76 N.W. 239 | N.D. | 1898
Section 179 of the Constitution of North Dakota reads as follows: “All property, except as hereinafter in this section provided, shall be assessed in the county, city, township, town, village or district in which it is situated,’ in the manner prescribed by law. The franchise, roadway, roadbed, rails and rolling stock of all railroads operated in this state shall be assessed by the state board of equalization at their actual value and such assessed valuation shall be apportioned to the counties, cities, towns, townships and districts in which said roads are located, as a basis for taxation of such property in proportion to the number of miles of railway laid in such counties, cities, towns, townships and districts.” Pursuant to this provision, the state board of equalization, in the year 1896, assessed the plaintiff railroad at a certain sum per mile upon its track mileage in the state, and the assessment so made was duly certified as
It will be conceded that if the word “roadway,” as used in section 179 of the state constitution, includes the property here in controversy, then the state board of equalization must consider the value thereof in arriving at the average mileage valuation of the road, and the local assessor would be without authority to assess the same. It becomes important, then, to ascertain the significance of the word “roadway.” The same word appears in the same connection in a corresponding section of the Constitution of the State of California
The case of Chicago & A. R. Co., v. People, 98 Ill. 350, arose on the application of a local tax collector for a judgment for taxes against two certain tracts of land belonging to the railroad'company, except a strip 100 feet in width extending through said tracts on which was situated the main line of the road. The evidence showed that outside of such strip the tracts contained about 32 acres of ground. One section of the revenue law of that state (Rev. St. 1874, p. 865, § 41) then in force required the railroad company to “make out and file with the county clerks of the respective counties in which the railroad may be located, a statement or schedule showing the property held for right of way,” etc. The next section declared: “Such right of way * * * shall be held to be real estate for the purposes of taxation and denominated ‘railroad track’ and shall be so listed and valued.” By other provisions the “railroad track” was assessed by the state board. The Court said: “What was intended by the enactment of this section of the statute by the.use of the words here employed, ‘such right of way’? Were these words intended to mean merely the'strip "of land a certain number of feet wide, upon which the railroad company had constructed its main track, or did the framers of the section intend to embrace, not only the main line of the road, but all side tracks, turnouts, and switches which are connected with the main track, and which are in actual use by the railroad company as a common carrier? We can see no reason why the term ‘right of way’ should be confined to the land over which the main track of a railroad should be constructed. The land upon which a side track, a switch, or a turnout is built and in actual use by the company, in the business for which it was organized, for all practical purposes is as much held for right of way as is the land upon which the main track is constructed. In the operation of a railroad it is necessary that trains should pass each other, and hence the necessity of turnouts, switches, and side tracks. In
Another question was argued at length, axrd with much ability, in the briefs of all the counsel in the case, and that is whether or not, under our consitution, the local assessor can assess the improvements on the roadway, other than “roadbed, rails, and rolling stock,”’ separate and apart from the roadway itself. This is a constitutional question of much importance, and perhaps not free from difficulties. It ought not to be decided unless its decision is necessary to determination of the case. Not only do we deem its decision unnecessary in this case, but we cannot conceive how the question can arise on this record. No such assessmexit of improvements has ever been made or attempted. No action has been brought to cancel any such assessment. The assessment was of lots and parcels of land. Ir may be that in fixing the value thereof the improvements thereon were coxisidered. But that fact cannot affect our decision. The assessmexit was of land. If that was assessable, the whole tax must stand. If it was not assessable, — and we hold that it was not,— the whole tax must fall. Should we hold with'respondent that the
Affirmed.