City of Henderson v. Fields

258 S.W. 523 | Tex. App. | 1924

* Writ of error dismissed for want of jurisdiction March 26, 1924. We think the court correctly decided that the district judge was not disqualified to try the case and render the judgment in the damage suit of appellee against the appellant merely because he was a taxpayer on property within the corporate limits of the city. Thornburgh v. City of Tyler, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 439, 43 S.W. 1054; Kopperl v. Board of Equalization (Tex.Civ.App.) 45 S.W. 1129; Orndorff v. McKee (Tex.Civ.App.) 188 S.W. 432. For the judge was not, in such circumstance, "interested" or affected directly in a pecuniary manner either in the "cause" itself or in the matter at issue in the original suit for damages of whether or not there was any negligence and of whether or not there would be a recovery for damages and the amount thereof. Even taxpayers are not disqualified to sit as jurors in actions for damages against the city. City of Marshall v. McAllister,18 Tex. Civ. App. 159, 43 S.W. 1043. The judge, as a taxpayer, would not be disqualified in respect to the judgment for damages until and unless an action was brought like the instant one, on the said judgment, having for its purpose to compel the levy of taxes or to directly subject property to taxation to pay same. City of Austin v. Nalle, 85 Tex. 520,22 S.W. 668, 960; City of Oak Cliff v. State, 97 Tex. 393, 79 S.W. 1068; and other cases cited by appellant. For only in such cases would the judge then be, as a taxpayer, directly and immediately, and not remotely, "interested" in a pecuniary manner in the result and outcome, and as well in the question at issue in the case. We conclude that the judgment was not void and the assignment should be overruled.

It is insisted that a judgment for damages for personal injuries, as here in suit, is not a debt for "current expenses" of government or for any of the special or local purposes within the power granted by law to a town or city operating under the general law like appellant, to impose taxes to pay. While a judgment for damages for personal injuries may not be classed as an obligation arising out of an undertaking voluntarily entered into or arising purely out of contract on the *525 part of a city, yet such judgment legally operates to be an expense or charge cast or imposed upon such city by law, judicially determined to be payable by it out of the taxes collectable for public purposes. For the law imposes liability upon a city for torts growing out of the usual discharge of corporate functions. 2 Cooley on Torts, p. 1002, and numerous reported cases. Since the legal liability on which the judgment was rendered arose in the ordinary course of running the city government, which was within its power to do, a sufficient legal reason exists to authorize payment of such character of obligations to be made out of the taxes levied and collected for the general purposes of the city. Therefore it is believed that the court properly classified the judgment, as he did in this proceeding, as a current expense of the city, to be paid with current revenue. City of Sherman v. Langham, 92 Tex. 13,40 S.W. 140, 42 S.W. 961, 39 L.R.A. 258.

The further propositions stated in the appellant's brief present in effect the two points in view, viz.: (1) That Acts 1921, p. 12, is both unconstitutional and void as against public policy, in that the Legislature has not, as within its power to do, fixed a definite maximum tax rate or per cent. allowable separately for each single municipal purpose specified in the law, but has left it to the discretion of the governing body of the particular city or town to arbitrarily fix the tax that shall be annually levied and collected for each of such purposes; and (2) that the maximum tax rate for "current expenses" of a city or town authorized by law prevailing at the time the judgment was rendered alone governs this mandamus suit, since to require the levy of a higher rate of tax for such special purpose, as is authorized by the act of 1921, to satisfy the obligation of a city or town arising out of a past transaction, would operate in legal effect to make the new statute in question retroactive, specifically prohibited by the Constitution.

An amendment of sections 4 and 5 of article 11 of the Constitution was submitted to the voters of the state and adopted by the requisite vote. Section 4 as amended reads:

"Cities and towns having a population of five thousand or less may be chartered alone by general law. They may levy, assess and collect such taxes as may be authorized by law, but no tax for any purpose shall ever be lawful for any one year which shall exceed one and one-half per cent. of the taxable property of such city; and all taxes shall be collectible only in current money, and all licenses and occupation taxes levied, and all fines, forfeitures and penalties accruing to said cities and towns shall be collectible only in current money."

After this, at its next session, the Legislature passed Acts 1921, p. 12, which reads, as bearing upon the question presented:

"Section 1. The city council or governing body of any city or town in this state having a population of five thousand or less shall have power by ordinance to levy, assess and collect an annual ad valorem tax sufficient to meet the interest and sinking fund on all indebtedness legally incurred prior to the adoption of the constitutional amendment of September 25, 1883, regarding the power of cities and towns to levy and collect taxes, etc., and may also levy, assess and collect such taxes as such city council or governing body may determine, not to exceed for any one year one and one-half per cent of the taxable property of such city or town, for current expenses and for the purpose of construction or the purchase of public buildings, waterworks, sewers, and other permanent improvements, within the limits of such city or town, and for the construction and improvement of the roads, bridges and streets of such city or town within its limits." Vernon's Ann.Civ.St.Supp. 1922, art. 925.

"Sec. 6. All laws and parts of laws in conflict herewith are hereby repealed, and articles 881, 882 and 925, as amended, of the Revised Civil Statutes, 1911, are hereby particularly repealed."

