Washington County v. St. Louis & Iron Mountain Railroad

58 Mo. 372
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 58 Mo. 372 (Washington County v. St. Louis & Iron Mountain Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington County v. St. Louis & Iron Mountain Railroad, 58 Mo. 372 (Mo. 1874).

Opinion

Lewis, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Suit was instituted to recover the county taxes assessed on defendant’s railroad and other property, in Washington county, for five years, from 1868 to 1872, inclusive. Upon a trial before the court, without a jury, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum claimed, $16,038.81, with the statutory penalty of 2 1-2 per cent, per month, making a total of $22,859.30.

It is objected by defendant, that the plaintiff’s,petition failed to exhibit a cause of action, and that, even if this should be found otherwise, the proofs were not competent to [375]*375authorize the .recovery. The questions depend chiefly on the proper interpretation of “ An act to provide for a uniform system of assessing and collecting taxes on railroads,” approved March 10, 1871.

The fifth section of the act constitutes “ a special board of equalization of railroad property,” composed of the State auditor, State treasurer and register of iands, who shall possess the same powers and discharge the same duties with reference to railroad property, as the State board of equalization with reference to all other property.” The sixth section provides for time and place of meeting. Other sections are as follows: “ Section 7. The board shall thereupon proceed to adjust and equalize the aggregate valuation of the property of each one of the railroad companies liable to taxation under the foregoing sections of this act. The board shall have power to summon witnesses by process issued to any officer authorized to serve subpoenas, and shall have the powers of a Circuit Court to compel the attendance of such witnesses, and compel them to testify. They shall have power to increase or reduce the aggregate valuation of the property of any railroad company, in accordance with the evidence produced before them and as they may deem just and right. If the said board should deem personal inspection of the property of any-railroad company necessary to a thorough understanding of .its value and a just decision, they shall have power to visit such road, and may adjourn from time to time for that purpose.”

!! Section 8. The board shall apportion the value of all lands, workshops, depots and other buildings belonging to each railroad company, to the counties, cities or incorporated towns in which such lands, workshops, or depots and other buildings are situate; and the aggregate value of all other property of each railroad company shall be apportioned to each county, city, or incorporated town in which such road may be located, according to the ratio which the number of miles of such road completed in such county shall bear to the whole length of such railroad.”

[376]*376It is apparent from an inspection of the seventh section that the first duty of the board is to consider in the aggregate, and as an entirety, all the property owned by each railroad company in the State. Its understood value is assumed to have been reported by the president of the company, under the second section. Is this reported estimate too high or too low? If either, it must be “adjusted,” which, according to the received definition, means “fitted,” “made accurate.” The exact relation which the property bears to a money standard must be so fixed. Secondly, does one company upon a comparison of the extent and amount of its possessions with those of another, appear to have assumed a higher or a lower standard of values than that other? If so, they must be “equalized.” These two processes comprehend the functions of the board under the seventh section. The power to “increase or reduce ” is in like manner limited to the valuation of aggregates, and cannpt be applied to divisible parts, whether by county boundaries or otherwise.

The aggregate valuation for each company’s property being thus adjusted, and being also equalized upon a just ratio with all the others ; the eighth section introduces a process of sub-division. Here is neither adjusting nor equalizing, but “apportionment” only. This, except as to lands, workshops, depots and other buildings, wholly ignores local values. It is based upon “the ratio which the number of miles of such road, completed in such county, shall bear to the whole length of such railroad.”' Thus, one county may contain railroad property worth far more than that within another, and may yet receive a smaller apportionment for taxation, by reason of having a less number of miles of road completed within its limits.

The petition, after various recitals touching the action of the board, proceeds to say: “That the total value of the property of the said defendant, the St. Louis and Iron Mountain Railroad company, in the county of Washington, so adjusted and apportioned as aforesaid by said board of equalization, subject to taxation for each of the years 1868,1869,1870, and [377]*3771871, was $281,630.” The defendant holds this to be an allegation that the board fixed upon the sum specified as the actual value of the company’s property within the county of Washington; and not as a share or an apportionment out of the valuation of the entire property. A critical interpretation of the language used might lead to such a conclusion. But other expressions in the same connection show substantially that a different meaning is intended. The general drift of the allegations is to the effect that the board, by the methods which the law prescribes, reached that sum as the share of Washington county in the aggregate valuation to be taxed.

Sections 9 and 12 of the statute are as follows; “See. 9. The board shall cause to be kept a fair record of all its proceedings and decisions ; shall sign the same officially, and file said record in the office of the State auditor on its adjournment.” “Sec. 12. The state auditor shall, in like manner, certify the action of said board had under the provisions of section 8 of this act, to the clerks of the County Courts of the proper counties, and to the secretaries of the several railroad companies, and thereupon the several County Courts shall levy for all comity purposes, on such proportionate value as certified by the State auditor, such taxes as may be authorized by law at the same time and at the same rate as may be levied on other property.”

Against the defendant’s objections, plaintiff was permitted to introduce in evidence the auditor’s certificate, as follows: “Auditor’s Office, State of Missouri. To the Clerk of Washington county. It is hereby certified that the total value of the property of the St. Louis and Iron Mountain railroad in the county of Washington, subject to the taxation of the year 1872, as adjusted by the special board of equalization, provided by section 5 of “An act to provide for a uniform system of assessing and collecting taxes on railroads,” approved March 10, 1871, is $281,630, and that the same valuation was fixed by said board for each of the years 1868, 1869, 1870, and 1871. In testimony whereof,” etc.

[378]*378Treating this certificate, as sufficient in form, we might find it competent testimony to show that such a certificate was transmitted by the auditor to the clerk, and that thus one of the requisites of the law was fulfilled. But nothing else was offered to prove what was done by the board of equalization. and this appears to have been considered sufficient. For such a purpose the certificate was a nullity.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Mo. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-county-v-st-louis-iron-mountain-railroad-mo-1874.