Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co. v. Stewart

13 Ohio C.C. 359
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio C.C. 359 (Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co. v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co. v. Stewart, 13 Ohio C.C. 359 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Frazier, J.

The action below was brought by the treasurer of Harrison county to collect of the railway company on account of taxes, the sum of $3,163.61, in which is included a penalty of ten per centum under section 2855, Revised Statutes, for the non-payment of the taxes due December 1894, and June, 1895.

The defendant, by answer, says the levies are illegal and excessive, and there is due $2,784.37, and no more.

The plaintiff, by reply, says the total valuation for taxa-'1 tion in Harrison county exceeds eleven millions and does not exceed fifteen million dollars; that the amount sued for, as due for taxes, is made up in part of state, county and local township taxes and in part of the penalty of ten per • centum for non-payment when due, and denies that the levies are excessive or illegal; that by reason of the defendant not [361]*361tendering or offering to pay the taxes it admits to be legally levied, it is liable for the payment of the penalty and interest on such part as was legally levied and unpaid from the time they became due and payable.

The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, which are embodied in a .bill of exceptions, and the court gave judgment for taxes, penalty and interest in the sum of $3,135.95, and it is claimed that in this the court of common pleas erred.

It is admitted by the agreed statement, that the levies for township purposes in some of the townships were in excess of the amount authorized by law, and the court gave judgment for the amount claimed, less the sum admitted to be illegally levied, and the railway company claims that from the agreed statement of facts and the law, the levy for general county purposes is also excessive.

The judgment of the court of common pleas reduced the amount of the township levies by the amount agreed to be illegal, but held that the levy for general county purposes was not excessive; and also held that there having been no tender of the amount admitted to be due, the treasurer was entitled to recover the penalty on such sum as is legally levied.

Two questions are urged by the plaintiff in error: First, that the levy for general county purposes is' in excess of the amount authorized by law, and this involves a construction of the proviso contained in the latter part of section 2823, of the Revised Statutes. The second is, whether, in the absence of a tender of so much of the taxes as is admitted by the tax payer to be due, the penalty can be collected in a suit brought by the treasurer for the taxes, based on the amount standing on the treasurer’s duplicate, a part of which is admitted to be illegal.

It appears, from the agreed statement of facts attached to the bill of exceptions, and which, it is agreed, shows the [362]*362levy of taxes in Harrison county in the year 1894, that the total levy by the county commissioners for all purposes was five mills and eight and one-half tenths of a mill, as follows: County levy, eighteen-tenths mills; infirmary fund, six-tenths of a mill; Children’s Home levy, two-tenths of a mill; bridge levy, six-tenths of a mill; for new roads, two tenths of a mill; building levy, two tenths of a mill; election levy, one-tenth of a mill;, court house levy, eleven and one-half-tenths mills; county road, ten-tenths of a mill; total, fifty-eight and one-half-tenths mills, or the amount stated above.

The last clause of section 2823 provides:

“Whenever in any county the levy in the first clause of. this section authorized, is deemed insufficient for general county purposes, the commissioners may increase said levy by any amount not exceeding six-tenths of a mill on the dollar valuation; but in such case the levies for other purposes shall be reduced to the same extent; so that the total levies for all purposes shall not exceed the limits in this chapter prescribed. ’’

The limits prescribed for the taxes which may be levied by the county commissioners by the chapter referred to, Title 13, Chap. 5, in a county of the class of Harrison, exclusive of such provision is, under section 2823, for county purposes,one mill and five-tenths, for building county buildings and purchasing sites therefor, and lands for infirmary purposes, one mill and five-tenths.

Under section 2824, as amended in 91st Ohio Laws, 196, for road and bridge purposes,one mill and five-tenths; under section 2826 for the support of the poor, six-tenths of a mill, making a total levy authorized by the chapter of five and one-tenth mills, so that the levy actually made of five mills and eight and one-half tenths of a mill is in excess of the rate mentioned in this chapter, by seven and one-half-tenths of a mill.

The defendant in error claims that the limitation in the latter clause of section 2823 applies only to the levies [363]*363authorized by title 13, chap. 5, of the Revised Statutes, and does not apply to the levies for new roads, two-tenths of a mill, election levy one-tenth of a mill, and court house levy eleven and one-half-tenths mills, which are levied under other statutes.

If the limitation is to apply only to levies provided for in chapter 5, title 13, and not to levies authorized by other general and special statutes, then the county commissioners have not exceeded the rates they were authorized to levy.

There is a levy under a special statute, 90 Ohio Local Laws, 279, of eleven and one-half tenths mills for the erection of a new court house. That statute provides, in section 2:

“That the county commissioners of said county, for the purpose of constructing said court house, are hereby authorized to borrow such sums of money as may be necessary at a rate of not exceeding six per cent per annum and issue the bonds of the said county to secure the payment of principal and interest thereon, and such interest shall be payable semi-annually at the office of the county treasurer; said bonds shall be issued and sold in all respects in pursuance of existing laws at not less than their face value, and the principal shall be paid at said county treasurer’s office at such times as the commissioners shall prescribe not exceeding nine years after date, and said bonds shall specify the object for which they were issued. The commissioners shall, annually, at their June session, levy such amount of. taxes as will fully meet the interest on such indebtedness and at least one-ninth of the principal.”

It was under this statute that the commissioners made the levy of eleven and one-half-tenths mills, and if it is the true construction of the law, that the amount authorized to be levied by this statute is in addition to that which is authorized by the general laws prescribing the rate of taxation, and in no manner reduces the amount which the commissioners may levy for every purpose prescribed by the general statutes, then the levy is not in excess of the rate which the [364]*364commissioners might levy for general county purposes, and we think this is the true construction of this statute, and it renders it unnecessary for us to examine the levies which are made under those statutes for new ■ roads and election purposes, for they would, probably, as is claimed by counsel for the defendant in error in this case, be governed by the same rule; but whether so or not,if the construction we give to this special statute is the correct one, then the levies are not excessive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio C.C. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeling-lake-erie-railway-co-v-stewart-ohiocirct-1896.