50 Iowa 61 | Iowa | 1878
In this way the provision of the notice is substantially,, although not literally, complied with. But the defendants contend that even under this view the company never became-entitled to demand the collection of the Knoxville tax. They say that it is not sufficient that double the amount of the Knoxville tax has been expended in Knoxville township; they say that the tax will not be collectible until something shall he expended by the company in each of the other townships. Pleasant Grove township has not yet been reached. Indiana, township has been left out of the line of the road, and has been passed. The fact, however, that Indiana township has been left out and passed is of no greater significance, in the determination of the question before us, than the fact that. Pleasant Grove township has not been reached.- It is either necessary that there should be an expenditure in each one of-
The provision in the notice under which the tax was voted, that it should be expended in the three townships, must, we think, mean either that there should be some expenditure in each, or that the expenditure should - be within the territory of the three townships regarded as a unit. It is not to be denied, we think, that, looking as a mere grammarian at the words used in the notice, the former would be the more natural construction; but there are oilier considerations in favor of the latter, and in our opinion they are of controlling importance. According to the defendants’ theory, if the company had expended one cent in Indiana township, and one cent in Pleasant .Grove township, it would have satisfied the terms of the notice, and the objection would have been obviated upon which they rely.
The objection, then, is purely technical, and of the two constructions o'f which the language is susceptible we are asked to 'adopt the one which shall involve a holding that there was a design to provide for something of no appreciable importance. At this point we are met by an argument on the part of the defendants to the effect that while it is true that it would have been of no appreciable importance to the tax payers of Knoxville township, so far as the expenditure itself is concerned, if an infinitesimal amount had been expended in each of the other townships, instead of the whole being expended in Knoxville township, yet if some amount
If the trustees of Knoxville township had desired to provide that the road should run through Indiana and Pleasant Grove townships they should have inserted the provision among the words used expressly to specify the line of the road. This is especially so, as the statute requires the line of the road to be expressly specified. We are not allowed to add to the specification expressly so made in obedience to the statute by erecting some other provision into a specification which can have that effect only by indirection. As, then, a provision for some expenditure in each township would be useless for the direct purpose of the expenditure, and not proper for the indirect purpose of controlling the line, the words used in the notice must be held not to be a provision for some expenditure in each township, but for expenditure in the territory embraced in the townships regarded as a unit. The road was to run by the way of the city of Knoxville, in Knoxville township. Indiana township, it appears, lies on one side and Pleasant Grove on the other. The tax payers of Knoxville township must be understood as designing to limit the expenditure of their tax to the three townships, not for the purpose of fixing the line of the road, for it was to run by Knoxville, as
If the tax payers had wished to confine the building of the road to the line as surveyed,. they should have expressly so provided. It was known to them that railroads are not always built on the line first surveyed. Improvements are sometimes made on the original survey. Changes are made which are called for by engineering considerations, which at first were overlooked or not properly estimated. Within the limits of the line as specified, we think the company had a right to assume that it was designed to give it the privilege of deviating from the original survey where the interests of the company seemed to require it. We think, then, that the collection of the Knoxville tax cannot be defeated by the fact that the road has not and will not be built through Indiana township as originally surveyed. We may, then, treat the tax the same as if it had been voted to be expended in Knoxville township, where the whole expenditure has, in fact, been made. The tax in Liberty township was voted to be expended there, and the expenditure has been made there. Whatever other objections are urged apply equally well to the tax in each township.
The company entered into no special agreement in writing, the performance of which was a condition precedent to its right to receive the tax. The agreement relied upon is the provision in the published notice under which the tax was voted that it should be expended in the three townships. The ■defendants say that if the company claims the tax it became a party to this provision, and must be regarded as having agreed to expend the tax in accordance with it. It did not, as we have seen, make an expenditure in each one of the three townships, and it may be conceded that it did not make such expenditure anywhere within the three townships as to entitle it to receive the tax within four years from the date of the levy. But the company’s failure was simply a failure to build the road. It was not a failure to perform a special agreement, for there was no special agreement. The designation in the notice of a place where the tax should be expended did not make a special agreement. Such designation is made properly every time a tax is voted, because the statute provides that it shall be. This, then, is an ordinary case. The tax was not collectible sooner simply because the company did not sooner do the requisite amount of work at the place where it was to be done to entitle it to the tax. The company may have a good excuse for not completing its road or doing ■a certain amount of work at a certain place within four years, and not have a good excuse for neglecting to perform its special agreements after the road is completed, or the requisite amount expended to entitle it to a given tax. We are of the opinion, then, that the action of the board of supervisors in abating the tax was without authority.
Another position taken by the defendants is that as there has been a judgment of forfeiture in regard to certain taxes paid, it should be considered a judgment of forfeiture in regard to the taxes not paid. But the judgment of forfeiture was based upon the fact that the taxes remained in the treasury two years without being earned by the company. This ground of forfeiture does not exist in regard to those not paid. Where taxes are actually paid into the treasury, so as to be available to the company immediately upon being earned, they become a source of strength to the company to enable it to earn them. If the company fails to earn them, it seems to be eminently proper, as the Legislature has provided, that after a suitable time (which is two years,'in the judgment of the Legislature) they should be refunded. But those tax payers who, instead of paying, have had the use of their money, have not the same reason to complain of the company’s delay.
Reversed.