Ward v. Wheeling Lake Erie Ry. Co.

3 Ohio N.P. 274
CourtMedina County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 274 (Ward v. Wheeling Lake Erie Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Medina County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Wheeling Lake Erie Ry. Co., 3 Ohio N.P. 274 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

NYE, J.

In the case of Irvin Ward, treasurer of Medina county, against the Wheeling & Lake Eiie Railway company, the plaintiff brings his action against said defendant company to recover 82,060.67 as taxes assessed against said company for the yean [275]*2751894 on the property of said defendant, situated in said county. Said taxes not having been paid when due, a penalty of ten per centum on said entire sum was added, and a judgment is asked against said defendant for the sum of $2,206.74, with interest thereon from the 21st day of June, 1895.

The defendant, for answer to the plaintiff’s petition, says that it is indebted to' said plaintiff' in the sum of $1,855.67, and no more.

The defendant says that its railroad passes through six townships and assessment districts in said county, and that in four of said townships, to-wit: Chatham, Harris-ville, Spencer and Westfield townships, an assessment was made greater than is provided by law, and that by said illegal assessments the total amount levied against said defendant company amounts to the sum of $2,060.67, when the levy should amount to only $1,855.67, the amount which the said company admits is due from it to said plaintiff as treasurer of said county.

The defendant further claims that said assessment of 82,060.67 is levied as a gross sum against said defendant, and that it could not pay any portion thereof without paying the whole, and therefore no tender was made to said treasurer; because said treasurer would not be authorized to receive any portion of said sum unless he received the whole, and that, therefore, the law would not require it to do a vain act of tendering a portion of said money when the treasurer was not authorized to receive a portion without the whole.

There is no claim that the assessment is too large in the other two townships or assessment districts.

The defendant further claims that the assessments made under section 2827, Revised Statutes, in each of said four townships is excessive, and the defendant further says that certain assessments claimed to have been made under certain other sections of the statute, which I will speak of hereafter, are larger than the Jaw permits.

The plaintiff, on the other hand, claims that the assessment is not in excess of what the law requires in any of said townships or assessment districts, and that, therefore, the whole amount, with penalty, should be paid. The plaintiff further claims that the amount due in each township and assessment district is a separate amount, appearing upon the duplicates of each township separately, and that the defendant might at any time have paid the amount due in any township or assessment district if it saw fit to do so, even if the assessment was too large or illegal in the other townships and assessment districts. It is conceded that there is a county infirmary in Medina county.

The principal questions in this case must depend upon the construction which should be placed on the several sections cf the statute under which the levies in the several townships were made. For that reason a jury has been waived and this case submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury.

The first q1 estion which I will 'consider is with reference to the construction to be-placed upon section 2827 of the Revised Statutes.

So far as it pertains to this case section 2827 reads as follows:

“The trustees of each township shall, on or before the 15th day of May annually determine the amount of taxes necessary for all township purposes, and certify the same to the county auditor; and there shall be levied annually, by the county auditor, for township purposes, including the relief of t poor, but not including the support of common schools, or the payment of the interest and principal of the debts of the' tovnship, such rates of taxes as the trustees of the respective townships may certify to the county auditors to be necessary, not exceeding one mill on each dollar of the taxable valuation of the property of the township, which does not exceed two hundred thousand dollars, and eight-tenths of .one mill on each dollar of such taxable valuation exceeding two hundred thousand dollars and not exceeding three hundred thousand dollars, and one half of one mill on each dollar of such taxable valuation exceeding three hundred thousand dollars and not exceeding five hundred thousand dollars; and four-tenths of a mill on each dollar of such taxable valuation exceeding five hundred thousand dollars and not exceeding eight hundred thousand dollars; and one-fourth of one mill on each dollar of such taxable valuation exceeding eight hundred thousand dollars. ’ ’

The plaintiff in this case claims that in each township an assessment may be made under section 2827 on the taxable valuation as follows:

On the first $200,000.00, not to exceed on# mill on each dollar; on the next $100,000.00, not to exceed eight-tenths mill on each dollar; On the next $200,000.00, not to exceed one-half millón each dollar; on the next $300,000.00, not to exceed four-tenths mill on each dollar; on all the remainder, not to exceed one-fourth mill on each dollar.

The defendant claims that an entirely different construction should be placed upon said section. It claims that an assessment should be made on the taxable valuation of the property in each township as follows:

If the valuation does not exceed $200,000. - 00, one mill on each dollar; if it exceeds $200,000.00, but is less than $300,000.00, eight-tenths mill on each dollar; if it exceeds $300,000.00, but is Jess than S500..000: 00, one-hálf mill on each dollar; if it exceeds $500,000,00, but is less than $800,000-00, four-tenths mill on each dollar; if it exceeds $800,000.00, one-fourth mill on each dollar.

It is important then to determine what the intention of the leigslature was in passing this section of the statute in the manner in which we find it.

[276]*276The construction to be placed on this section of the statute is important to every officer in Medina county, who is called upon to act under it, as well as every other officer in the state whose duty it is to make an assessment or levy thereunder. It would seem that one of these constructions is adopted ■and used in certain portions of the state, and. the other in other portions of the state, for I have been furnished with blanks from different publishing houses for the use of township officers, one of which adopts one theory and the other the other.

I am clearly of the opinion that it was the intention of the legislature that less money would he required for township purposes to carry on the business of a small township than would be required to carry on the business of a larger township with a much larger amount of taxable property.

It is very evident that a township which has property of the taxable valuation of two hundred thousand dollars would not require so much money to carry on its business as it would to carry on the business of a township which had a taxable valuation of five hundred thousand dollars.

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Related

Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co. v. Stewart
13 Ohio C.C. 359 (Ohio Circuit Courts, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-wheeling-lake-erie-ry-co-ohctcomplmedina-1896.