Horlick v. Town of Mount Pleasant

161 Wis. 366 | Wis. | 1915

Vinje, J.

Tbe question presented by this appeal is whether an action to recover an illegal income tax paid under protest may be maintained without an appeal having been taken from tbe assessment of tbe board of review to tbe state tax commission as provided in sec. 1087m — 19, Stats. Sub. 1 of that section reads:

“Any person dissatisfied with any determination of tbe county board of review may appeal within twenty days to tbe state tax commission, to whom a copy of the record of tbe board shall be certified, together with all evidence or a copy thereof, relating to such assessment.”

Tbe defendant contends that tbe remedy given by this section is exclusive and that a compliance with its provisions ia *368a condition precedent to tbe right to maintain any action or proceeding for tbe recovery of illegal income taxes.

Tbe solution of tbe question raised depends upon tbe construction to be given to several sections of tbe Income Tax Law in addition to tbe section quoted. Sec. 1087m — 18 provides:

“No person subject to assessment by tbe county assessor shall be allowed in any action or proceeding to question any assessment of income, unless objections thereto shall first have been presented to tbe county board of review in good faith and full disclosure made under oath of any and all income of such party liable to assessment.”

In sub. (4), sec. 1087m — 22, it is provided that “All laws not in conflict with tbe provisions of this act, relating to tbe assessment, collection and payment of taxes on personal property, tbe correction of errors in assessment and tax rolls, tbe compromise or cancellation of illegal taxes and tbe refund of moneys paid thereon, shall be applicable to tbe income tax herein provided for.”

Tbe substance of tbe defendant’s argument is that tbe Income Tax Law provides for a complete scheme of taxation, and that such scheme must be followed and exhausted before recourse can be bad to tbe courts; that the remedy given by it is exclusive, and, if not pursued as far as it permits, then a resort to tbe courts is in conflict with its provisions because it provides a different remedy, namely, in this case, an appeal to tbe state tax commission instead of an action in court. It is also urged that it was tbe legislative scheme to vest jurisdiction in tbe first instance in tbe commission created to administer tbe law, to tbe end that a cheap and speedy remedy could be bad and tbe law harmoniously construed by ■a single body — tbe commission — -instead of by tbe different circuit courts of tbe state. If such was tbe legislative intent, then it should control tbe construction to be given tbe sections quoted and tbe remedy given by tbe Income Tax *369Law should be held to be exclusive and to be a condition precedent to tbe right to maintain an action for the recovery of illegal taxes. State ex rel. Superior v. Duluth St. R. Co. 153 Wis. 650, 142 N. W. 184.

While it must be conceded that there is much force in the argument of defendant, still we think the legislative language is so certain and explicit upon the subject that no serious doubt can be entertained as to its intent. In sec. 1087m — 18 the condition precedent to the right to maintain an action or proceeding to question any assessment of income is specifically stated. Such condition is that the person questioning the assessment must have presented his objections to the board of review in good faith and made a full-disclosure under oath of all his income. The legislature having expressly spoken upon the subject of conditions precedent to the right to maintain an action, no other conditions than those named should be implied unless the language or the situation presented is such as to unmistakably call for implied conditions. Expressio unius est exclusio alterius. Neither the situation presented nor the language of the statute requires resort to implied conditions precedent. The remedy.by action is a well recognized one in this state and is expressly granted by sec. 1164, Stats. 1913. It should not be taken away from the taxpayer except by a clear legislative mandate. Milwaukee v. Wakefield, 134 Wis. 462, 113 N. W. 34, 115 N. W. 137.

The appeal to the state tax commission provided for in sec. 1087m — 19 is permissive merely. The language of the section contains no intimation that unless it is taken there can be no redress in the courts. In the very preceding section the legislature has spoken on the subject of conditions precedent to the right to maintain an action. If the permissive appeal to the tax commission had been thought to be one, it is strange that no direction to that effect was made when the subject was fresh in the minds of the lawmakers. *370Of course the language granting the right of appeal could not.' be mandatory. If it were it would compel an aggrieved taxpayer to take an appeal whether or not he wanted to further-insist upon the objections. This the legislature naturally did not wish to do, so the language used had to be permissive ■ in form and the word “may” suitably expressed the idea. The word “must” was clearly an improper word to use. So-no particular force can be given to the mere permissive form-of the language used in providing for the appeal. But the' fact that no suggestion was made in the language granting it that the appeal was a condition precedent to the right to-maintain an action in court is highly significant when it is. borne in mind that the section giving the right to appeal follows the one providing for a condition precedent. Such, omission must be held to indicate a legislative intent that an action may be maintained without taking an appeal.

By the Court. — Order affirmed.