State v. Weyerhauser

68 Minn. 353
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 26, 1897
DocketNos. 10,437—(48)
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 68 Minn. 353 (State v. Weyerhauser) 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. Weyerhauser, 68 Minn. 353 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

Since October 6,1893, the defendants have owned a large number of pieces of real estate situate in the county of Itasca, in this state. Prior to that date, while other individuals owned those lands, they were assessed for each of the years from 1888 to 1893, inclusive, by the proper county officials of said county, pursuant to the provisions of the general tax laws of the state; and the taxes for each of said years were, before the same became delinquent, paid by the owners of said lands. Prior to. January 1, 1894, it was made to appear to the governor of this state by a duly-verified complaint that a considerable amount of property in said county of Itasca had been grossly undervalued in the tax proceedings for those years; that thereupon and forthwith the governor did, in writing, appoint a competent citizen of this state, not a resident of said county, to ascertain the character, location, value, and ownership of the real and personal property in said county so omitted, underassessed, or undervalued, and such citizen, having duly qualified, proceeded forthwith to examine and report upon the subject, and did prepare duplicate lists of such lands as he determined had been so underassessed or undervalued, in the manner prescribed in Laws 1893, c. 151, § l;3 that thereafter, and prior to January 1, 1894, the said duplicate lists were filed with the state auditor and with the county auditor of Itasca county; that thereafter the county auditor and county assessor of Itasca county took the proceedings in regard to said lands described in said lists which are prescribed in section 2 of said chapter 151.4

All of said lands so owned by these defendants were returned as undervalued lands for each of said years from 1888 to 1893, inclusive, and were entered by the county auditor upon the real estate assessment books for the year 1894, and were assessed by the assessor of Itasca county at the respective values shown by said lists, and were also entered by the county auditor upon the assessment and tax books [358]*358for each of said years from 1888 to 1893, inclusive, and were by him assessed at the valuation and amount as shown by said lists to have been omitted or undervalued, and the arrearages of taxes by reason of said increased valuation were extended upon said assessment books. No notice of any of said proceedings in making said reassess* ment or revaluation of said lands, or in extending said taxes against said lands, was ever given by publication or otherwise to these defendants, then owning the same.

In the trial court, being the district court in and for said county of Itasca, the proceeding was by complaint' in the form of the published delinquent tax list to enforce the collection of taxes for the year 1894, remaining delinquent and unpaid on the first Monday in January, 1896, together with back taxes assessed against the said lands of these defendants assessed thereon in accordance with proceedings taken under Laws 1893, c. 151; said delinquent tax list so forming the complaint in this proceeding being in the ordinary form as prescribed by the tax laws of this state, including summons, notice, and all the matters and things by law prescribed. The taxes so sought to be recovered against said lands in this proceeding are claimed to be due by reason of the reassessment so made pursuant to the provisions of said chapter 151 of the Laws of 1893, upon the ground that said lands in the prior assessment proceedings had been grossly undervalued.

The trial court found that the taxes claimed in this proceeding are the proper amount of taxes which would be due against said lands on account of said increased valuation if such taxes were valid and legal, and could be collected in such proceeding, and that such proceedings were in accordance with chapter 151 of the law quoted, and would be a legal charge against said lands so owned by the defendants, if said law was constitutional; but it held that said law was illegal and unconstitutional, and therefore that none of the taxes claimed in this proceeding were a legal -charge against the- said lands so described and owned by the defendants, and judgment was ordered entered that said lands be discharged from all liability for the taxes claimed in this proceeding. The case was duly certified to this court.

The importance of the question involved is at once apparent. Upon one side there was evidently an attempt to shield property from bearing its just burden of taxation, and on the other a drastic law seeking [359]*359to remedy the public wrong thus perpetrated. Whatever motive prompted the gross undervaluation of the property before the defendants became the owners, we must assume from the facts in th'e record that such undervaluation did exist, and to remedy this evil so far as possible was the intention of the legislature in passing Laws 1893, c. 151. Great wrongs are sometimes only remedied by drastic legislation, and no fine-spun theories should stand in the way of applying the remedy in such cases. The legislative intent and the legislative will should be upheld unless they impinge upon the domain of some constitutional prohibition. The contention of the defendants is that the law above referred to is unconstitutional upon the following grounds, viz.:

“(1) The law is in violation of section one of article three of the constitution of the state of Minnesota providing for the distribution of the powers of the government into three branches of legislative, executive, and judicial. (2) The law is in violation of section one of article nine of the constitution of the state of Minnesota providing for the equality and uniformity of .taxation. (3) The law is in violation of section seven of article one of the constitution of the state of Minnesota, providing that no person should be deprived of his property without due process of law." “(5) The law is in violation of the fundamental principles of justice which underlie our system of state and national government.”

For the purpose of raising these questions, the defendants interposed an answer to the proceedings to enforce the collection of taxes remaining delinquent, and which those in controversy were assumed to be, and the defendants do not dispute the plaintiff’s contention that as a matter of fact the lands in question were grossly undervalued, or the correctness and regularity of all the proceedings raising only the question of the authority of the legislature to enact such a law. The several sections which constitute this law are found in G. S. 1894, commencing with section 1C32 which, in part, reads as follows:

“Whenever it shall be made to appear to the governor of this state by a complaint in writing and under oath or by the finding of any court, the legislature or any committee thereof, that for any reason any considerable amount of property in any county in this state has been or may hereafter be improperly omitted from the tax lists and assessment roll of any such county for any year or years, or, if assessed, that the same has been grossly undervalued by the assessor [360]

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Bluebook (online)
68 Minn. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-weyerhauser-minn-1897.