56 P. 715 | Okla. | 1899
Injunction by Samuel Clay, for himself and fifty-five others, again the treasurer, sheriff, and board of county commissioners of Pottawatomie county, enjoining the collection of taxes. From a judgment for the plaintiffs, defendants bring error. Reversed.
Opinion of the court by On June 13, 1896, the defendant in error Samuel Clay filed a petition in the district court of Pottawatomie county, for himself and fifty-five others named in said petition, praying an injunction against the plaintiffs in error, restraining them from collecting that portion of the taxes for the year 1895 assessed and levied against each of said parties upon the basis of the increase of assessments arising from the action of the board of territorial equalization in raising the returned values of property in Pottawatomie county 35 per cent. over the valuation thereof returned by the county clerk of said county to said board of equalization. The defendants *48 filed a demurrer to the petition of the plaintiff on the ground that said "petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action." The demurrer being by the court overruled, and the defendant declining to plead further, judgment was rendered as prayed for in the petition; and the case is brought here by petition in error.
The only question presented is that arising upon the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the petition in the cause. The action was based upon the alleged illegality of the proceedings of the territorial board of equalization for the year 1895 in raising the aggregate of valuations of property returned from the several counties over the valuations as shown by the returns of the various county clerks. This court has repeatedly held, (and it is no longer an open question,) that the board of equalization had authority of law for the action complained of, and that the increase of valuations ordered by them in the various counties for the year 1895 was legal, and that the collection of taxes based thereon would not be enjoined on the ground that such increase of valuations was without authority of law. (Wallace v. Bullen,
In Wallace v. Bullen,
In Weber v. Dillon, supra, the rule was stated as follows: "The territorial board of equalization had power, in equalizing the returns of the several counties of the Territory, to adopt the returns of any county which, in its judgment, the most nearly represents the actual cash value of all of the property therein, and equalize all the other counties of the Territory, by either raising or lowering them to conform to the returns of the county adopted as a standard; but such board has no power to raise the returns of any county above the actual value of all the property therein contained; and if said board, in raising the total returns of any county, raised the assessed valuation of the property of any person or persons above its actual value, injunction will lie to restrain the collection *50 of all taxes based on the valuation in excess of the true value thereof."
In Bardrick v. Dillon,
The demurrer in this case states only the special ground, that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and it was ruled in Weber v. Dillon, supra, and in Bardrick v. Dillon, supra, that misjoinder of parties, under our Code is not a ground of demurrer, but must be raised in some other manner. Nor *51 is the want of authority in the party named as plaintiff to sue in behalf of others, and make them parties to the record, under our Code, a ground of demurrer. Therefore, in determining this case, we must determine it upon the single question whether, as between the plaintiff Clay and the defendants, the petition states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The allegations as to the illegality of the proceedings of the board of equalization, in so far as they relate to the general powers of the board, do not state a cause of action; and if his petition, as the petitions in Bardrick v. Dillon and Weber v.Dillon had alleged that his property had been assessed or valued by the assessor and local boards of equalizations at its true cash value, and by the action of the territorial board of equalization such true cash value had been increased 35 per cent., or any other amount, a cause of action would have been stated. The only allegation in plaintiff's petition in relation to the value of his property is that he returned his personal property to the assessor, with a valuation of $5,000; that such valuation was not changed by the assessor, by the township board of equalization, or by the county board of equalization; that the valuation placed on said property by him when the same was rendered to said assessor was a reasonable and fair valuation. This is not an allegation that it was returned at its true cash value, and therefore plaintiff has not brought himself within the rule of the cases above cited, so as to make his petition good against a demurrer. The allegations of the petition that others of the parties on whose behalf he sought to maintain the action had returned money for taxation, and that the value thereof was by the action of the board of equalization increased 35 per cent., cannot aid his cause of action. Had *52 the parties themselves individually brought action to relieve from an excessive valuation of money returned, they could recover, but he cannot maintain their action for them. There being no other allegations in the petition which state any sufficient cause of action, we must hold that the court below erred in overruling the demurrer to this petition.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the district court to set aside the order overruling the demurrer, and to sustain the same, and to permit such other proceedings in this cause as may be in accordance with the views herein expressed.
McAtee, J., not sitting; all the other Justices concurring.