89 Tenn. 707 | Tenn. | 1891
These are consolidated injunction and mandamus bills.
The "Warner Iron Company and the .¿Etna Iron Company were Tennessee corporations engaged in the manufacture of iron, charcoal, and alcohol in Hickman County. June 29, 1889, J. H. Pace, Trustee of that county back assessed the two companies for the years 1886, 1887, and 1888, under Section 24, Chapter 2, of Acts of 1887. Being dissatisfied with the assessments, both companies appealed to the Chairman of the County Court on the sixth day of July following, and on the same
After the dismissals by the Chairman and the appeals' to the Circuit Court, each of the companies filed a bill in the Chancery Court against the Trustee, Chairman, and others denying its liability for the taxes assessed against it, disputing the valuation of its property, alleging the want of proper notice of the Trustee’s intention to make the assessments, and that the Chairman had erroneously dismissed its appeal, and praying for injunction to restrain collection of the taxes assessed, and for mandamus to compel the Chairman to revise and correct the assessments. Demurrers being "overruled, the bills were answered and proof taken. On final hearing the two causes were consolidated, and the relief sought was granted. Defendants appealed.
Many questions were, raised in the pleadings and have been debated at the bar which are not material in the view we have taken, and, therefore, need not be further alluded to in this opinion.
Ve first consider the contention of defendants that there was no statute in 1889 authorizing an appeal to the Chairmaú of the County Court; that he, therefore, had no jurisdiction, at any time,
The Act of 1879, Chapter 79, constitutes all tax-collectors Assessors, and confers upon them the power and devolves upon them the duty of assessing all taxable property, “ which, by mistake of law or fact, has not been assessed.” After conferring this power and imposing this duty, the first section of the act further provides that if the owner admits the liability of his property to taxation, but disputes the amount of the assessment, he may have a re-valuation at any time within one month, before the Chairman of the County Court, whose decision “shall be final.” The second section provides that, where the owner denies that his property is taxable, but makes no complaint of the valuation, the “collector shall submit the facts to the Comptroller as to the State tax, to the Judge or Chairman of the County Court as to the county tax, and to the Mayor of the city or toAvn as to the municipal corporation taxes; and if by these several officers, or any one of them, he is directed to proceed to the collection of the taxes, he shall immediately and without delay obtain from any Justice of the Peace of his county a warrant, or warrants, for said taxes, and which shall be served on the owner of said property, and set for trial before some Justice of the Peace in said county, and warrants may be for the State, county, and municipal corporation taxes jointly or separately; and all
The assessments complained of in the present cases come within the third section, because both the right to assess at, all ' and the valuation of the property are disputed; and by it the right of appeal to the Judge or Chairman of the County Court, for a re-assessment, is expressly given, though the word appeal is not used.
This Act, however, confers power to assess for the current year only, and does not authorize the tax-collector to assess and collect taxes for years anterior to that for which he has been elected and qualified. Otis v. Boyd, 8 Lea, 679; 11 Lea, 51; 12 Lea, 527; 14 Lea, 58, 59; 16 Lea, 42.
To meet this infirmity, the first section was amended by the Act of 1883, Chapter 181, so as
These amendatory Acts do not take away the right of appeal given by -the Act of 1879; nor does the subsequent Act of 1887, Chapter 2, have that effect. Section 84 of the last named Act repeals certain specified Acts, and all other Acts and parts of Acts in conflict with the provisions of that Act; hut the Act of 1879, Chapter 79, is not among the Acts specifically named, nor are its provisions for appeal to and revision by the Chairman or Judge of the County Court superseded by or in conflict with any part of the Act of 1887, Chapter 2. The twenty-fourth section of the latter Act, which defines the duty and prescribes the mode of making hack assessments, and which it is insisted repeals the Act of 1879, does not embrace or relate to the question of appeal for reassessment in any way whatever; hence, it cannot he held to operate as a repeal by implication. The language of that section is as folloAvs: “That should it at any time after the assessments have been made, come to the knowledge of the Chairman or Judge of the County Court, the Clerk of the County Court, the County Trustee, Sheriff', or other officer or person of any County in this State, that any person, company, firm, or corporation in
The enactment of this section was no more a repeal of the right of appeal and revision, given by the Act of 1879, Chapter 79, than was that of Section 25 of the'Act of 1881, Chapter 171; or of Section 25 of the Act of 1883, Chapter 105; or of Section 25 of the Act of 1885, Chapter 1; all of which sections of the last three Acts, like that
That said Acts of 1881 and 1883 were not by the Legislature understood as repealing the Act of 1879, is evident from the fact that it was recognized as still in force by the Act of 1883, Chapter 181, which amended and enlarged its scope. Similar evidence of the continuing vitality of the Act of 1879 is found, in the legislation of 1885,. whereby it was again amended. Acts 1885, Chapter 23.
It was held by this Court, in 1886, that the Act of 1879, as amended by said Acts of 1883 and 1885, was then in full force, and that it authorized an appeal to the Chairman of the County Court from back assessments made thereunder. Shelby County v. Mississippi & Tennessee Railroad Company, 16 Lea, 401.
Then, by adjudication and by legislative recognition, it is shown that the Act of 1879, as amended, was in force, and the right of appeal and revision thereunder in existence up to the passage of the Act of 1887, Chapter 2; and by a consideration of the latter Act, in its language, scope, and purpose, the conclusion that it does not repeal such right, either expressly or by implication, becomes irresistible.
Hence, we hold that the right to have a reassessment by the Chairman of the County Court, as provided by the Act of 1879, did exist in 1889,
Bat whether . that right existed as to all these assessments is a more difficult question. The Act of 1879 related alone to omitted property, and did not authorize the re-assessment of property which had been inadequately 'assessed. Franklin County v. Railroad, 12 Lea, 530, 531; 14 Lea, 58; 16 Lea, 691.
