State Ex Rel. Malkin v. McMahon

91 A. 445, 88 Conn. 461, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 A. 445 (State Ex Rel. Malkin v. McMahon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Malkin v. McMahon, 91 A. 445, 88 Conn. 461, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 67 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Beach, J.

The General Assembly of 1913 passed an Act consolidating the town of Norwalk with the cities of Norwalk and South Norwalk and the East Norwalk fire district, and incorporating the city of Norwalk, whose boundaries include the whole territory formerly occupied by the above-named municipalities. 16 Special Laws, p. 1038. The Act divides the new city into five districts for purposes of taxation: the first taxing district, which was the former city of Norwalk; *463 the second taxing district, which was the former city of South Norwalk; the third taxing district, which was the former East Norwalk fire district; the fourth taxing district, which is the territory included in the first, second, and third taxing districts above described; and the fifth taxing district, which is the entire new city of Norwalk.

The general scheme of taxation provided for, contemplates that the fifth district shall assume all the burdens formerly borne by the town of Norwalk; that the first, second, and third districts shall each assume, to some extent, the local burdens formerly carried by its municipal predecessor; and that certain other taxes for city, as distinguished from ordinary town, expenses, shall be borne by the fourth district, which includes the entire urban district of the new city.

This controversy presents the question whether the expense of lighting the streets of the first district is to be borne by the first district separately, or by the fourth district.

The first district is a body politic and corporate, and has a separate board of commissioners and a treasurer, whose duties are prescribed by the Act. The same is true of the second and third districts, respectively. The fourth district is not a body politic or corporate, being merely a geographical division of the city for certain specified purposes, including certain taxing purposes. The general supervision and control of the finances and taxation of the entire city is vested in a board of estimate and taxation appointed by the mayor.

The commissioners of the first district, as required by the Act, presented to the city treasurer estimates and requests for appropriations, covering the expenses to be separately borne by the first district, for the fiscal year next ensuing, not including any estimated expense *464 of lighting the streets of the first district. The board of estimate and taxation added to these estimates an appropriation of $10,300 for that purpose, and increased by that amount the taxes to' be separately assessed upon the district. This amount of $10,300 represents the agreed price for lighting the streets of the first district for the fiscal year next ensuing, as provided in an existing contract between the former city of Nor-walk and the local electric lighting company. The contract in question was in force at the passage of the Act of consolidation, and runs for the period of three years from December 1st, 1912.

The relator is a citizen and taxpayer of the first district, and brings this writ of mandamus to compel the board of estimate and taxation to eliminate this item of $10,300 from the separate assessment list of the first district, and to include it in the list of the fourth district.

The precise question is whether the expense of lighting the streets of the first district, which was formerly the city of Norwalk, is properly chargeable, under the Act, to the first district separately, or to the fourth district, which includes also the former city of South Norwalk and the East Norwalk fire district. Its decision involves, also, the larger question whether the cost of street lighting is included among the “burdens, expenses, and liabilities” of the former municipalities which are expressly imposed upon the first, second, and third districts, as successors to the rights, property, and obligations of the city of Norwalk, the city of South Norwalk, and the East Norwalk fire district, respectively, or whether the total cost of lighting these three districts was intended to be distributed throughout the fourth district by a uniform rate of taxation.

The scheme of taxation outlined by the Act is well defined in its general outlines, as will appear from-the *465 following references to the Act: Section 10 provides that the fifth district shall assume the expenses formerly borne by the town of Norwalk, also the expenses of the board of health, and certain salaries and office expenses of elective city officials; and that all expenses of permanent pavements “shall be borne by said fourth taxing district.” The distribution of all other taxes is generally provided for as follows: “All other burdens and expenses of the city shall be met by taxes levied upon the inhabitants and property within the limits of the fourth taxing district, and it shall be the duty of the assessors to indicate in the completed list of the city, and by separate lists, the property and amount thereof taxable in each of the several taxing districts herein created, and the money derived from the taxation of the inhabitants and property of each of the aforesaid taxing districts shall not be used for any other purpose than to defray the burdens and expenses of such taxing districts as herein imposed.”

Evidently a distinction is made between the words “shall be borne by said fourth taxing district” and the words “shall be met by taxes levied upon the inhabitants and property within the limits of the fourth taxing district,” the latter phrase meaning that the expense in question may be assessed either upon the fourth district, as such, or may be separately assessed upon any one of the three taxing districts included in the fourth district.

The Act next specifies in detail the powers and duties of the several taxing districts, except the fifth. Sections 11 to 21 relate to the first district, and, so far as material to this case, they provide that it shall succeed to all the property of the former city of Norwalk, and have the ownership, management, and control of the water-works formerly owned by that city. It is also provided that “all the inhabitants and property within *466 the limits of said first taxing district shall be liable to taxation to defray any burdens, expenses, and liabilities of the former city of Norwalk at the passage of this Act and such other liabilities as said taxing district may incur under the provisions of this Act.”

These enactments are certainly sufficient to specifically impose on the first district the existing obligations of the city of Norwalk under its street-lighting contract, and to subject the inhabitants and property within the first district to taxation for any liability of the former city of Norwalk under such contract existing at the passage of the Act. .

Sections 22 to 33 relate to the second district, and contain similar provisions in respect of the assumption by the second district of the rights, property, and obligations of the former city of South Norwalk, and making the inhabitants and property within the second district liable to taxation to defray its “burdens, expenses, and liabilities.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A. 445, 88 Conn. 461, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-malkin-v-mcmahon-conn-1914.