135 Iowa 404 | Iowa | 1907
The plaintiff railroad company owns approximately eight hundred miles of telegraph lines and equipments in the State of Iowa situated on their right of way between Burlington and Council Bluffs, Iowa. The lines are used in the ordinary manner for the transaction of railroad business, and are necessary for the proper operation of its railroad. In addition to their use for railroad
Code, section 1334, so far as material to the question now under consideration, provides as follows: “ On the first Monday in March in each- year, the executive council shall assess all the property of each railway corporation in the State excepting the lands, lots and other real estate belonging thereto not used in the operation of any railway, and excepting railway bridges across the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, and excepting grain elevators; and for the purpose of making such assessment, its president, vice-president, general manager, general superintendent, receiver, „or such other officer as the council may designate shall, on or before the 15th day of February each year, furnish it a verified statement showing in detail for the year ending December thirty-first .next preceding.” Among other requirements of the subdivisions of this section is the following, under No. 7 thereof: “ The number of miles of telegraph lines owned and used within the State.” Section 133 6 provides: “The
It is a familiar rule of statutory construction that the several provisions of the statute relating to the same subject matter shall be construed together in determining the legislative intent, and with this rule in mind it is not difficult to ascertan the legislative intention as to' the assessment of railroad property by the executive council. Whilé section 1334 provides in general terms that the executive council shall assess all the property of any railway corporation in the State, with the exception therein noted, section 1336 fully and specifically points out what is meant by the term “ all the property,” used in 1334. It will be noticed that section 1336, after enumerating certain property which is generally known to be exclusively used in the operation of a road, says that the executive council shall make the assessment “ upon all other property real and personal exclusively used in the operation of such railway.” The language of. this section, in our judgment, clearly excludes from the action of the executive council property owiled by a railway company which is not exclusively used in the operation of such railway. To hold otherwise would be to disregard the plain and unambiguous language of section 1336, wherein the property to be assessed is specifically pointed out, and to give undue force and effect to the general language of section 1334.
Turning to section 1-332, relating to the assessment of telegraph and telephone companies, we find this provision: “ No télegraph line shall be assessed which is owned and operated by any railroad company exclusively for the transaction of its business, and which has been duly reported as
The executive council had no authority, under sections 1334 and 1336, to assess the property in question as railway property within the meaning of said sections, and consequently the attempted assessment was void. It did have
The appellee urges that such property had been returned and assessed as railway property for many years, and that the construction given the statute by the executive council and by the railroad company is entitled to great consideration in arriving at the intention of the Legislature. This may be true in some instances, but it is in no way controlling on the courts when they are called upon to enforce a statute which is apparently plain and unambiguous.
We are of opinion that the district court was in error in overruling the demurrer and in entering judgment on the petition. The decree is therefore reversed, and the case remanded for a judgment not inconsistent with this opinion. — Beversed.