86 Mich. 625 | Mich. | 1891
This suit is brought to recover the taxes assessed against defendant upon the general tax roll for the year 1889 of the city of Muskegon. Samuel H. Stevens was city treasurer, and by virtue of that office collector of the taxes.
Defendant, a foreign corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Illinois, was assessed upon the assessment roll for personal estate upon a valuation of $48,000, and State, county, city, and school taxes were
Upon the trial of the cause the original tax roll for the year 1889, returned to and filed with the county treasurer, containing the assessment and taxes against defendant, was introduced in evidence. No jurisdictional defects were pointed out in this roll, or in the proceedings upon which the assessment was based. The statement of uncollected taxes upon personal property for the year 1889, with the warrant of the county treasurer annexed, in which statement the assessment and taxes against defendant appeared, was also offered in evidence.
“After having made your return of the roll that I have called your, attention to, — the tax roll for the year 1889, — did you receive this statement and warrant- from the county treasurer, marked ‘Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1?’”
Exhibit 1 is the statement of uncollected personal taxes, with the warrant annexed, given by the county treasurer to the city treasurer. The counsel for the defendant objected to the question, for the reason that it had not been shown that the city treasurer made such a return to the county treasurer as is required by the charter of the city of Muskegon or the general laws of the State of Michigan. The court overruled the objection, and the witness answered, “I did.” It must be presumed that the expression, “made return of the roll,’* made use of, refers to the statements required by section 44, and referred to in section 45, of Act 153, Laws of 1885. These statements are public documents, and are necessarily brought to the cognizance of tribunals through the medium of human testimony, and such testimony must be limited to giving such a general description of the document as shall be sufficient to identify it, and deposing to the real evidence afforded by'its visible state. Best, Ev. §§ 216, 223. The witness was not called upon to give the contents of the statements, nor to depose to the fact of verification. The statute required these statements to be made and verified in a certain manner, and the county treasurer was by the statute required to file them. The testimony was admissible.
1. Not only-the right of the city to sue for and recover this tax, but—
2. The authority of the city treasurer to institute suit for its recovery.
The two questions are independent of each other. In considering the first question, we must give effect to all the provisions of the statute bearing upon it. Section 26 of the act declares that ^ the taxes assessed under the provisions of the act shall become at once a debt to the township from persons to whom they are assessed. The other provisions of the law are mere procedures to enforce the collection. Section 35 makes the tax . roll prima facie evidence of the debt sought to be recovered, and section 90 enacts that—
“ In any suit or proceeding to enforce or set aside any tax, such tax shall be held illegal only for one of the following reasons:
“1. That no law authorizes such tax.
“2. That the person or persons appointed to decide whether a tax shall be raised under a given law have acted without jurisdiction, or have not imposed the tax in question.
“ 3. That the person or property assessed was exempt from the taxation in question, or was not assessed.
“4. That the tax has been paid.
“5. That the supervisor or board of review, in assessing a person or property for taxation, or in the apportionment of the tax to the person or property in question, acted fraudulently.”
Hnder these provisions, a prima facie case is made in an action to enforce the payment of a tax levied upon an assessment of personal property by the production and
The further question is that the city is not entitled to recover bécause the institution of the suit was unauthorized by any competent municipal authority. The only authority claimed is that derived under section 47 of the act; that is, the city treasurer claims the right to institute the suit by virtue of the statute and the warrant of the county treasurer. It follows that, if the warrant was unauthorized, the suit is also unauthorized. Township of Port Huron v. Potts, 78 Mich. 435. Under the above decision, the plaintiff must show that the statute relative to the verification of the statement was complied with; otherwise the -warrant could not issue, and the city treasurer would have no authority to institute the suit. In this case the statement was not introduced by the plaintiff, and its counsel rely entirely upon the presumptions declared in section 89 of the act of 1885, which reads as follows:
“No tax assessed upon any property, or sale therefor, shall be held invalid on account of any irregularity in any assessment, or on account of any assessment or tax roll not having been made or proceeding had within the time required by law, or on account of the property having been assessed without the name of the owner, or in the name of any person other than the owner, or on account of any other irregularity, informality, or omission, or want of any matter of form or substance, in any proceeding, that does not prejudice the rights of the person whose property is taxed. * * * The absence of any record of any proceeding, or the omission of any mention in any record of any vote or proceeding, or of mention of any matter in any statement or certificate that should appear therein under the provisions of any law of this State, shall not affect the validity of any proceeding, tax, or title depending thereon: Provided, the fact that such vote or proceeding was had or tax authorized is shown by any other record, statement, or certificate made evidence by the terms of this act, or any other*631 law of this State. No tax, or sale of property for any tax, shall be rendered or held invalid by showing that any re'cord, statement, certificate, ' affidavit, paper, or return cannot be found in the proper office; and, unless the contrary is affirmatively shown, the presumption shall be that such record was made, and such certificate, statement, affidavit, paper, or return was duly made and filed!”
It will be noticed that this section applies and is restricted to taxes and tax sales. Neither the tax, nor a sale of property, shall be held invalid for irregularity in the assessment or absence of papers from the proper office, unless it is affirmatively shown that there was no-record or the papers were not duly filed. In this case the-validity of the tax is not questioned, and there has been no sale of property. The presumptions of the statute do not apply to the question before us. The statute does not say that no warrant issqed by the county treasurer to the township or city treasurer to collect unpaid taxes on personal property shall be held invalid, unless, etc. It therefore rested upon the city treasurer to show that-the warrant to him was authorized. He showed that a. return was made and filed; he showed that the county treasurer gave him a statement of the personal taxes so-returned which remained unpaid,, and annexed thereto-his warrant for the collection thereof; and he invokes the aid of the presumption that public officers correctly perform their official duties, and therefore the presumption is that he made the proper return, and that the county treasurer would not have delivered to him the. statement and warrant unless the verification 'had been, properly made. But this position is met and overcome, by the principle that presumptions are never allowable-when better evidence of a primary nature is required by law to be preserved. People v. Treadway, 17 Mich. 480, 485. He failed to show a valid warrant in his hands,
It follows, further, that, if the suit was instituted in the name of the municipality without authority, no costs •can be awarded against it upon a reversal of the judgment.
The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, without costs to either party.
This statement was made by the county treasurer from the return of the city treasurer, pursuant to the last paragraph ’ of section 47 of the tax law of 1885.