In the cases before us the complainants were back-assessed, under the Act of 1887, Chapter 2, Section 24, on omitted property, for all the years, 1886, 1887, and 1888; and on inadequately assessed property for the year 1887 alone.
So that the right of appeal and revision conferred by the Act of 1879 would, by the terms of the Act, apply only to a part of these assessments— those for omitted property, and not those for inadequately assessed property. In none of the Acts do we find any provision for a re-valuation or reassessment by the Chairman of the County Court of property which has been, or shall be, back-assessed on account of an assessment thereof on an inadequate valuation in the first instance. No such provision was made in the He venue Act of 1881, Chapter 171; or of 1883, Chapter 105; or of 1885, Chapter 1; or of 1887, Chapter 2. The twenty-fifth sections of the first three of these Acts, and the twenty-fourth section of the last one, make ample provision for the back assessment of inadequately assessed as well as omitted property, but all
Nor do the Acts of 1883, Chapter 181, and of 1885, Chapter 23, amendatory of the Act of 1879, provide for an appeal and revision in case of back assessment of inadequately assessed property; they, like the Act they amend, relate by their terms to taxation of omitted property only.
Nevertheless, in view of the general course of legislation on the subject of taxation, and the increased scope of back assessments by the general Revenue Acts since the passage of the Act of 1879, we think the right of appeal and revision provided by that Act may well be extended to all such back assessments as are here involved. The Legislature has manifested a purpose, for a series of years, to give the tax-payer who feels himself aggrieved, a fair opportunity to have all mistakes in the assessment of his property corrected, and to this end two systems of correction have been established. As to errors in the general assessment he is given the right of a hearing before the Board of Equalization,” which sits -two weeks (Acts 1881, Chapter 171, Sections 36, 37; 1883, Chapter 105, Sections 36, 37; 1885, Chapter 1, Sections 36, 37; 1887, Chapter 2, Sections 41, 42); and as to errors in back assessments, which are generally made after that board ceases to exist, a remedy is provided by the Act of 1879, Chapter 79. At the next session of the Legislature after the passage of this Act, which related alone to
There being already a provision for appeal to the Chairman of the County Court for the correction of mistakes in the back assessment of omitted property, it was not indispensable, in the extension of its benefits to those whose property might be re-assessed because inadequately assessed in the first instance, that there should be a formal re-enactment of that provision. When the power of back assessing was enlarged by subsequent Acts,, the remedy afforded by the Act of 1879 for the revision of back assessments was correspondingly enlarged by necessary intendment. It can hardly be supposed that the Legislature ever intended to-give the right of appeal 'from a back assessment to a tax-payer whose property had not been assessed at all in the first instance, and to deny the same-right to the tax-payer whose property had been assessed at an inadequate amount in the general assessment.
Therefore, we hold that the complainants had the right of appeal to the Chairman of the County-Court from all the assessments complained of in these bills, whether made on property omitted from.
The right of appeal and revision, either by the Boai'd of Equalization or the Judge or Chairman of the County Court, is expressly denied in some cases; as, for instance, where a fiduciary neglects or refuses to furnish a schedule of property held by him in trust, so that an assessment may be made, it is provided that the Chairman of the County Court shall assess such property from the best information obtainable, and that his assessment, when made, shall be conclusive. Acts 1885, Chapter 1, Sections 34, 35; 1887, Chapter 2, Sections 34, 35.
But this is a different provision from that under which the property in these cases was back assessed; and the fact that the right of revision is expressly excluded in the one instance and not mentioned in the other justifies the inference that it was not intended to be cut off or denied in the latter.
The next question we consider is as to the time within which the appeals should have been prosecuted and re-assessments made. The words of the statute are as follows: “ That in case the owner of the property disputes both the 'assessment as to amount and the right to tax his property, then lie shall be allowed ten days to have a reassessment before the Judge' or Chairman of the County Court, and at the end of ten days the tax-collector shall proceed as under the second section.” Act 1879, Chapter 79, Section 3. *
The action . of the Chairman in dismissing the appeals of these complainants and refusing a revaluation 'and re-assessment, when they had failed, for thirty-one days after the back assessments were made, to point out the grounds of their complaint and furnish proof to sustain them, was correct, lie ■ had no power to make any changes or corrections after ten days from the date of the back assessments. Of this result complainants have no just ground to complain. They knew, or should have known, the law; yet they did not even appeal from the action of .the Trustee and present the papers tcf the Chairman for seven days; and
The Chairman had no power to revise these assessments after the expiration of ten days from the time they were made; when that period of time elapsed his jurisdiction ceased, and he could not lawfully have done what the complainants here seek to compel him to do. Therefore, it is too manifest for debate that mandamus will not lie. "When the writ was applied for, no duty to make the desired re-assessments rested upon the Chairman, and he was utterly without power to take any lawful action with respect thereto. It would be unreasonable for ' the Chancellor to undertake by mandamus to compel him to do a thing which it was not at the time his duty to do, and which, when done, could have no legal efficacy.' Jurisdiction which has terminated by lapse of time, or otherwise, can no more be revived by mandamus than it can be conferred by that means in the first instance.
To justify the issuance of this writ to compel the performance of a particular act, it must be made to appear not only that performance has been demanded and refused, but also, and primarily,
With respect to the merits of the assessments complained of we make no decision, but merely suggest that any errors ' which may have been committed by the Trustee were probably the unavoidable result of manifest evasions on the part of complainants, for which he might well have added the statutory penalty of fifty per cent., but generously omitted to do so.
Reverse the decree, dissolve the injunctions, and dismiss the bills at the cost of complainants.