191 N.W. 618 | N.D. | 1922
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant in an action to recover certain taxes paid under protest. The facts were stipulated and, so far as material, are as follows: The plaintiff at the time of the beginning of the action was the agent of the President in charge of railroads while under Federal control. While under such control taxes were assessed and levied against the property of the Great Northern Railway Company in the county of Pierce in the year 1919 amounting to $51,858.78, which taxes were regularly paid .the 29th of February 1920, by the United States Railroad Administration. $931.97 of this amount was paid under protest and a notice served upon the county treasurer at the time to the effect that this amount represented excess taxes assessed and levied for the county tui
A brief statement of the legislation authorizing and limiting the mill tax for the tuition fund may conduce to a more ready understanding of the legal question presented upon this appeal. Section 1224 of the Compiled Laws for 1913 requires the county auditor to extend a tax of 2 mills on the dollar on taxable property in the county to be apportioned among the school districts. In 1915 the legislature passed an act (chapter 254 of the Session Laws for 1915) limiting levies, which this court held, in Great Northern R. Co. v. Duncan, 42 N. D. 346, 176 N. W. 992, to be applicable to the county tuition levy so as to limit the amount that could be raised under § 1224, Compiled Laws of 1913 to the percentage of increase authorized by that chapter, which might bo less than the12 mills permitted by § 1224. In 1919, in the regular session of the legislature, two acts were passed, bearing upon the tax in question. They were both approved on the same day, March 6, 1919. One of them, chapter 214, Session Laws of 1919, reads in part:
“Sec. 1. For the year 1919 and 1920, the total annual amount of the taxes levied for any purpose, except special levies for local improvements and for the maintenance of sinking funds in any county or political subdivision thereof shall not exceed by more than 10 per cent the amount that would be produced by the levy of the maximum rate provided by law upon the assessed valuation of 1919; provided, that for road or school purposes the amount levied may be twenty per cent for 1919 and forty per cent for 1920, respectively, upon the basis of the assessed valuation of 1918.”
“Sec. 3. In any case wherein any duty or power is imposed or conferred by law upon any official in any county or political subdivision. thereof aud such duty or power is contingent upon the assessed valuation of the taxable property in such county or political subdivision, prior to July first, 1921, such duty or power shall rest upon and be conditioned by the assessed valuation of 1918, except as provided in section one hereof.”
This act was passed with an emergency clause, declaring it to be in
At tbe special session of tbe legislature, held November 25, 1919 to December 11, 1919, another act was passed, amending chapter 214 of Session Laws of 1919. Tbe amendatory act did not differ in form or principle from the act amended; it merely extended tbe limitations to cities, towns, and villages, and made them apply to tbe taxes of tbe then current year of 1919. Special Session Laws 1919, chap. 61. This act carried an emergency clause, putting it into effect from tbe date of its approval.
On the day following tbe approval of this act another act was approved further amending § 1224 of tbe Compiled Laws of 1913, as previously amended by chapter 216 of the Session Laws for 1919, by reducing tbe mill tax for tbe tuition fund from 1 mill to mill on tbe dollar. This act contained no emergency clause:
Tbe plaintiff and appellant contends that tbe limitation contained in chapter 214 of the Session Laws of 1919, as amended by chapter 61 of tbe laws of the Special Session of 1919, is applicable to tbe levy for the county tuition fund authorized by chapter 216 of tbe Laws of 1919. Tbe latter law fixes tbe levy at 1 mill on tbe dollar of valuation, and tbe specific contention is that chapter 214 has tbe effect of limiting or reducing this tax to tbe point where it cannot exceed by more than 20 per cent in 1919 tbe maximum determined according to the assessed valuation of 1918.
Tbe principal arguments in support of this contention, as we understand them, are two in number. First, that chapter 214 of the laws of 1919, being devoted exclusively to tbe subject of limiting levies, is general and negative in its terms, and consequently is applicable to' all levies of whatsoever kind or character; and that tbe intention to make it broad enough to apply to every levy is further substantiated by tbe amendatory act of tbe special session, extending it to cities and villages, and specifically requiring its limits to be observed in extending tbe taxes for tbe then current year and at a time when the tax lists bad probably been partially made up. Second, that § 3 of tbe act, hereinbefore
We are of the opinion that neither of these arguments is tenable, and further, that the limitation upon the levy for the tuition fund during 1919 was only that expressed in chapter 216 of the Session Laws, wherein the tax was reduced from 2 mills, originally provided in § 1224, to 1 mill.
The reasons for our conclusion may be briefly stated. Section 1 of chapter 214 of the Session Laws of 1919 (and likewise the amendatory act, § 1, chapter 61 of the Laws of the Special Session) contains no enumeration of tax levying officers which would include the county auditor who extends the mill tax, as was the case with § 1 of the original act of this character passed in 1915, chapter 254, Session Laws of 1915, and which was construed by this court in Great Northern N. Co. v. Duncan, supra. This act simply places a limitation on the total amount of taxes levied “for any purpose” during the years 1919 and 1920, and, as we construe it, it can have no application to a tax levied by the legislature itself at a certain rate in mills, in the absence of a clear expression to that effect. The only way this limitation can be made effective is to consider the school district or other taxing district as the unit for the purpose of applying the statute. That is, the limitation does not apply to the aggregate of school taxes in a county, but applies to the aggregate of such taxes in a district. To attempt to apply it to the aggregate of school taxes in a county would, of course, result in the absurdity of making the authority of a particular school board to levy taxes contingent upon what is done by all the other boards. lienee, considering the statute as limiting the taxes that might be levied in a particular district taken as a unit and applying the appellant’s construction of § 1 as applicable to the mill levy, it will be seen that it would be incumbent upon the auditor to compute for each district the school taxes levied locally and add thereto the mill tax, for obviously both levies are for school purposes. If the aggregate should exceed the limitation in § 1, it would then be his duty, under appellant’s contention, to reduce the aggregate. In making the reduction, there is no legislative guide for the auditor to follow in determining whether or not he should reduce the tax levied locally or the mill tax, or whether he should
The gist of the whole matter is that the limitation of § 1 has regard for the purpose — in fact that term “school purposes” is used — and it has no application by its terms to a stated tax, which ordinarily affords but a fractional part of the taxes levied for the general purpose of maintaining schools. Hence, to construe this section as applicable to this one tax would limit or reduce taxes levied for school purposes in some instances even though the aggregate amount levied against the property in a particular district would be loss than the basic levy of 1918. This contravenes the obvious intention expressed in chapter 214. It also subverts the evident policy of § 1224 as amended — a policy of long standing — of levying a unifom tax for the support of the public schools, lo be apportioned among them as a tuition fund.
We do not regard § 3 as being addressed specifically to the county auditor in such a way as 'to limit his power to extend the mill tax, for the reason that it is apparent that his duty or power is neither contingent upon nor conditioned by the assessed valuation. He is required to-spread the tax on all taxable property in the county regardless of the aggregate assessed valuation. This power cannot be said to be contingent upon assessed valuation when it must be exercised towards the entire property regardless of amount. This language would seem to apply to a tax that is authorized only when the assessed valuation roaches a certain amount. See § 1867, Compiled Laws of 1913.
Moreover, we are of the opinion that the legislature, by the passage of two acts, each successively cutting in half the mill tax (chapter 216, Session Laws of 1919 and chapter 66 of the Special Session Laws of 1919), which entered into their concurrent consideration of the tax limiting question, showed, unmistakably, an intention to continue the policy of extending the mill tax at the rate prescribed, rather than subject it to such contingencies as would result from the attempted application of the levy limitations prescribed by chapter 214 and its amend-