State ex rel. Morse v. Cornwell

18 S.E. 184, 40 S.C. 26, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 13, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 18 S.E. 184 (State ex rel. Morse v. Cornwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Morse v. Cornwell, 18 S.E. 184, 40 S.C. 26, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 6 (S.C. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice McIver.

This is an application addressed to this court in the exercise of its original jurisdiction for a mandamus to compel the respondents, as the corporate agents of Broad Kiver Township, in York County, to levy a tax upon the taxable property of said township sufficient to pay certain past due coupons on bonds issued by respondents as [27]*27sucb corporate agents, of which the relator is the bona fide holder. Inasmuch as there is but a single question presented for the determination of the court, we need not go into any detailed statement of the pleading; but it will be sufficient for us to state such conceded facts and admitted propositions of law out of which the question arises which we are called upon to decide. It is conceded that the amount of the bonds here in question is the sum of twenty-four thousand dollars, and if the same is a valid debt of Broad River Township, then such debt was incurred on the 22d day of December, 1888, on which day the act was passed purporting to fix such debt upon said township. It is likewise conceded that said township “is a municipal corporation or a political division of the said State, within the provisions of section 17, of article 9, of the Constitution of the State of South Carolina.” That constitutional provision, as may be seen by reference to the acts of 1884 (18 Stat., 689), reads as follows: “Any bonded debt hereafter incurred by any county, municipal corporation, or political division of this State shall never exceed eight per centum of the assessed value of all the taxable property therein.”

1 It is very obvious that the legislature had no power to fix upon this township any debt in excess of the limit prescribed by the constitutional provision just quoted; and hence if the amount of twenty-four thousand dollars, purporting to be fixed upon Broad River Township by the act of 1888, above cited, was in excess of eight per centum of “the assessed value of all the taxable property therein,” at the time the act was passed, it follows necessarily that said act, in so far as it purported to fix such debt upon said township, was unconstitutional and void; for it is admitted in the argument, and properly admitted, that the time when the debt purports to have been contracted, is the time to which reference must be had in ascertaining whether the constitutional limit has been exceeded. The inquiry, then, is, was the sum of twenty-four thousand dollars in excess of eight per centum of the assessed value of all the taxable property in Broad River Township on the 22d December, 1888. It being conceded that the assessed value of all the taxable property in said township, as [28]*28ascertained by the next preceding assessment which had been made in the early part of the year 1888, for the fiscal year of 1887-8, before the act purporting to create the debt was passed, amounted to $271,350, while the assessed value of all such property, as ascertained by an assessment made in February, 1889, for the fiscal year 1888-9, after the passage of said act, amounted to $314,400; so that it is quite clear, if the former assessment be taken as one of the elements of the calculation, the proposed debt exceeded the constitutional limit, while, if the latter assessment be adopted as one of the elements of the calculation', then there was no such excess. The real question, therefore, and the only one discussed in the argument, and the only one which we propose to decide, is, which of these two assessments should be properly taken as the basis of the calculation?

In the first place, it seems to us that there is an insuperable practical obstacle in the way of adopting the assessment made after the debt purports to have been contracted, as contended for by the counsel for petitioner in this case; for, if so, it would be impossible for persons desiring to purchase the bonds, as well as for the taxpayers'of the township, to know whether the bonds were valid or not; as they would have no means o'f ascertaining what would be the assessed value of all the taxable property in the township until after the next assessment should be made and finally completed; and it might be, and probably would be, months before one of the essential facts necessary to the determination of the question of the validity of the bonds could possibly be ascertained. Again, the construction contended for by the relator would open the door to fraud and oppression, for a majority desirous of fixing a burdensome debt upon the township might exert the power which majorities always possess to increase unduly the assessments for the fiscal year, in order to bring the amount of the debt proposed to be contracted within the constitutional limit, relying upon the same power to reduce subsequent assessments, and thus practically defeat the wise purpose of the constitutional provision. For, as was said in State ex rel. Vandiver v. Tolly, 37 S. C., 551: “The manifest object of this provision was [29]*29to limit tbe power of these subordinate branches of the government to contract debts, and, like most constitutional limitations, its purpose was to protect minorities by depriving a mere majority of the power to impose what might prove to be grievous burdens upon the property of such taxpayers as might be in the minority.” Indeed, the reasoning in that case goes far to support the construction contended for by respondents in this case, though we do not claim that the point there decided is conclusive of the question here presented.

As was further said in that case, “the language used in the constitutional provision is not eight per centum of the actual or real or market value of the taxable property, but the language is, ‘of the assessed value of all the taxable property therein.’ This word ‘assessed’ has, and had at the time of the adoption of the constitutional provision now under consideration, a well defined meaning when applied to taxable property, and the. framers of that provision must be assumed to have used it in the same sense in which it was used in the various acts of the legislature relating to the subject of taxation. It must be regarded as meaning the value placed upon property for the purpose of taxation by officials appointed for that purpose.” In all this, reference is had to the past and not to the future — • to an assessment already made and completed and entered upon the proper record. The word “assessed” in the constitutional provision being in the past tense, implies the same thing. But what seems to be absolutely conclusive is this: It must be assumed that the legislature, or any subordinate agency of the government invested with power to contract a debt, would be careful, in exercising such power, not to go beyond the limits prescribed by the Constitution, aud if the body, when contracting the debt, has no means of ascertaining whether the amount is within the prescribed limit, which could not be done until another assessment has been made, it is very obvious that such care could not be exercised, in issuing the bonds or contracting the debt, before such new assessment is made.

It seems to us clear, therefore, that the words, “assessed value,” as used in the constitutional provision now under consideration, must be regarded as meaning the assessed value as [30]*30ascertained by the next preceding assessment appearing on the tax books of the county, and cannot mean any assessment to be made subsequent to the time when the debt in question purports to be contracted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 S.E. 184, 40 S.C. 26, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-morse-v-cornwell-sc-1893.