Town of Acton v. McGary

356 A.2d 700, 1976 Me. LEXIS 434
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 29, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 356 A.2d 700 (Town of Acton v. McGary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Acton v. McGary, 356 A.2d 700, 1976 Me. LEXIS 434 (Me. 1976).

Opinion

WERNICK, Justice.

A Justice of the Superior Court (Ken-nebec County) has reported this case to us, pursuant to Rule 72 M.R.C.P.,

“ . . . upon the pleadings, agreed statement of facts . . . and upon so much of the evidence produced . as is legally admissible”,

and we are to

. render such decision as the rights of the parties require.”

The plaintiffs in the action are 31 municipalities of the State of Maine 1 and also 2 individual persons, Walter S. Reed, Jr., and E. Ward Logan, who live, own real property and pay taxes thereon in the Town of Boothbay Harbor (one of the plaintiff municipalities).

The original defendants in the action were the State Board of Education; Carroll R. McGary, Commissioner of Educational & Cultural Services; Ernest H. Johnson, State Tax Assessor; Norman K. Ferguson, Treasurer of State and Jon A. Lund, Attorney General (whom the plaintiffs saw fit to join as a party defendant because the action attacks the constitutionality of a statute). 2 Since various of the *702 aforesaid public officials have ceased to serve in the several offices above described, under Rule 25(d) M.R.C.P. the present holders of the offices are substituted as parties defendant, namely: H. Sawin Mil-lett, Jr., Commissioner of Educational & Cultural Services; Raymond L. Halperin, State Tax Assessor; Rodney L. Scribner, Treasurer of State; and Joseph E. Brennan, Attorney General.

The instant proceedings were commenced on April 12, 1974 when plaintiffs filed their complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that the State property tax levied pursuant to Chapter 556, P.L.1973 — “AN ACT Equalizing the Financial Support of School Units” — be held null and void on the ground that its provisions for the determination of the tax rate involved a delegation of legislative power violative of Article III and Article IX, Section 9 of the Constitution of Maine. 3

In attacking the State property tax as unconstitutional plaintiff municipalities simultaneously seek to nullify the obligation imposed upon them by the State property tax statute to pay over to the Treasurer of State particular proceeds of the State property tax, i. e., that portion not allocated for local school purposes (as more fully explained infra). Accordingly, during the course of the litigation, under date of August 1, 1974, plaintiff municipalities and the State established an escrow agent to receive these monies from the plaintiff municipalities. In this manner, the municipalities aimed to avoid the risk that if they paid the monies in dispute to the Treasurer of State, to avoid penalty for delinquency, they might foreclose their opportunity to challenge the State’s asserted right to payment.

After various of the plaintiff municipal-ites had made deposits of monies with the escrow agent, plaintiff municipalities amended the complaint to add a claim that if the challenged statute be declared unconstitutional, the Court should order

“. . . all proceeds held pursuant to the Escrow Agreement . . . paid or remitted . . .”

to the several plaintiff municipalities which had made the deposits.

Discharging responsibilities under the statute here at issue, as effective January 1, 1974, (1) on February 27, 1974 the Commissioner of Educational & Cultural Services certified to the State Tax Assessor the estimated public school costs for 1973-1974; (2) on March 14, 1974 the State Board of Education approved the Commissioner’s estimate; 4 and (3) during *703 February and March of 1974 the other public officials required to act made the computations necessary to estimate, subject to later adjustments, the amounts to be allocated to the various municipalities for such school purposes as were local in respect to each municipality. 5

At the 1974 First Special Session of the 106th Legislature, Chapter 783, P.L. 1973 was enacted effective as emergency legislation on April 1, 1974. Section 45 thereof repealed the Section 451 (of 36 M. R.S.A.) which had been in effect since January 1, 1974 (by virtue of Section 6 of Chapter 556, P.L.1973) and replaced it with a new Section 451. 6

Pursuant to this legislation, the State Tax Assessor in April of 1974 established a State property tax rate of 21)4 mills consisting of the 14)4 mills directly fixed by the statute and an additional 7 mills as determined by the State Tax Assessor on the basis of computations in accordance with the statutory prescriptions relative to that part of the State property tax denominated as the “additional school” tax.

*704 Further, in accordance with the statutory directive that the State Tax Assessor shall determine not only the rate of the State property tax but also the “amount to be assessed upon each municipality . . the Assessor made such determination.

“The Treasurer of State, in his said warrants, shall require the said mayor and aldermen, selectmen or assessors, respectively, to pay or to issue their several warrants requiring the collectors of their several municipalities to collect and to pay to the treasurers of their respective municipalities the sums against said municipalities required by this subchapter.
“Said municipal treasurer shall pay to the Treasurer of State a sum equivalent to that portion of the tax levied under section 451 which is based upon a percentage of public school education costs which exceeds the allocation to the unit as computed under Title 20, section 3713. Said municipal treasurer shall pay to the treasurer of the School Administrative District or community school district in quarterly installments that portion of the tax levied under section 451 of public school education costs which is not in excess of the allocation to the unit as computed under Title 20, section 3713.
“The balance of the sums so assessed in each municipality shall be disbursed by the treasurer thereof for necessary expenses of local government as determined or appropriated for the public welfare within the purposes specified in Title 30, which Title sets forth these purposes for the public welfare for which municipalities are themselves authorized to raise money by taxation. For the year 1974, the municipal treasurer shall pay % the sum provided for in this section to the Treasurer of State. Payments in 1974 shall be in 2 equal installments payable on or before the last day of September and the last day of December. For the year 1975 and thereafter, payments shall be made to the Treasurer of State in equal quarterly installments payable on or before the 15th day of March, June, September and December.”

By virtue of Section 46 of the aforesaid emergency legislation another change in the law went into effect on April 1, 1974.

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Bluebook (online)
356 A.2d 700, 1976 Me. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-acton-v-mcgary-me-1976.