The plaintiffs, who are citizens and taxpayers of the city and school district of Unionville, Putnam county, Missouri, on August 25, 1914, filed in the circuit court of Putnam county, their first amended petition against said school district, the members of the board of directors of said district, and J. T. Morgan, clerk of the county court of said county, in which they charge that at the annual election held in said school district on April 7, 1914, there was submitted to the qualified voters thereof a proposition to incur an indebtedness for thirty thousand dollars for the purpose of erecting a new school building. At said election there were cast “For the Loan” 304 ballots, and “‘Against the Loan” 99 ballots, thus giving more than two-thirds of the total vote cast for the incurring of the indebtedness.
It is alleged that defendants composing said board advertised for proposals for the purchase of said bonds, to be -issued pursuant to said election, and have contracted for ,the sale of said bonds with Francis Brothers & Company of St. Louis, Missouri; that Putnam county is organized and governed under what is known as the Township Organization Law of this State. . - . .
It is averred that there is already an outstanding indebtedness of said district of $5000, making a total indebtedness for said district, if said bonds for $30,000 áre issued, of $35,000, which is in excess of the indebtedness said school district may lawfully incur.
It is further alleged that said board of directors are preparing to. issue said bonds, to negotiate same, and to levy a tax upon the taxable property situate in said district for the purpose of creating a sinking fund for the payment of said bonds and to pay the interest on said bonds; that said county clerk is about to extend said taxes on the tax books of Putnam county, against the property of plaintiffs and others in said district, and that the . issuing of said bonds would cause a multiplicity of suits.
The above petition, was demurred to by defendants, for the alleged reason that it failed to state a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained; plaintiffs refused to plead further, stood upon said petition, and a final judgment was entered in due form in favor of said defendants. The cause was duly appealed to this court, and wé are called upon to determine whether said petition state's a cause of action.
In State ex rel. Kidder School District v. Kinney, 48 Mo. l. c. 375, this court, in construing the law as it stood in 1868, speaking upon this question, through Judge Bliss, said: “No more comprehensive language could be used than is contained in both acts. The one provides for entering in the merchants ’ tax book the amount of each kind of tax levied upon the goods, and the other provides that boards may levy taxes upon all property within the district, to be collected as state and county taxes. No exception is made, or exemption provided for, in favor of merchandise, either in the'acts under consideration or in the general revenue law; nor can any be implied from the peculiar mode of ascertaining the taxable value of such merchandise.”
So that, as the law existed in 1868, and of course before the present constitution was adopted, meU chants’ and manufacturers’ licenses were subject to taxation, with other property located in the school district. The principle of the foregoing case was upheld in City of Cape Girardeau v. Riley, 72 Mo. l. c. 223, under the law as it stood prior to 1875.
In State ex rel. v. Tracy,
In State ex rel. Allen v. K. C. St. J. & C. B. Ry. Co.,
In view of the subsequent change in the statutes upon this subject, we will set out section 6896, Revised Statutes 1889, which reads as follows:
“Merchants shall pay an ad valorem tax equal to that which is levied upon real estate, on the highest amount of all goods, wares and merchandise which they may have in their possession or under their control, whether owned by them or consigned to them for sale, at any time between the first Monday of March and the first Monday in June in each year . . .”
As section 6899, Revised Statutes 1889, was repealed (Laws 1895, p. 223, and following), we simply quote what Judge Burgess said in reference to same, at page 22 of above volume: ‘‘ The merchant is required to file a sworn statement with the county clerk, on the first Monday in June in each year, of the greatest amount of goods on hand at any time between the first Monday in March and the first Monday in June next preceding; and upon this statement the fax is directly levied. [R. S. 1889, secs. 6896, 6899, 6900.] The mer
Judge Burgess, on page 23 of above volume, disposed of the question under consideration, as follows: “The tax of merchants and dramshop keepers, although they are required to pay an ad valorem tax on their stock in trade, is in the nature of a license tax, and the property upon which the taxes are thus paid does not go into and form a part of the general wealth of tbe county witbin the meaning of the revenue laws upon which taxes are levied for revenue purposes. No such property is listed by the assessor. The county court is required to fix the rate of taxation and make the levy at the May term (R. S. 1889, sec. 7663), while merchants’ statements are not to be filed until the first Monday in June of each year. The tax on merchants constitutes a separate and distinct class of itself.”
He held that the merchants’ licenses should not be considered in fixing the rate of taxation, etc. It does not appear from the above opinion that either of the other Missouri cases referred to above were considered or distinguished. As the law, however, has been materially changed since the above case was decided by Judge Burgess, we deem it unnecessary to undertake to review the conclusions reached in that case, except in a general way.
In 1896, this court, in City of Aurora v. McUannon,
The case of Thornburg v. School District No. 3,
It will be observed from the concluding portion ®f said opinion, that Brace, P. J., and Marshall, J., dissented from paragraph three which included the above quotation. Judge Rorinson was absent, and hence the language above quoted simply represented the individual opinion of Valliant, J., and in which no other member of the court concurred. This opinion, like the others, was construing the law as it existed prior to 1895. The Legislature of this State, by an act approved March 2, 1895, Laws 1895, pp. 223, 224, repealed section 6899 of chapter 111, Revised Statutes-1889, heretofore referred to, and re-enacted a new section with the same number. As this act was soon-, after amended, we shall not pause to discuss the same..
The above acts of 1895 and 1897 were carried into the Revision of 1899', and are there known as section '8546. Said section 8546, without change, was carried into the Revision of 1909, and is there known as section 11623, and the significant language used in the Act of 1897, heretofore quoted, still appears as the law of this State. It is evident that this amendment was made in 1897 to obviate the inconsistencies which appeared from the adverse rulings of the court in respect to this subject. The Legislature evidently intended to settle the controversy, by placing merchants’ and manufacturers’ licenses on the same footing with other property in the school district, when it became necessary to ascertain the value of all taxable property in said district. We can see no good reason for having this class of property excluded, when it represents value, any more than any other property located within the jurisdiction of the district.
Since the amendment of 1897, supra, the Court in Banc, in the case of State ex rel. Carleton Dry Goods Company v. Louis Alt, License Collector,
The language used by Judge Gantt in the above ■case, without any reference to the amendment of 1897, •sustains the action of the trial court in holding that merchants ’ and manufacturers ’ licenses should be taken into account in determining the valuation of property in the school district for the purposes of taxation.
In the recent ease of Bauch v. Cabool,
In the case of Southworth v. Glasgow,
We are clearly of the opinion that the merchants’ and manufacturers’ licenses set out in the petition were properly considered by the trial court in determining the value of the property in said school district liable for taxation. The action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to appellants’ petition was correct, and is hereby sustained.
The judgment of the court below is accordingly affirmed.
PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion of Bailey, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
