77 P. 332 | Idaho | 1904
This appeal is prosecuted by the Washington County Abstract Company, Limited, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of this state. On the eighteenth day of July, 1903, the appellant, through its attorney,, appeared before the board of commissioners of Washington county, then sitting as a board of equalization, and made application to the board to strike from the assessment-roll of the-county for the year 1903 the assessment of the abstract-books belonging to the appellant and assessed at the sum of $1,000. After a hearing the board granted the petition and ordered the-assessment stricken from the roll. On the same day the board of commissioners, sitting as a board of equalization, ordered that the individual stockholders of the capital stock of the appellant corporation be assessed according to the number of shares held by each in the aggregate sum of $1,000, which was.
. The appeal from the order of the board of equalization taken in this case was taken under the provisions of sections 1776 to 1779, Eevised Statutes, as amended by act of February 14, 1899 (Sess. Laws 1899, p. 248.) By section 1776 it is provided that “An appeal may be taken from any act, order or proceeding of the board, by any person aggrieved thereby or, by any taxpayer of the county when any demand is allowed against the county or when he deems any such act, order or proceeding illegal or prejudicial to the public interests.” The section to which the foregoing is an amendment is found in chapter 2 of title 11 of the Political Code of 1887, and it should be observed that that chapter is devoted exclusively to the duties and powers of the board of county commissioners when acting 'as such a board, and does not undertake to prescribe their powers and duties as a board of equalization.
Section 25 of the county commissioners’ act of the Compiled Laws of 1874, page 529, provided for appeals from orders of the board of commissioners as follows: “Appeals may be taken from orders of the board of county commissioners as follows: 1. From an order by any person aggrieved thereby; 2. From an order allowing any account or demand against the county by any elector or taxpayer of the county, on the ground of improper or excessive allowance; 3. From any order prejudicially affecting the public interest, by either the district attorney or probate judge of the county on behalf of the county.”
Under that provision it was held by the territorial supreme court in General Custer Min. Co. v. Van Camp, 2 Idaho, 40, 3 Pac. 22, that an appeal would not lie from an order of the board of commissioners when acting as a board of equalization. Judge Priekett discussed the matter and set forth the conclusion of the court thereon very ably and clearly as follows: “It seems quite clear that the board of county commissioners and the board of.equalization are two separate and distinct bodies, created by different acts of the legislature; that by section 22 of the revenue
The constitutional convention of 1889, by section 12 of article ■7 of the constitution, provides that “The board of county commissioners for the several counties of the state shall constitute boards of equalization for their respective counties, whose ■duties shall be to equalize the valuation of the taxable property in the county, under such rules and regulations as shall be prescribed by law.” By section 6 of article 18 of the same instrument they provided for a board of county commissioners. Since the adoption of the constitution but few amendments have been made to the Bevised Statutes relative to the duties of a board of county commissioners as it existed under the territorial form of government. One of the principal amendments thereto has been sections 1759 and 177’6 to 1779, inclusive. On the ■other hand, since the adoption of the constitution the legislatures have repeatedly passed revenue acts and in each act have provided for the equalization of assessments by the board of ■county commissioners. At no time, however, has the legislature ever provided for an appeal from any action or proceeding taken by the board of county commissioners when sitting as a '“board of equalization.” It is also worthy of observation that the board of county commissioners, as such, meet at stated periods for the transaction of the regular county business, but .at none of these meetings are they authorized to . equalize as
The same question here considered was discussed extensively by the supreme court of Washington in Olympia Water Works v. Board of Equalization, 14 Wash. 268, 44 Pac. 267, and the court arrived at the conclusion that an act authorizing appeals from orders and proceedings of the board of commissioners does not authorize an appeal from an order of the board of equalization.