Comparing these two provisions it does not appear that the Legislature in enacting the statutory provision has exceeded its due authority, or has failed to secure the legal protection which our system of government affords to the property of its citizens against wrongful or arbitrary taxation. The constitutional provision expressly empowers cities and towns having 5,000 or less inhabitants to "levy, assess and collect such taxes as may be authorized by law." As a consequence of its terms the power is lodged in the Legislature to delegate to such cities and towns the general authority to levy and collect such ad valorem taxes as may be needed annually for their own municipal purposes, within due bounds of law. And the statutory provision enacted by the Legislature in plain and express terms confers upon such cities and towns the general authority to provide "by ordinance" for the levy, assessment, and collection of such ad valorem taxes "as such city council or governing body may determine." The constitutional provision places the following limitation upon the rate or amount:

"But no tax for any purpose shall ever be lawful for any one year which shall exceed one and one-half per cent of the taxable property of such city."

And the statutory legislation in question expressly provides that the taxes collectable by such cities and town are

"not to exceed for any one year one and one-half per cent of the taxable property of such city or town."

The maximum rate does not exceed the rate fixed by the Constitution. The taxes so authorized by the Legislature to be levied and collected annually are allowable, as expressly stated, for the specific purposes, viz.: *526 (1) "For current expenses;" (2) "and for the purpose of construction or the purchase of public buildings, waterworks, sewers and other permanent improvements within the limits of such city or town ;" (3) "and for the construction and improvements of the roads, bridges and streets of such city or town within its limits." These specified "purposes" are clearly within the requirement of section 3 of article 8 of the Constitution providing that taxes shall be levied and collected "for public purposes only." Consequently the statute in question has the effect of expressly restricting the exercise by the city or town of the authority to levy and collect taxes, by fixing, entirely within the constitutional provision, a maximum rate of ad valorem taxes, collectable annually, and only for public purposes, specifically enumerated. The requirements of a valid tax law are met when by its provisions, as here, all taxable property shall be alike subjected to the tax, and no higher rate or greater tax levy in proportion to value is imposed then authorized by law. And the purposes of the tax, to which it only shall be applied, are distinctly stated, and are, in fact and in law, public purposes only. It is true that by the terms of the act it is left to the city council or governing body of the city or town to "determine" and provide "by ordinance" the special rate that annually shall be levied separately for each of the three specified purposes. But the act places a limitation upon the sum total of ad valorem taxes collectable annually for all three of the enumerated purposes combined together. And the authority to levy a maximum tax for all of the purposes carries with it the authority to fix or make a percentage apportionment of such total tax that could be collected for each purpose separately. For instance, the governing body of the city or town may under the act properly apportion and fix a levy on the $100 valuation of not exceeding, say, 40 cents for "current expenses," 60 cents for "construction or the purchase of public buildings," etc., and 50 cents for the "construction and improvement of streets," etc. Evidently it was in the mind of the Legislature that, instead of itself fixing the apportionment of taxes to each purpose, it was expedient to authorize local municipal bodies, better adapted to understand local necessities to make the apportionment to each purpose within the bounds of the sum total taxes allowable, as the local exigencies require. It is not indispensable to the validity of the act that the Legislature itself fix the precise amount of the levy that shall be made for each purpose separately. The validity must rest on the fact that a maximum tax rate is fixed by the Legislature directing the amount of taxes that is allowable to be collected from the taxable property for the purposes specified. The constitutional provision does not, expressly or by implication, deny authority to the Legislature to delegate to the city or town the authority to make the apportionment to the several purposes as their own governing bodies may determine proper, within the bounds of the sum total tax authorized by the law. Section 9 of article 8 of the Constitution does prohibit a tax levy exceeding a fixed amount for each of the public purposes specially enumerated; but, as held by the Supreme Court, that section does not have application to and govern the constitutional provision in question. Lufkin v. City of Galveston, 63 Tex. 437.

Recurring to the second point above, it appears that the Legislature passed the act in question about five years after the rendition of the judgment. At the time the judgment was rendered, article 925 of the Revised Statutes fixed the maximum tax rate that could be levied by a city or town to defray "current expenses" at 25 cents on the $100 valuation of taxable property. The act of 1921 authorizes an increased tax rate for current expenses of a town or city of the population of appellant. The doctrine of retrospective legislation sought to be applied does not legally have application to the character of case here presented, and consequently the tax rate prescribed by the present act would be available to enforce the present payment of the judgment debt. The tax rate here was in no wise a subject-matter of express contract between the parties which may not be impaired by imposing a tax rate contrary to the terms of contract. Section 16, art. 1, of the state Constitution, makes ineffective retroactive legislation "impairing the obligation of contracts." "Unless the Constitution prohibits," quoting from 1 Cooley on Taxation (3d Ed.) p. 492, "retrospective legislation, the basis of an assessment of taxes may as lawfully be retrospective as the reverse; that is to say, it may as well have regard to benefits theretofore received as to those which may be assessed thereafter."

And besides the obligation to pay a personal judgment is a continuing one. It is within the power and competency of the Legislature, in its exercise of power within the limits of a constitutional provision, to raise or lower the rate or sum of taxes generally collectable. Since the power of taxation is exerted by the Legislature for a public and not a private purpose, a given city or town has no vested right to continue a tax rate formerly existing, as against a tax rate differently provided according to law.

We have given special consideration to the record and to the clear and well-prepared brief of the appellant's attorneys, in view of the important questions submitted for decision. Our conclusion, though, is that the judgment should be affirmed; and it is accordingly so ordered. *527