Wilson v. Wiggins

1898 OK 103, 54 P. 716, 7 Okla. 517, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 30, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1898 OK 103 (Wilson v. Wiggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Wiggins, 1898 OK 103, 54 P. 716, 7 Okla. 517, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 60 (Okla. 1898).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Tarskey, J.:

Plaintiff is a non-resident of the Territory of Oklahoma, being a resident of the state of Kansas. On the 27th day of June, 1897, plaintiff brought 1,000 head of cattle from the state of Texas into Woodward county, Oklahoma, for the purpose of grazing said cattle, and to prepare the same for market. About the 1st day of August, said cattle were listed for taxation by the township assessor of the township in Woodward county, where said cattle were located, and were valued and assessed by said assessor, for the purposes of taxation, at $10,000. Taxes were levied on such assessment for territorial, county, township, and school purposes, and charged on the tax rolls of said county for said year. The cattle were not listed by the owner for taxation, but were listed by the assessor without the consent of the plaintiff. Said cattle were bought by the plaintiff in Gaines county, Tex., and were listed for taxation in said county and state for the year 1897, before being removed *519 therefrom, and said taxes were fully paid. On January 3, 1898, plaintiff made application to the board of county commissioners of Woodward county for the abatement of the taxes levied on said cattle in said county, showing to said board that said cattle had been listed for taxation and taxed in the state of Texas for the year 1897, and that said taxes had been paid; but said board refused plaintiff’s said application.

An act of the legislature of this Territory, approved March 8, 1895, entitled “Taxation of Transient Property,” (Laws 1895, p. 229,) provides:

“Section 1. When any personal property shall be located in any county of this Territory after the 1st day of March of any year, which shall acquire an actual situs therein before the 1st day of September, such property is taxable therein for that year, and shall be assessed and placed on the tax roll, and the tax collected as provided by this act.
“Sec. 2. Whenever any live stock shall be located in this Territory for the purpose of grazing, it shall be deemed to have acquired an actual situs therein, as contemplated by this act.
“Sec. 3. When any person, association or corporation shall settle or organize in any county in this Territory, and bring personal property therein after the 1st day of March, and prior to the first day of September in any year, it shall be the duty of the assessors to list and return such property for taxation that year, unless the owner thereof shall show to the assessor, under oath, that the same property has been listed for taxation on that'year in some other state or county in this Territory. If such property is brought within any county after the assessor has made his returns for that year to the county clerk, the assessor shall at once assess such property and return the same to the county clerk, if the tax roll be still in his hands, and after that to the *520 county treasurer, and the same shall be entered on the tax book and collected as in other eases. If there be no assessor, then any township trustee or member of any city or town council where the property is located, may make and return the assessments, with like force and effect as though made by the assessor. The persons so assessed shall have the right, if assessed after the 3rd Monday in April, to appear before the township or city board of equalization at any time before the taxes become due, and his taxes shí.11 be. enualized as provided 'by law in section 5620 of the Statute of 1893.”

The other sections of the act relate to the procedure for the collection of the taxes thus authorized to be assessed and levied. The plaintiff in error does not contend that the taxes sought to be enjoined are illegal solely because the property had previously been taxed for the same year in another jurisdiction, or that the above act is invalid because, under its provisions and scope, double taxation may result; but counsel contend that the act is invalid because it discriminates between resident and non-resident property owners; that under its provisions persons who settle in any county in the Territory, or associations or corporations that organize in any county of the Territory, can be relieved from double taxation, or have their property exempted from taxation under this act by showing to the assessor that the same property has been listed for taxation for the year in some other state or county in the Territory, while non-residents, or persons who do not settle in any county of the Territory, or association or corporation that does not organize in any county of the Territory, cannot have their property thus exempted, or be relieved from such double taxation.

If the act in question were susceptible only of the *521 construction placed upon it by counsel for tbe plaintiff in error, and should necessarily be held to show a legislative intent to discriminate between residents and nonresidents in the particular suggested, we might be required to determine whether the legislature of this Territory is, by any paramount law, inhibited from authorizing such discriminations. In view of the fact, however, that we are of the opinion that no discrimination was intended to be authorized by the act in question, it is not necessary that we should determine in this case v. hether the legislature is inhibited from discriminating between the property of resident and non-resident owners in exempting property from taxation. While there is apparent ambiguity upon the face of the act of March 8, 1895, yet, when construed in the light of the law as previously existing, and of the conditions upon which the act was to operate, the intent of the legislature may vith reasonable certainty be ascertained. Prior to the passage of said act, no property was subject to taxation for any year, unless* the same was located and kept in some county of the Territory on the 1st day of February of said year. It was known to the legislature that vast herds of cattle and other live stock were being brought into the Territory after the 1st day of February of each year, and, after being kept and grazed within the Territory, were removed therefrom before another period for listing property for taxation; that other classes of personal property were being brought into the Territory in large quantities after the period for listing property for taxation, and sold and disposed of by the owner, who would retire from business before the next period for listing. Again, it was within the knowledge of the legislature that vast tracts of land, unoccupied and belonging *522 to the government, might at any time be opened for settlement, and suddenly populated, requiring the organization of county and municipal governments, needing revenues for their support, thus properly necessitating assessments and levies of taxes before another regular period for listing property generally would occur. Therefore, although the act in question is entitled “Taxation of Transient Property,” the scope and purpose of the act is much broader than its title imports.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1898 OK 103, 54 P. 716, 7 Okla. 517, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-wiggins-okla-1898.