32 Colo. 382 | Colo. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the court.
The county assessor of Arapahoe county added to the tax schedule of The Denver Union Water Company an item which he called a ‘ ‘ franchise, ’ ’ and for the purposes of taxation fixed its value at two millions of dollars. Sitting as a board of equalization, the board of county commissioners of the county afterwards reduced this valuation to three hundred thousand dollars, and levied the various taxes upon it. The water company, asserting that this franchise was not taxable either under the constitution or the revenue laws of the state, filed its petition before the board in which it asked, for the reason alleged, to have this valuation canceled and removed from its tax schedule, and to be relieved from payment of any taxes upon it. The petition was denied by the board, and an appeal was taken to the district court. That tribunal held that franchises are taxable property under the constitution, but ruled
Authority for this proceeding, if it exists at all, is to be found in an act of the 7th general assembly published in Session Laws of 1889, page 24, and the parties admit that these proceedings, if maintainable, are so thereunder. It is there provided that whenever an owner of assessable property has been unjustly or erroneously assessed thereon for purposes of taxation, he may petition the board of county commissioners of the county wherein the property is assessed, for its correction. In this petition he must describe the property claimed to be unjustly or erroneously assessed, state the sum at which it is assessed, its true cash value, and what is a just assessment thereof compared with other like property. In considering the petition, the board is required to hear all testimony that it produced bearing upon the claim therein made, and shall either grant or refuse the prayer of the petition in whole or in part, as may be just and proper. If the prayer of the petition is denied, in whole or in part, the petitioner is allowed an appeal from the decision of the board to the district court of the county where the trial of the issue is de novo. As a condition precedent to the allowance of the appeal, the petitioner must pay the taxes levied on the property upon the assessment as made, and if he succeeds in having the same modified or set aside, the county treasurer to whom the taxes have been paid must refund the same, or such part thereof as the modification requires, whenever a certified copy of the judgment modifying the assess-
1. This act gives to an aggrieved property owner a remedy which, in its absence, he would not have. It prescribes a special procedure to which the person seeking to avail himself of its provisions must conform. It cannot by construction be extended to embrace cases not falling within its letter or spirit. It will be observed that the new right is given, and the new remedy furnished only to an owner of assessable property, and not to one who owns property upon which no taxes can be assessed or levied. In the petition we are considering there is no allegation of the true cash value of the franchise in question, nor is there an averment as to what a just assessment thereon would be as compared with other like property. Even if the petitioner conceded (as it does not) that the franchise was assessable property, its petition would be insufficient to entitle it to a hearing as to whether or not it had been unjustly or erroneously assessed, because of the absence of the necessary allegations to which we have just referred. The case as made by the petitioner in its petition, therefore, must be regarded as an attempt on the part of an owner of property who claims that it cannot be assessed for taxation either because under the constitution it is exempt, or because no general law has been enacted for the ascertainment of its value, and for that reason it is non-assessable, to obtain relief under a statute which provides a remedy only for owners of property conceded to be assessable, but upon which an unjust or erroneous assessment has been made. .
2. Having determined that this proceeding, as instituted and conducted before the county commissioners, by which its character was unalterably fixed, is merely an attempt by an owner of property claimed
3. It is too plain for argument that the board of county commissioners did not have power to pass upon the question which the petitioner presented for decision. Whether it denied the petition for the lack of power does not appear from its proceedings, but its. decision was right, irrespective of the reasons given therefor. The power of the board, under this statute, is restricted to cases in which relief is asked from an unjust or erroneous tax assessed against property which itself is assessable or taxable, and not against a tax laid on property claimed to be non-assessable.
The statute under consideration is the source and measure of the power and jurisdiction both of the board of commissioners and the district court, to afford relief to a complaining taxpayer. The remedy
When, therefore, it was manifested to the board of commissioners and the district court, that the petitioner asked to be relieved from an assessment and tax, which it claimed to be void because the property upon which the tax was laid was not assessable property, the only order that could be entered
5. Since neither the board of commissioners nor the district court has jurisdiction to determine the merits of the cause presented in the petition, this court is also without jurisdiction in the premises, even if, under the court of appeals act, or otherwise, a review could be had herein upon the ground that some question invoking jurisdiction thereunder was presented. The fact that the parties have argued various important questions which they ask this court to decide, does not justify us in assuming jurisdiction of a subject-matter which we do not possess. The parties may waive jurisdiction, so far as it affects them personally, but it is beyond their power to confer upon a judicial tribunal jurisdiction of the subject-matter which it does not possess under .the constitution and statutes of the state. The constitutional question supposed to be involved could not in any event be determined upon this review. The water company lias not assigned cross-errors. The ruling of the district court was that, although the franchise is taxable property under the constitution, it is not assessable property, because no method for ascertaining its value has been provided. The constitutional question was resolved in favor of the board, and that body is not here questioning that ruling; and since the water company has not assigned cross-error thereto, it is not in a position to be heard' upon it.
Whether the general revenue law furnishes an adequate, or any, method for fixing the valuation of franchises, is a question of statutory construction
The conclusion which we have reached does not cut off the rights of the parties, whatever they may be. They are the same as if these proceedings had not, been instituted. Neither the judgment of the district court nor that of the board concludes their rights, for neither tribunal had jurisdiction to pronounce a valid judgment except one of dismissal. The judgment below is, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the district' court to vacate its judgment heretofore entered. This leaves in effect the.decision of the county board denying the petition, which was right; and, as we have said, the water company is relegated to whatever rights and remedies it has for setting aside the assessment, and for the recovery of the tax heretofore paid into the county treasury, wholly without reference to the action of the county commissioners or the district court in this proceeding.
Reversed.
Mr. Justice Steele not participating.