70 Iowa 365 | Iowa | 1886
In the case of Worthington v. Whitman, 67 Iowa, 190, the plaintiff, who was a county treasurer, sought to recover of the executor of an estate an amount of money which it was alleged the deceased should have paid as taxes, but did not pay, because no assessment nor levy of any tax was made upon the property of the deceased. We held that no recovery could be had, because the taxing power can be exercised only in accordance with the forms of law. It is said in that case “ that the assessment or recorded valuation of property by the officer or officers having power to make such assessment or recorded valuation is an indispensable step in the exercise of the taxing power. Such recorded valuation constitutes the basis of the levy, and without it there cannot properly be a levy.”
In the ease at bar, it is alleged that the deceased was assessed for taxation, but that, by reason of the fraudulent concealment of his property, his assessment was not. large enough. In other words, the county seeks to recover damages from his estate because his property was not all assessed for taxation. It is not a suit to recover a tax, because the amount claimed was never levied as a tax. It is in the nature of an action by the county for an alleged fraud 'upon the revenue laws of the state. We think it cannot be maintained. Taxes are exactions made by the state upon
AFFIRMED.