73 P. 1042 | Or. | 1903
delivered the opinion.
This is a suit to determine, by way of injunction, the effect of certain changes contemplated by the legislature in the law relative to assessment and taxation (Laws 1903, p. 295). By express provision, the new law is to go into
It will readily be observed that the purpose of the amendatory act is to change the dates upon which the several official acts designated shall be performed, the mode of assessment and levy and the manner of collection remaining the same. All the dates in the process are completely shifted; that is to say, instead of beginning the assessment on the first Monday in March, and making
Such is the holding of the Supreme Court of Indiana,
Applying the rule to the present exigency, all the sections of the old law relative to the assessment and collection of taxes set out in the amendatory act, as amended to be in force and effect from and after January 1,1904, will be wholly obliterated and superseded by the new sections as contained in the amendatory act, which latter will become solely operative and effective from and after that date. The logical consequence is that the county court or the board of county commissioners will be left without power or authority to estimate the amount of money to be raised for county purposes, or to apportion the same with the state and school taxes according to the valuation of the taxable property in the county, or to levy a tax thereon for the purpose of raising revenue at its term in January. So with the Governor, Secretary of State, and State Treasurer. They cannot act in apportioning the revenues for
It has been suggested, however, that the case of Smith v. Kelly, 24 Or. 464 (33 Pac. 642), and other authorities announcing a like principle, might afford a solution of the problem favorable to the appellants. But it is not to the purpose. In that case there was a repeal of the mortgage tax law, together with the remedy especially provided for the collection of taxes levied on mortgages; and it was held that the repeal, not being of a special tax law, but in the nature of a revision of the general taxing system, did not affect taxes theretofore levied against property of that species, and that, a remedy still remaining under the general provisions for the collection of revenue, the payment of taxes so levied was susceptible of enforcement thereby; therefore that the taxes assessed and levied against mortgages did not fail because of the want of a remedy to enforce their collection. The case at bar is not of that character. Here there will be a valid assessment of property prior to the taking effect of the amendments, but no levy
Affirmed.