State Ex Rel. St. Louis-S. F. R. Co. v. Boyett

1938 OK 379, 80 P.2d 201, 183 Okla. 49, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 31, 1938
DocketNo. 27671.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1938 OK 379 (State Ex Rel. St. Louis-S. F. R. Co. v. Boyett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. St. Louis-S. F. R. Co. v. Boyett, 1938 OK 379, 80 P.2d 201, 183 Okla. 49, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 163 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

*50 HURST, J.

This is an action in mandamus by the state of Oklahoma on relation of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company and the trustees thereof, the Kansas City Southern Railway Company, and the Oklahoma Pipe Line Company against the following officials of Le Flore county, to compel (1) the members of the board of county commissioners, the equalization board, the excise board, the county assessor, and the county clerk to strike worthless property and government owned property from the tax rolls and to exclude such property from consideration when estimating income to be derived from ad valorem taxes; (2) the county treasurer and the members of the board of county commissioners to request and the members of the county excise board to appropriate, funds to hold a resale of delinquent real estate; (3) the county treasurer to advertise and sell tax delinquent real estate ; (4) the county treasurer to issue, and the sheriff to levy, warrants on delinquent personal property. The trial court denied the relief prayed, and relators appeal.

The first question to be determined is whether mandamus is the proper remedy to obtain the relief sought by relators. Respondents cite no authorities that it is not, but asserts that there is no proof that they did not perform the duties which relators seek to compel, other than the failure to appropriate funds for, and to hold the resale of, tax delinquent real estate. However, the assertion of lack of proof does not affect the question of whether mandamus is the proper remedy in this case.

Mandamus is a remedy to compel the performance of a duty required by law where the party seeking relief has no legal remedy and the duty sought to be enforced is clear and undisputable. City of Shawnee v. City of Tecumseh (1915) 52 Okla. 509, 150 P. 890, and Excise Board of Love County v. Randolph (1935) 172 Okla. 161, 44 P.2d 953. And mandamus will lie to compel an executive officer to perform a mere ministerial act which does not call for the exercise of his discretion, but which the law gives him the power, and imposes upon him the duty, to do. Norris v. Cross (1909) 25 Okla. 287, 105 P. 1000, and State v. Lyon (1917) 63 Okla. 285, 165 P. 419.

Relators se'ek to compel respondents to perform duties enjoined on them by law and in the performance of which they exercise no discretion. Mandamus is therefore the proper remedy.

2. The next question to be determined is whether relators are proper parties to maintain this action, it being the contention of the respondents that relators have no specific interest peculiar to them which is not shared in common with the community in general, and the action must therefore be brought at the instance of the county attorney or the Attorney General. In this connection they rely upon section 731 O. S. 1931; State ex rel. Hoard, Tax Ferret, v. Ashly, County Treas. (1935) 171 Okla. 169, 42 P.2d 225; Stubbs v. Excise Board of Muskogee County (1935) 173 Okla. 341, 49 P.2d 83; Bobbett v. State ex rel. Dresher (1872) 10 Kan. 9; Turner v. County Com’rs (1872) 10 Kan. 16; and Collingwood v. Schmidt (1928 Kan.) 262 P. 556.

Section 731, supra, provides that the writ of mandamus may be issued on the information of the party beneficially interested, and in State ex rel. Hoard v. Ashly, supra, we held that a tax ferret had no such beneficial interest as would entitle him to maintain an action for a writ of mandamus against the county treasurer to compel him to issue to the owner of omitted property notice of the proposed listing and assessment thereof. We specifically called attention to the fact that plaintiff brought and prosecuted the action as tax ferret and not as a resident and taxpayer of Carter county. The case is therefore not analogous to the instant one.

Stubbs v. Excise Board of Muskogee County is also not in point. Therein Stubbs maintained an action in mandamus in his own name to compel the excise board of Muskogee county to reconvene and to amend and increase an appropriation previously allowed by said board for the maintenance and support of separate schools in district No. 20 of said county and to require said board to approve prior estimates submitted to it by the board of education of the city of Muskogee. We held therein that where a question of public right is directly involved, the mandamus action should be brought in -the name of the state, the person instituting the action appearing as relator; but where an individual has a particular interest of his own, independent of that which he holds in common with the people at large, in the performance of some statutory duty imposed upon some officer or board, and so under the Code can rightfully claim to be the real party in *51 Interest, then the action may be maintained in his own name. Since the present action is brought by relators in the name of the state of Oklahoma, the rule announced has been complied with, and the case is therefore no authority against re-lators’ right to maintain the suit.

In Bobbett v. State ex rel. Dresher, supra, relators brought an action in mandamus to compel the county commissioners to hold an election for the relocation of the county seat. In Turner v. County Com’rs, supra, the rela-tors sought to compel the county commissioners to submit to the electors a proposition to take stock in a certain railroad. In both of said cases, the Kansas Supreme Court held that mandamus would not lie at the instance of a private citizen to compel the performance of a purely public duty; that such suit must be brought by the county attorney or Attorney General; and that plaintiffs had shown no peculiar, and specific interest entitling them to maintain the action. The same result was reached in Collingwood v. Schmidt, supra, wherein plaintiff sought to compel the board of county commissioners to put the township herd law into force. The foregoing cases do not militate against relators’ right to maintain this action, since they are not suing as private citizens, but as taxpayers, and as such, have brought themselves within the rule announced by the Kansas Supreme Court in that they have a peculiar and specific interest entitling them to maintain the action. This distinction was brought out in the Collingwood Case, supra, where the court said that “no question of taxes is involved here.” That a taxpayer is a party beneficially interested in the collection of taxes by public officials is established by the cases' cited hereafter.

In Hyatt v. Allen (1880) 54 Cal. 353, it was held that a taxpayer was a party beneficially interested in having all the property of the district assessed, and was therefore a proper party to make the affidavit for the issuance of the writ of mandamus to the assessor to compel him to assess property subject to assessment. In State ex rel. Coe v. Fyler (1880) 48 Conn. 145, it was held that a taxpayer had a direct and pecuniary interest in the collection of taxes and that he was a proper party to bring an action in mandamus to compel the tax collector to collect a tax. In People ex rel. Stephens v. Halsey, 53 Barbour (N. Y.) 547, the court held that a county treasurer had no discretion in issuing tax warrants to the sheriff to collect taxes and that a taxpayer was a proper relator to compel; by mandamus, the issuance of such warrants by the treasurer and the levy thereof by the sheriff.

In Webster v. Morris (1928) 129 Okla. 145, 264 P.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 379, 80 P.2d 201, 183 Okla. 49, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-st-louis-s-f-r-co-v-boyett-okla-1938.