5 S.D. 84 | S.D. | 1894
The object of this suit is to enjoin the collection of an alleged personal tax of $1,300 placed upon the assessment roll by a county board of equalization, and to re
Plaintiff’s counsel moved to dismiss the appeal because the notice of appeal was not served on the plaintiff, and for that reason this court never acquired jurisdiction. To this preliminary question we will first direct our attention. The printed abstract, at page 10, contains the following: ‘ ‘That thereafter, on the-day of December, 1892, the defendants perfected an appeal to the supreme court of the state of South Dakota, by serví ng upon the plaintiff and the clerk of the circuit court in and for said county of Spink a notice of appeal.” Rule 13 of this court provides ample means by which alleged errors or imperfections in appellant’s abstract may be remedied and brought to the attention of this court, and unless the methods therein specified are pursued, and an additional or supplemental abstract is provided by respond< nt, in accordance with such rule, which denies the correctness of the abstract filed by appellant, the latter must be taken as true. Irrigation Co. v. Schone, (S. D.) 50 N. W. 356; Noyes v. Lane, (S. D.) 48 N. W. 322. The abstract which our rules require is designed to take the place of the record for the purposes of the argument and decision of the case to which it relates; and when such an abstract has been prepared by an appellant, and filed in this court, in accordance with such rules, and recites, in substance, that defendant’s perfected an appeal to this court by serving upon the plair tiff and the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the case was tried a notice of appeal, such recital will be accepted by this court as true, unless it be denied by an amended or supplemental abstract Gates v. Brooks, 59 Iowa, 510, 6 N. W. 595, and 13 N. W. 640; Hardy v. Moore, 62 Iowa, 65, 17 N. W. 200; Farmer v. Sassen, 63 Iowa, 110, 18 N. W. 714. An affidavit denying service of the notice of appeal upon plaintiff, submitted with a motion to dismiss, cannot be
Concerning the facts upon which this appeal depends, there is but little contention; and, as the evidence is not before us, we must conclude that the facts found by the court are sustained by the evidence. From the material and uncontroverted allegations of the complaint we obtain the following facts: Plaintiff, at all times hereinafter mentioned, and for more than twenty years prior thereto, has been a resident and citizen of the state of Wisconsin, and has never resided in the territory of Dakota, nor in the state of South Dakota. That she is the owner of certain lands situated in Spink county, S. D., and that the defendant W. C. Kiser, as treasurer of said county, has advertised and intends to sell said real estate on the 3rd day of November, 1890, for alleged delinquent personal taxes, amounting to 11,300. That upon the assessment rolls returned by the various assessors of Spink county for the year 1887 the name of the plaintiff did not appear upon the list of personal property, and m personal property was therein listed as the property of the plaintiff. It appears that the board of equalization acted upon the theory that the firm of Billinghurst Bros., as agents of the plaintiff, had in their possession or under their control, within the said county of Spink, on the first day of April, 1887, certain money,- notes, and mortgages belonging to the plaintiff, and that said agents of the plaintiff were engaged in a general banking business on their own account, and in loaning and collecting plaintiff’s money. There seems to be some dispute about the amount of said money and bills receivable, and the aggregate value thereof; but the board of equalization, on the 11th day of August, 1887, without notice to plaintiff, valued and assessed the same at $18,000, and caused such amount to be placed upon and added to the assessment roll, as the personal property of plaintiff subject to taxation in Spink county for the year 1887; that plaintiff has not paid the same, or any part thereof, which, with interest and penalty, accord
Findings of fact: (1) That the plaintiff, at the time of the assessment complained of, was the owner of the N. E. ¶ of section 6, township 119, range 61 W., and the N. E. ¶ o‘f section 32, township 119, range 61, and the S. E. ¶ section 7, township 118, range 63, all in said Spink county. (2) That there were no real estate taxes due on said land at the time of the acts of the board of county commissioners hereinafter referred to. (3) That the plaintiff is, and was at all times hereinafter referred to, a nonresident of this state, but had sums of money at and prior to the 11th day of August, 1887, and on the 1st day of A.pril of said year, in the hands of her sons, C. B. Billinghurst and W. S. Billinghurst, doing business as the Billinghurst Bros., at Ashton, in said county, for investment, or actually invested, in notes and mortgages on property in said county, and that her said sons were acting as her agents in loaning and investing the same, said sum amounting to $6,000. (4) That no assessment of said property, or of any personal property of the plaintiff, was made by the assessor of said county during the year 1887, and the assessment roll for said county for said year was returned to the county auditor, showing no assessment against the plaintiff for personal property of any kind; but said C. B. Billinghurst, for said Billinghurst Bros., returned under oath, that said Billinghurst Bros, had no other property belonging. to them, or by law required to be listed by them for the year 1887, as agents or otherwise, for any other person, than the sum of $3,230; that none of said $3,230 was the property of the plaintiff. (5) That the board of county commissioners, sitting as a board of equalization, on the 11th day of August, 1887, placed, or ordered to be placed, on said assessment roll, an assessment against plaintiff of $18,-000, for personal property; that no notice of said entry, or of
Conclusions of law: “(1) That the action of the board of county commissioners, in placing the said assessment upon the roll without notice to the plaintiff or her agents, was irregular and illegal. (2) That the said assessment is null and void, and said plaintiff is entitled to have the same set aside. (3) That the county treasurer has no authority to sell plaintiff’s land or to advertise the same, and plaintiff is entitled to have him restrained from selling the same. (4) That plaintiff is entitled to a judgment m accordance with the above. To each of which conclusions of law the plaintiff, at the proper time, excepted.”
