State v. Republic Steel Corporation

271 N.W. 119, 199 Minn. 107, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 29, 1937
DocketNos. 30,981, 30,982.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 271 N.W. 119 (State v. Republic Steel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Republic Steel Corporation, 271 N.W. 119, 199 Minn. 107, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 628 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Holt, Justice.

In the proceeding to enforce the personal property tax for the year 1934, in St. Louis, the defendants ansAvered. The cases were *108 tried together, but separate findings of fact and conclusions of law were made sustaining the tax. Motions for new trial were made, and from the orders denying the same defendants appealed. In this court the cases were consolidated.

We deem “the following statement of facts enough to present the legal controversy: On May 1, 1934, the towns of Stuntz and Balkan were and had been duly organized townships. At the annual town meetings held March 13 of that year, by the vote of the electors the sum of $400,000 was levied by the town of Stuntz for town purposes and the sum of $100,000 by the town of Balkan for like purposes, and such levy was certified to the county auditor on March 20 by the town of Stuntz and on March 16 by the town of Balkan. This levy as computed by the auditor would amount to a tax of 16.9 mills in Stuntz and 17 mills in Balkan. The assessor of each town duly listed and assessed the personal property of defendants located within the said towns on May 1, 1934, for taxation, and the books or tax lists made by each assessor were seasonably returned to the county auditor. The property so assessed consisted of stock piles-, of iron ore and mining equipment, all located within the said towns on May 1. For some years the organized village of Chisholm, adjacent to these towns, has functioned. Its assessor listed and assessed the personal property within the village limits for taxation for the year 1934 and made a seasonable return thereof to the county auditor. But it does not appear that the village council attempted to make any levy upon the assessment so made. On September 4,1934, the city of Chisholm was organized under L. 1921, c. 462, as amended, embracing within its territorial limits the village of Chisholm and adjacent parts of the towns of Stuntz and Balkan, wherein defendants’ mentioned personal property was located on May 1. On October 8, 1934, the city adopted a home rule charter, effective 30 days from its adoption. On November 21, 1934, the city council levied a tax of 44.1 mills, as computed by the auditor, for city purposes, and certified such levy to the county auditor. Not until December 13, 1934, did the state tax commission certify its revision of the personal property assessments of these towns to the county auditor, who could not proceed to *109 spread the tax under the levies made until that revision was certified to him. In this situation the county auditor conceived it to be his duty to spread the levy made by the city of Chisholm against all property -which he could ascertain to have been located within the. present city limits on May 1, regardless of its assessment by the town assessors and the levies made and returned by the towns. And to that end he conferred with the assessors of the towns mentioned and with the assessor of the village of Chisholm, and transferred from their assessment books or listings what property was conceived to have been located upon the present city territory on May 1. The court’s findings sustained the county auditor’s action. Defendants moved for amended findings without success. There is no question as to the correctness of the state tax, the county tax, or the school tax included in the amount taxed against defendants. What is at stake is the difference between 44.1 mills and 16.9 mills on the personal property of defendants assessed in the town of Stuntz and 17 mills in the town of Balkan.

The assignments of error raise several questions which we need not discuss. We may assume, without so deciding, that the county auditor could properly use or transfer the assessments made by the village assessor and by the town assessors to the city assessment records, the city not having any assessor at the time the assessment should have been made. But it must be borne in mind that the county auditor has no power to levy a tax or make an assessment. He is merely doing the mechanical or clerical part in computing the tax resulting from the several levies made by the bodies authorized by law to make them and entering such tax on the permanent records of the county for enforcement. As we see it, this appeal is reduced to the simple question of whether the levies made by the towns of Stuntz and Balkan against owners of personal property located therein and duly listed and assessed on May 1 by their assessors may be altered or nullified by the fact that the city of Chisholm was subsequently created and made a levy against the same property for city purposes. There can be no question of the power of the towns to levy taxes for town purposes by vote of the electors at the annual election held March 18, 1934, and certifying *110 the same to the county auditor. 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 1002, 2060-2. The fact that a city subsequent to such assessment and levy is created out of parts of these towns gives the county auditor no right to ignore or interfere with the tax already levied by the towns, in the absence of any statute granting such right. The levy was in certain amounts to meet the needs of each town fo'r the year 1935. It was calculated to meet the needs of the towns as' entire-ties. The county auditor may not say that a part or what part of the $400,000 levied in the town of Stuntz is to be taxed against the personal property (or the owners thereof) which is inside or outside of the parts now annexed by the city. We have no statute to call to assistance in a case of this kind. The state cites Hardin v. Pavlat, 130 Neb. 829, 266 N. W. 637, but it would seem that the decision and that of State ex rel. Hinson v. Nickerson, 99 Neb. 517, 156 N. W. 1039, therein quoted from, are against the contention made by the state. It was there held that after territory had been detached from a city the municipality had no power to tax such detached territory, even though a part of the city when the property therein was listed for assessment. In the case at bar, the towns not only had properly assessed, but had lawfully levied the town taxes, before the city existed and before it attempted to levy. It may be that when the tax levied by the towns is collected some equitable division is possible, as was considered in Town of Balkan v. Village of Buhl, 158 Minn. 271, 197 N. W. 266, 35 A. L. R. 470.

We of course have nothing to say regarding the spreading of the city levy within the territory of the village of Chisholm. There the assessor of the village had made and returned proper assessments, but the village made no levy. So no other lawful taxing body had exercised its right in the premises when the city acted.

The learned trial court considered that because the plenary power of the legislature over the formation of municipal corporations, changing boundaries, and annexing territory of towns and villages has in no way confined such formation or change to a period of the year when there was no step being taken for the imposition of taxes, therefore it was thought a city formed at any time must be *111 invested with power to levy taxes necessary for its functioning, and assessments and levies made by taxing districts made a part of the city formed must yield.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 N.W. 119, 199 Minn. 107, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-republic-steel-corporation-minn-1937.