Mercantile Trust Co. v. Schramm

269 Mo. 489 | Mo. | 1916

REVELLE, J.

Respondents are members of the St. Louis Board of Equalization and as such have the same general power of reviewing local assessments in the city of St. Louis as have county boards of equalization in their respective counties.

It appears from the record that the assessor of the city of St. Louis, as required by section 11357, submitted to the State Board of Equalization an abstract of the taxable property in the city of St. Louis and its valuation, including, among other things, “corporate company’s bank stock,” at a total valuation of that *493class of property in the city of St. Louis of $65,738,690. The state board, having received such abstracts and reports, proceeded to equalize the assessments of hanks throughout the State and fixed such valuation at fifty per cent, of the aggregate returned by the various assessors, including that of the city of St. Louis. This assessment was certified by the State Auditor to the city assessor of St. Louis and the assessors of the counties, being dated April '!, 1916,. and shows that the aggregate valuation of the stock in banks in the city of St. Louis was placed at $32,688,450, or fifty per cent, of the aggregate returned by the city assessor. This was the uniform per cent, of the returned aggregates made by the various assessors of the State. Thereafter respondents, as members of the city board of equalization, placed the aggregate assessment against such banks at $46,017,083, which was exactly seventy per cent, of the original valuation certified to the state board by the city assessor, or twenty per cent, more than the valuation fixed by the state board.

Several cases involving the question here presented are pending, >•,but by stipulation they are submitted on one record, all involving the same question. There is no dispute as to the controlling facts.

Our'’law provides a complete plan and scheme for the assessment and collection of taxes, an adequate means by which the burden, primarily borne by the State and its sub-divisions, is transferred to the citizen. Tim prime and dominant idea of the scheme is furnished by the Constitution' and is that all property of the same class and value shall hear the same burden. "While it is a matter of common experience that absolute equality in the imposition of taxes is not attainable, we nevertheless findlan aim and intention on the part of our lawmakers to approximate to the idea of absolute equality as closely as the nature of the subject and the necessities of practical administration will permit. It is the uniformity of burden that the principle of uniformity in taxation is intended to accomplish, and whatever tends to foil this incurs the law’s wrath. Discrimination, by *494whatever means induced, whether by different rates on the same values or the same rates on different values, seems within the inhibition. The State being subdivided, practical administration and the necessities of the case require that different rates be charged in different subdivisions in order to meet different local needs and conditions, and constitutional and statutory provisions for such different local rates are made. The principle of uniformity, however, requires that all property of the same class within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax be taxed at the same rate. A State tax must be apportioned uniformly throughout the State; a county tax throughout the county; and a municipal tax throughout the municipality. While provisions are made for different rates in different sub-divisioñs and for local purposes, no provisions are- to be found anywhere which authorize different standards or bases of valuation. It is evidently intended that the difference in the various local conditions shall be cared for by a difference -in the rate and not otherwise.

The law clearly and expressly requires that for the purpose of valuation all property in the State, regardless of where situate, shall be dealt with in the same manner. For this purpose of valuation, the law decrees uniformity and one standard throughout the State, and this without any regard whatever to local needs or differences in local conditions, for it ordains that all property, wherever situate, shall be assessed at its true value. In order to effectuate this command a State Board of Equalization has been provided, and its arm of authority extended to all parts of the State. It is a creature of the Constitution and by that instrument enjoined to adjust and equalize the value of property among the several counties of the State, and perform such other duties as may be prescribed by law. The law has prescribed, among other things, that this board.shall equalize the valuation of each class of property among the respective counties in the following manner :

“First — It shall add to the valuation of each class *495of property, real or personal, of each county which it believes to he valued below its real value in money such per centum as will increase the same in each case to its true value.
“Second — It shall deduct from the valuation of each class of the property, real or personal, of each county which it believes to he valued above its real value in money such per centum as will reduce the same in each case to its true value.” [R. S. 1909, sec. 11412.]

It is these provisions, in the light of those in pari materia, that we are called upon to construe. It is not questioned that, under the provisions of this section not quoted, the State Board of Equalization can equalize according to classes as it did in the instant matter. This power was expressly confirmed by the amendment of 1899, prior to which time its power was limited to equalizing among the different counties and- not between classes. [State ex rel. v. Vaile, 122 Mo. 33.] Respondents concede that under this section the state board has the exclusive power to determine the minimum taxable value, and that no county or city hoard can reduce such minimum, hut urge that such local hoards can increase the same and make the aggregate value of any class greater, if they deem proper. In this they plant themselves on what is contained in sections 11403 and .11414, Revised Statutes 1909. Section *11403, after providing that county hoards shall equalize the valuation of all' taxable property within their respective counties so that the same may he entered on the tax books at its true value, contains the following:

“Provided that such hoard shall not reduce the valuation of the real or personal property of the county below the value thereof as fixed by said State Board of Equalization. ’ ’

Section 11414 provides:

“And it shall be the duty of the State Auditor to require of clerks of the several county courts of this State to keep up the aggregate valuation of; real and personal property in their respective counties for those years in which no State Board of Equalization is held *496to the aggregate amount fixed by the last State Board of Equalization.”

Recognizing that the object to be accomplished by a statute is of prime consideration in its construction, respondents say that the chief purpose of the creation and maintenance of the State Board of Equalization was and is to enable the State to make sure of the collection of at least as much from each county as it deems just. This argument, when analyzed, minhnizes .the citizen and maximizes the government, and this is antagonistic to our governmental system in which the people are the sovereigns and the government but their servant. The State is more concerned with the welfare and equality of its citizens and in the promotion thereof than with the mere incidents to their accomplishment, such as is public money.