Defendants rely, in their assignments of error, upon the following: That the findings of fact do not sustain the conclusions of law, and that the court erred in declaring said assessment void, and that the county treasurer had no authority to advertise and sell the same for the personal taxes of the plaintiff for the year 1887, and in not rendering a judgment for the defendants for taxes upon personal property found to be of the value of $6,000.
The following questions are presented by the record: First, could the personal property in question be lawfully listed and assessed in Spink county, S. D., while the owner was a resident of the state of Wisconsin?. Second, had the board of equalization authority to place such property upon the assessment roll without giving notice of such action to plaintiff or to her agent? The first question is of no importance, if the second is determined in favor of the plaintiff; and we will therefore proceed to consider and determine whether the action of the board of equalization was void because no
Onr statute requires all credits, whether money, property, or labor due from solvent debtors on contract or in judgment, to be subjected to taxation, and it requires every inhabitant of this state, of full age and of sound mind, upon the application of the assessor to list all property subject to taxation in this state, of which he is the owner or has the control and manage ■ ment; and if he fail or refuse so to do, and no assessment of such property has been made at the time the assessment rolls are returned and presented to the board of equalization for its action thereon, the law makes it the duty of such board, at its annual meeting, and at the time and place fixed. by law, to place upon and add to such assessment roll any property, personal or rea], that is subject to taxation, and which has been omitted by the assessor or owner,' and to enter for the same a reasonable, just, and uniform taxation. During the sessions of such board, any person, or his agent or attorney, has the right, under express provisions of the law, to apply to the board for the correction of any alleged errors in the listing or valuation of his property, whether real or personal, and the board may correct the same as shall be reasonable and just. Comp. Laws, §§ 1547, 1554, 1585. Section 1584 gives the board of equalization power to change the valuation and assessment of any property, real or personal, upon the assessment roll, by increasing or diminishing the assessed valuation thereof, for the purpoose of equalizing and correcting the same so that it shall be just and uniform, provided the aggregate assessment shall not be changed thereby. Although the question of notice was not directly involved in the case of Avant v. Flynn, (S. D.) 49 N. W. 15, it was observed in that decision that no addition to the assessment roll made by the board of equalization without notice to the owner would be valid. In that case the property, consisting of cattle, had been listed by the owners, and was raised by the board from 235 to 400 head, and the value increased from
In the case of Railway Co. v. Johnson, 108 Ill. 11, the .court, speaking through Chief Justice Sheldon, says: “The point is made that the assessor had no authority to list and assess this omitted property without notice to the railroad company; and. Cleghorn v. Postlewait, 43 Ill. 428; McConkey v. Smith, 73 Ill. 313; and Bank v. Cook, 77 Ill. 622, are referred to as sustaining the position. Those cases are only to the effect that when a person furnishes the assessor with a list and valuation of his property, which is accepted by the assessor without question, the assessor has no power afterwards to alter the same without first giving the party assessed notice. But we know of no authority for the position that, if an assessor discovers other property than that listed, he must give the owner notice before he can list and assess it. ’’ In Bank v. Jor
From a careful examination of the subject, we are led to believe that the action of an assessor in listing and .assessing taxable property without notice to the owner would not, alone, invalidate the tax; and we also conclude that the Spink county board of equalization, in placing plaintiff’s property upon the assessment roll, and entering a taxation for the same, was acting merely as an assessing board, and any irregularity which did not go to the ground work of the tax would not prevent the recovery of the just and true amount of tax, if any, found due upon the trial of the cause, as provided by Section 1643 of the Compiled Laws of the state. Both the assessor and the board of equalization act in a judicial capacity, and are required to perform their duties' within a time fixed by law. If it were necessary to ascertain the whereabouts of every absent property owner, and give him notice of an intended assessment, valuable interests would often escape taxation, and residents as well as nonresidents might engage their capital in lucrative business, and receive the advantages and protection of our laws without bearing any of the burdens of taxation. Unless the property of an absent owner be listed by another, the statute makes it the duty of the assessor to ascertain and estimate the value of such property, and to assess the same in his, her or their name, provided such name be known to him or is ascertainable; and, in case such property be omitted, it is made the express duty of the board of equalization to place the same upon, and add it to, the assessment roll, and enter therefor a reasonable, just and uniform taxation. Comp. Laws, §§ 1548, 1585.
Entertaining the belief that the failure to notify the plaintiff or her agents was not sufficient to render the action of the
There is nothing to indicate that plaintiff’s money or notes were not at all times in the hands of her agents whom she had authorized to loan or invest the same in Spink county; but counsel’s contention is that, as she was a nonresident, such property could only be taxed at the place of her residence,