State Ex Rel. Marlowe v. Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber Co.

58 S.W.2d 750, 332 Mo. 379, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 499
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 16, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 750 (State Ex Rel. Marlowe v. Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber 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. Marlowe v. Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber Co., 58 S.W.2d 750, 332 Mo. 379, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 499 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This case comes to this court on certification of the Springfield Court of Appeals as involving a construction of the revenue laws of the State. The plaintiff is the Collector of the Revenue for New Madrid County and defendant is a manufacturer of lumber and its products, located at Morehouse, in that county. As such, defendant gave bond, as required by law, for the payment of the taxes lawfully assessed against it for the year 1928. This suit is on such bond. There is no dispute as to the property assessed *Page 383 or its valuation. In fact, the defendant paid all taxes assessed against it for the year 1928 except a part of the school taxes now in dispute. The disputed taxes are for the year 1928 and in favor of School District No. 25, commonly known as the Morehouse School District, which defendant refused to pay as being illegally assessed. The total taxes assessed against defendant for schools for the year 1928 amounted to $1659.20, made up of the following rates per $100 valuation, to-wit:

For School Purposes ............................... $1.00 For Interest ...................................... .10 For Sinking Fund .................................. .10 For Building Purposes ............................. .50 ______ $1.70

The defendant tendered and paid the amounts assessed for interest and sinking fund and forty cents per $100 valuation for school purposes, making a total paid of sixty cents per $100 valuation, aggregating $585.60 school taxes. The defendant refused to pay the amount assessed for building purposes, fifty cents on the $100 valuation, and refused to pay sixty cents of the 100 cents assessed for school purposes. The plaintiff now sues for this balance of $1073.60 plus interest and costs, made up of the fifty cents per $100 valuation for building purposes and sixty cents per $100 valuation for school purposes. On trial by the court plaintiff had judgment and defendant has appealed.

No question arises on the pleadings and there are practically no disputed facts. Defendant concedes that under the law this Morehouse School District could and did properly levy a tax of forty cents per $100 valuation on all classes of property, but contends that it could not lawfully levy more than that amount except by a vote of the taxpayers of the district at an election lawfully called and held for that purpose. Defendant challenges the legality of such election and invokes the protection of the constitutional provision providing that, except in cities of one hundred thousand population or over, the annual rate of taxation for school purposes shall not exceed forty cents on the $100 valuation; provided that such annual rate may be increased, in districts formed of cities and towns, to an amount not to exceed $1 on the $100 valuation, and in other districts to an amount not to exceed sixty-five cents on the $100 valuation, on condition that a majority of the voters who are taxpayers, voting at an election held to decide the question, vote for such increase. [Constitution of Missouri, Sec. 11, Art. X.] The question here is whether this provision of the Constitution and our statutes made to carry out same were complied with in voting an increase above the forty-cent rate allowed without any such vote. *Page 384 The record here shows that at a meeting of the school board of the Morehouse District on February 24, 1928, the following order was voted:

"That the secretary be instructed to post notice for the annual election as follows: To vote a nine months' school. To vote a tax of sixty cents in excess of forty cents on the $100 valuation for School purposes, and to vote a tax of fifty cents on the $100 valuation for Building fund."

It is claimed that this order is insufficient in not designating the time and place of holding the election. Under our statute, Section 9283, Revised Statutes 1929, the annual meeting of each school district is held on the first Tuesday of April each year, and power is then given by Section 9284, Revised Statutes 1929, "to determine, by ballot, the length of school term in excess of eight months that the public schools of the district shall be maintained for the next scholastic year; also, to determine the rate, if any, in excess of forty cents on the one hundred dollars' assessed valuation to be levied for school purposes, as provided for in Section 9225." Section 9225, Revised Statutes 1929, provides that the board of education, when it deems it necessary to increase the annual rate of taxation for school purposes, shall determine the rate necessary and shall submit the question of such increase to the voters of the district. It is conceded here that this question was voted on at the annual meeting in April, 1928, and resulted in a majority vote in favor of increasing the rate from 40 cents to 100 cents for school purposes. Defendant's contention is that the order of the board of education made on February 24, 1928, submitting this question of increasing the rate at the annual election in April, 1928, does not designate the time and place of holding such election. It will be noticed that the order of the school board is that the clerk post notices for the annual election, specifying the matters to be voted on, among them "to vote a tax of sixty cents in excess of forty cents on the $100 valuation for School purposes." The record here does not show a copy of the notice of the election, but no objection is made that the notices themselves were deficient in any respect as to the time or place of holding the election. The contention is that it is the province of the school board to fix the time and place of the annual meeting and that this could not be delegated to the clerk, whose sole duty is to post the notices.

[1] As to the time of holding the annual meeting, that is fixed by law, both for common school districts (Sec. 9283, R.S. 1929) and for town or city districts (Sec. 9341, R.S. 1929), as the first Tuesday in April of each year, so that there was no need of any further designation of the time by any order of the board. It could not fix a different time for the annual meeting. The notices of the election *Page 385 when posted merely served as a reminder to the voters of the time of the annual election as fixed by law, and the clerk needed no order of the school board as to that. We are here dealing with a matter authorized at the annual school meeting, the time of which is fixed by statute, and not with a matter authorized at a special election called by the school board, the time and place of which must be fixed by the order calling the election. What is said in Thornburg v. School District, 175 Mo. 12, 28, 75 S.W. 81, to the effect that the law "does not clothe him (the clerk) with authority to order a meeting of the voters or to designate the day on which an election shall be held. The board alone had authority to do that," had reference to a special election to vote school bonds.

[2] As to the place of holding the annual school meeting at which this increased levy for school purposes was voted, the order of the school board merely directed the secretary to post notices of the annual meeting and designated what matters to be voted on such notices should contain. In common school districts such annual meetings are to be held at the district schoolhouse if there be one, and, if not, the place of meeting shall be designated by the school board. [Sec. 9283, R.S. 1929.] Under Section 9341, Revised Statutes 1929, relating to town, city, or consolidated school districts, the annual meeting or election "shall be held on the first Tuesday in April of each year, and at such convenient place within the district as the board may designate, beginning at seven o'clock A.M.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 750, 332 Mo. 379, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-marlowe-v-himmelberger-harrison-lumber-co-mo-1933.