61 Minn. 233 | Minn. | 1895
On the proceedings to obtain a tax judgment against the real estate of the Cloquet Lumber Company for the taxes remaining delinquent on the first Monday in January, 1894, said company appeared and answered.
It is urged by respondent that this tax is illegal and void, for the reason that the statute requires the village council to specify the amount of tax to be levied, and not the rate per cent. Laws 1885, c. 145, § 34 (G. S. 1894, § 1251), provides: “The village council shall on or before the 15th day of August in each year, by resolution, to be entered of record, determine the amount of corporation taxes to be levied and assessed on the taxable property in such village for the current year, which shall not exceed in any one (1)
Construing these two sections together, it is evident that it is the imperative duty of the village council to fix the specific amount of the tax to be levied, not the rate; and that it is the duty of the county auditor to calculate and ascertain the rate. This the county auditor must do after the state board of equalization has equalized the assessment, while the village council are required to determine the amount of money necessary to be raised before said board has-
It is further contended on behalf of the state that under the provisions of G-. S. 1894, § 1588, the irregularity in the proceedings of the council is not a defense to such application for a tax judgment. That section provides: “If all the provisions of law in relation to the assessment and levy of taxes shall have been complied with, of which the list so filed with the clerk shall be prima facie evidence, then judgment shall be rendered for such taxes and the penalties and costs. But no omission of any of the things by law provided in relation to such assessments and levy, or of anything required by any officer or officers to be done prior to the filing of the list with the clerk, shall be a defence or objection to the taxes appearing upon any piece or parcel of land, unless it be also made to appear to the court that such omission has resulted to the prejudice of the
But it is our opinion that in the case at bar the taxes were not assessed at all; that there is so wide a departure from the mode prescribed by the statute that it amounts to a failure to assess the tax. To hold otherwise would erase from the statute a provision designed with much care, to prevent the raising of more public revenue than is necessary for legitimate public expenses. This section was not intended to destroy other important safeguards found in the revenue laws. It was intended to prevent the success of technical defenses, and also to prevent the success of meritorious defenses to any greater extent than their merits demand. If the court below could do -what the council failed to do, — determine the proper sum to be raised by taxation in this instance^ — the omission of the council might not constitute a complete defense to the application for judgment; but the court could not do this.
This disposes of the case, and the order of the court below is affirmed.