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

101 Mo. 120
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 101 Mo. 120 (State ex rel. Love 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. Love v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, 101 Mo. 120 (Mo. 1890).

Opinion

Brace, J.

This is an action brought in the name of the state at the relation of the collector of Caldwell county to recover certain taxes assessed and levied against the property of the defendant in said county for the years 1867-68-69-70-71-72-73-74-75-76 and 1877, with interest and penalties for the non-payment of the same.

The plaintiff recovered judgment for the amount of the road tax for all of the said years except the year 1873', and for the amount of the school taxes for the years 1867 to 1872, both inclusive, the whole aggregating with cost the sum of $78,121.12. The court found for the defendant as to all the taxes for the year 1873, and as to all other taxes for other years sued for, except the items stated. The taxes for which judgment was recovered were upon the defendant’s real estate and roadbed, together with the sidetracks and station houses appurtenant thereto, situate in said county. The errors assigned, and for which it is contended the judgment should be reversed, will be noticed in the order in which they are urged by counsel.

[127]*127I. It is conceded by counsel that it was shown by competent evidence that the road and school taxes, for the years 1867 to 1872, inclusive, were levied in pursuance of the valuation placed upon defendant’s property in said county by the state special board of equalization for railroad property created by act of the general assembly. Sess. Acts, 1871, pp. 56-59. But it is contended that that evidence, consisting in part of the journal of the proceedings of said board, also shows that the valuation of defendant’s property made by its president was increased by the board without notice, arbitrarily, and without hearing any evidence. It appears satisfactorily from the evidence that the board met and continued in session at the time and place when and where the assessment was made as required by law, of which time and place it was the duty of the defendant to take notice; that they took up the return made by the defendant of its property and made this assessment “after mature deliberation.” The only ground for the contention that they made the increase without evidence is that the record of their proceedings does not show affirmatively that such increase was made upon any other evidence than the return of defendant’s officers.

The law did not require that the evidence upon which they based their valuation should be preserved, or upon what evidence it should be based. Upon “the evidence produced before them ” they were required to increase or reduce the aggregate valuation of any railroad company as “they may deem just and right.” Sec. 7, p. 57, supra. There is no foundation for the contention that there was no evidence before them upon which to base an increase; they had the report of the defendant of its own valuation of its property, and of every other railroad company in the state, as a basis for equalization ; for increase or reduction, to such a standard as to them might “seem just and right.” What [128]*128other evidence they may have had in regard to the value of defendant’s property does not appear upon the face of the record of the board, nor was it necessary that it should so appear. H. & St. Joe Ry. Co. v. State Board, 64 Mo. 294.

That the board fixed'the same valuation upon defendant’s property for the precedent years that they did for 1872 may raise a suspicion in the minds of counsel that they acted arbitrarily and without evidence, but such a suspicion surely ought not to be permitted to overcome the legal presumption that these sworn officers, acting in a judicial capacity, honestly discharged their duties, and" against any mere mistake of their judgment no court can give relief, except by a direct review of such judgment in a manner provided by law. We find no error in the ruling of the court that the taxes were legally assessed in this respect, if the defendant’s property was subject to taxation for the years for which they were so assessed.

II. It is contended that the defendant’s property is not liable for the school taxes for the years 1867 to 1872, for which plaintiff recovered judgment, for the reason that although subject to taxation for school purposes for those years (Livingston County v. Railroad, 60 Mo. 516), yet not having been subjected to taxation for such purposes by appropriate legislation prior to the ' act of March 10, 1871, it could not be subjected to taxation under the provisions of that act for those years. For support of this contention reliance is placed on the language of the third section of said act, and upon the decision in State v. Railroad, 77 Mo. 202.

Said section reads as follows: Sec. 3. “In case . any such railroad or other property of any such company heretofore specified shall have been subjected to taxation prior to the passage of this act, for any year for which it shall not have been assessed and paid taxes, then,” etc.

[129]*129In Livingston County v. Railroad, supra, in construing this section in an action for taxes levied under the same act against the property of defendant in that county, the court, per Naptow, ,T., uses this language : “This section does not undertake to subject to taxation property which at the date of the ordered assessment was not liable to taxation, but merely to declare that in case property has been subject to taxation prior to the passage of the act, has escaped taxation either through the inattention of the owner, or of the county officers, these back taxes shall be assessed and collected.” School taxes for the same years were included in the action in that case as in this, and that case would seem to be decisive of the question, unless the contention can be maintained upon the authority of the case in 77 Mo., page 202, in which, in effect, it was held, in favor of a subsequent purchaser, that a lien in favor of the state could not be created against the property in specie of the defendant railroad company for taxes for the years preceding the levy and assessment under that act, whose capital stock during those years had been subjected by appropriate legislation to taxation, upon the principle that it was not to be held that the legislature intended to favor double taxation, and that,” having provided for the taxation of the capital stock during those years, the property of the company in specie could not be subjected to a lien, attempted to be thereafter created for such taxes upon the property in specie.

The case at bar is to be distinguished from that, in this: That the capital stock of the defendant during those years was neither subject to nor subjected to taxation for school purposes, for the reason that, by legislative enactment, its capital stock was exempt from taxation for such purposes, and its property in specie was subject to taxation therefor as will more fully appear in the subsequent discussion of another branch of the case, and was subjected thereto by the general [130]*130legislation, providing for the levy and collection of taxes upon such property in specie. Sess. Acts, 1852, p. 15, sec. 3 ; Q-. S. 1865, chap. 11, p. 95, sec. 1, and chap. 46, pp. 262 and 263, sec. 21, et seq. Consequently, there is no question of double taxation in this case, the vital one, which lay at the root of the controversy in that case, and which led to the distinction made between property subject to and property subjected to taxation.

III.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Mo. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-love-v-hannibal-st-joseph-railroad-mo-1890.