by its order, had fixed the rate of twenty-five cents as the rate at which taxes were to be levied for the payment of annual interest on the bonds, and the creation of a sinking fund for their redemption when due, and that therefore, no higher rate than twenty-five cents could be levied for such purposes. This defense was also determined against the defendant. The other defense made *Page 40 was, that the levy of fifty cents on the $100 valuation was grossly excessive, and wholly unnecessary to pay off the amount of bonds then outstanding, and was an illegal and void levy.

Upon the rulings made in the first trial arising upon the last mentioned issue, the judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded. The correctness of the ruling in favor of defendant at the second trial, upon the defense last mentioned, is the issue presented upon this appeal. The evidence was that out of the proceeds of the levy in question, together with the balance on hand belonging to the fund at the time that levy was made, all of the outstanding bonds and accrued interest were paid, and that after such complete payment there remained in the said fund on August 1, 1922, the sum of approximately $39,000, which was transferred to the general revenue fund of the county by the county court. Upon that fact, and also upon the conditions existing at the time the levy in question was made, defendant bases its claim that such levy was unnecessary, illegal and void, at least as to the excess levied and demanded over the sum already paid by defendant.

The record made upon the first trial was put in evidence upon the second trial, but the evidence on the second trial of especial importance upon the only issue remaining, was the testimony taken showing the condition existing, and confronting the county court, at the time the levy was made. The trial court at the first trial rejected the plaintiff's offer to show by oral testimony that the bonded debt fund of the county, amounting at the time of the levy in question to about $23,000, appeared at that time to be lost to the county. The defendant at that trial made no offer to show the net amount of the tax which could have reasonably been expected to be realized upon the levy at the time it was made. These matters were gone into upon the second trial, and it is this evidence which is to be considered in view of the ruling of the trial court, and in accordance with the rulings made in the former appeal. In the first appeal it was held that the mere fact the county court made a levy, sufficient, not only to take up the $30,000 of bonds which had been called, but also the remaining bonds, although those remaining had not reached maturity, was not an abuse of discretion. In accordance with that ruling, the determination of the issues submitted on the second trial was made to turn upon the question whether the levy was illegal as being excessive. Under the former ruling and under the authorities generally, the determination of that issue depends not alone upon the fact that there remained a surplus of $39,000 as a result of developments subsequently appearing, but the conclusion is to be reached upon a consideration also of all the conditions which surrounded the county court at the time the levy was made. The rules of law to be borne in *Page 41 mind in the determination of the essential issue, supported by the authorities generally, were briefly stated in the former opinion by RAGLAND, J.:

"Exactions from the people, as taxes or otherwise, in advance of any needs of the government are not only condemned by sound public policy, but are violative as well of fundamental rights guaranteed by our organic law. The County Court of Cass County was therefore without power to levy a tax clearly in excess of what could at the time have been reasonably anticipated as necessary to pay the interest and principal of the funding bonds. However, the authority to determine what amount would be necessary for that purpose was vested in it, and unless there was a clear abuse of this discretionary power, its action in the premises cannot be interfered with. In other words the amount levied must have been so grossly excessive as to constitute, constructively at least, a fraud upon the taxpayers. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 918, 321 Mo. 35, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-johnson-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-mo-1928.