It must be borne in mind that state, county and municipal taxes are all based upon the same assessment and upon one and the same valuation. This is one reason for demanding equality and uniformity throughout the State in the matter of valuation. If property of the same class is assessed in one county at fifty per cent, of fits value, and in another at seventy per cent, thereof, the State collects for its own use, as distinguished from what is collected for local purposes, a greater amount from a citizen in one of its parts than fijom another in a different part, although their property is of the same class and value and is receiving the same public benefits and protection. This produces favoritism and destroys the cherished principle of equality. Instead of' the state board being primarily created for the purpose of exacting the State’s pound of flesh, we are inclined toward the more beneficent view that it was to secure and guarantee uniformity and equality in the burdens which the maintenance of a state render necessary and which society imposes.

The construction contended for by respondents would break down this principle and destroy its benign purpose. It would place the State in the unenviable position of having to exact and receive from certain of its people *497more than its authorized representatives had found and solemnly declared to be just, right and necessary — this because a state tax on the valuation in excess of that found by the state board to be true and just would be collected, and to this extent the tax would be not only unjust and unequal, but also, under the law, would be deemed unnecessary for public purposes.

The power of taxation has been jealously hedged about and limited to the public needs; it rests upon necessity and is accordingly restricted. In the absence of clear and express provisions we would not hold that any scheme of taxation was intended or permitted to collect more than was necessary for the public good. The rate fixed by the people and the valuation determined by the state board on the property designated in section 11357 decide the question of what is necessary.

This much is practically admitted by respondents through their concession that the state board alone can fix the minimum taxable value. Section 11414, supra, is of no aid to respondents since the mere reading thereof discloses that it is applicable only to cases and times when the state board failed to act; nor do we think that the proviso contained in section 11403, supra, can be consistently construed so as: to authorize the local board to change and increase the valuation fixed by the state board on banking corporations. This proviso was enacted at the same time that the original statute authorizing the state board to equalize property among the several counties was passed. At that time, as heretofore stated, the state board dealt only with one county’s assessment as compared with another county’s, and not with classes as it has since 1899. The county boards under the original and present acts are authorized to equalize the value of each piece of property in their respective counties with other property so located.

"When the proviso in question is considered in the light of all the laws relating to the subject and the purpose which they were intended to accomplish, we are of the opinion that it was but an admonition to the local boards that in equalizing one piece of property with *498another they should so proceed that the county’s aggregate would not fall below the value fixed by the State Board of Equalization, and that it was not intended to apply to the relations between the State and local boards.

As clearly indicating, that the functions of the local board are purely ministerial after the state board has acted, we find section 11408, which provides that when the report of the state board is not received at or during the session of the county board, the county clerk shall adjust the tax books according to such report when the same is received.' It could not be contended that the county clerk in such a case would have any authority to change the valuation fixed by the state board, and it is hardly reasonable to assume that the Legislature intended that the conclusiveness of the state board’s action should depend upon whether its report was received at a particular time.

Section 11412 supra expressly authorizes the state board to not only increase the assessments made by the local authorities, but also empowers it in similar language to reduce the same to its true value. If its action in this respect were not held to be conclusive, clashes and conflicts would be inevitable and confusion and chaos would come out of what was intended for order.

Cases from other jurisdictions are cited, but they are of little value here, other than as tending to show that when a constitution provides for uniformity in taxation it is the general public policy, where the property located in different sections is assessed by different boards, to provide a superior board for equalization between them "and. that the decision of such board is made final. In fact, it has been said that under such circumstances the constitutional requirements of uniformity impose on the State the duty of adequately providing for such equalization. [Railroad and Telephone Co. v. Board of Equalizers, 85 Fed. 302.] We have no doubt that had the Legislature in terms undertaken to provide that the property of banking corpor*499ations in the city of St. Louis should he assessed at a value different from the property of hanking corporations in other parts of the State, its action could not he sustained. We are equally well satisfied that had the State Board of Equalization undertaken to assess the property of hanking corporations in the city of St. Louis at a value different from that placed* on the hanking corporations in other parts of the State, its action would likewise he invalid. That which cannot be done directly cannot he done through indirection, and if a method is provided which results in unjust discrimination, the result cannot he upheld. In Railroad & Telephone Co. v. Board of Equalizers, supra, it is said: “This is equally so whether such a result is due to erroneous action by the hoard or to defect in the legislation, in not requiring equalization, and furnishing the means whereby this might be made real and effective.” In that ease the court further said: “It may be as well to say in this connection that it is now established that the constitutional requirement of uniformity in taxation applies to the mode of assessment, as well as to the rate of levy, and the Constitution may be violated in a lack of just proportion in the value at which property is assessed for taxation quite as much as in the rate or percentage at which the tax is actually laid on the assessed value.”

These observations are indulged in, not for the purpose of declaring any of the sections heretofore cited unconstitutional, but as throwing light upon the construction which should be given them. It is our opinion that the Legislature has attempted to provide a method calculated to secure constitutional uniformity and that our decisions should be toward upholding that method and end.

We are therefore of the opinion- that the respondents have no authority to increase or change the value and amount certified to them by the state board and that their record should be quashed. It is so ordered.

All • concur, except Bond, J., who dissents, and Faris, J., not sitting.