Taggart v. Board of Supervisors

71 Mich. 16
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 71 Mich. 16 (Taggart v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taggart v. Board of Supervisors, 71 Mich. 16 (Mich. 1888).

Opinions

Sherwood, C. J.

Tbe Legislature of 188-7 passed an act, before its final adjournment on June 29 of tbat year, entitled :

[18]*18“ An act to provide for reporting all mortgages, by tbe several registers of deeds of this State, to the supervisors and assessing officers of their respective counties, and to the registers of deeds of other counties wherein the mortgagee resides, for assessment purposes, and providing blank form-books therefor ; also prescribing the duties of registers of deeds relative to the recording of mortgages,”—

And which is Act No. 262, and w.as approved by the Governor on June 27, 1887. The act went into effect on September 28, 1887.

On September 30, 1887, the 'executive department addressed the following letter to the clerk of Sanilac county:

“Michigan Department op State. “Oppicb op Secretary, Lansing, September 30, 1887.
To the County Cleric, Sanilac Center, Mich. Dear Sir : Appended hereto is the text of an act of the Legislature of 1887 relative to the assessment of mortgages. A careful perusal of sections one and two of this act will acquaint you with the duties of the boards of supervisors in connection therewith. Please bring the matter to the att ntion of the board at their October session, and have tliem take action with regard to the necessary books, as required by section 2 of the act.
“Very respectfully, G. E. Osmun,
“Secretary of State.”

The county clerk did as requested, and the board of supervisors, on October 18, 1887, took the subject of the requirements of said act of the Legislature under consideration, and finally passed a resolution in which they decided that they would take no action required of them by the provisions of the act in question, and have since adhered strictly to such resolution.

The relator, therefore, at the last January term of this Oourt, filed a petition for an order against the respondents, requiring them to show cause why a mandamus [19]*19•should not issue against said bdard of supervisors commanding them—

“To perform their duty, in accordance with the prol visions of said sections one and two of said act of 1887, and commanding and requiring them to ascertain the number of assessment districts in their county, and to determine the number of books necessary for their own •county, as in and by said sections one and two they are required to do, and commanding and requiring them to report in detail, as a part of their proceedings, and commanding and requiring them to instruct the register of deeds of said Sanilac county to make an order for said books upon the Secretary of State, and to accompany said order by a certified copy of the report adopted by said board, in accordance with the provisions of said section two of said act, as they are required to do."

Respondents filed a demurrer to relator’s petition, and upon the issue thus framed the matter was heard. Counsel for respondents, to sustain their demurrer, make the following points against the law of 1887 in question:

“1. The law in force at the time this act was passed, and at the present time, does not provide for assessing mortgages.
“ 2. This act is in clear violation of section 12, Art. 14, of our Constitution.
“3. Double taxation cannot be avoided under this act.
“4. This act is in violation of section 20, Art.‘4, of the Constitution, as it embraces more than one object."

There is nothing xo the first point. Included among the property to be taxed, specifically mentioned, are “notes and mortgages." See section 13, subd. 2, Laws •of 1885, p. 179. See, .also, section 2, p. 175, Laws of 1885. Section 1 of the act of 1885 says that—

“All property within the jurisdiction of this State, not expressly exempted, -shall be subject to taxation."

And section 2 says that personal property shall include—

“All indebtedness due to inhabitants of this State, whether such indebtedness is due from individuals or from [20]*20corporations, public or private, and whether such debtors reside within or without the State.”

Mortgages are nowhere excepted out of the taxable property. It was evidently the intention of the Legislature, under our tax laws as they now are, to make personal property bear its just proportion of the burdens of taxation, and I find no constitutional objection to this being done. Article 14, § 11, provides that—

“ The Legislature shall provide an uniform rule of taxation, except on property paying specific taxes, and taxes, shall be levied on such property as shall be prescribed by law.”

And section 12 of the same article provides that — .

“All assessments hereafter authorized shall be on property at its cash value.”

It has long been the policy of our tax laws to make all property, except as exempted by the Constitution, taxable; and I have yet failed to discover why the rule is not a just one, and why the law of 1885 does not include mortgages. Evidently, the Legislature supposed it had made such property taxable when it passed the law of 1887, now under consideration. The assessor is required, under it, to list and assess all the taxable property to be found in the township of every individual, including mortgages. See sections 12-16, Laws of 1885, pp. 178-181. The language of the statute is too plain to be mistaken or misunderstood.

The respondents’ second point is not well taken, — that, the law is in violation of the provision of the Constitution which says—

“ All assessments hereafter authorized shall be on property at its cash value.”

I know of no reason why property in real-estate mortgages cannot be assessed at its cash value, as well as any [21]*21•other personal property. Such property is very largely dealt in by nearly all classes of business men, and the various kinds have a rated value according to the extent of the security and personal responsibility of the party whose obligation is secured, if any; and I know of no reason why the assessing officer may not as well ascertain that value as any other business man. The law of 1887 oertainly contains nothing depriving him of the means of investigation, or the use of his reason, judgment, and experience, in determining the cash value of a mortgage, any more than fixing such value upon any other kind of property. I can find nothing in the law in violation of either the letter or spirit of the provision of the Constitution last referred to. The assessment is required to be made according to law, and at the cash value of the property.

The claim that double taxation cannot be avoided under the act cannot be sustained. This is the respond•ents’ third point, and much is claimed for it; but I cannot take the view so' earnestly urged as controlling in the case by the learned counsel for the respondents. I do not think the law provides for double taxation. In order to have double taxation, the same property must be taxed twice, when it should be taxed but once. The law of 1887 creates no such injustice.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Mich. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taggart-v-board-of-supervisors-mich-1888.