73 P. 103 | Kan. | 1903
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought to recover taxes and interest paid under protest by the plaintiff in error to the treasurer of Miami county. To the petition the defendant demurred. The demurrer was sustained and judgment rendered against plaintiff.
In 1896 the state board of railroad assessors assessed the railway property of the plaintiff in Miami county at $2420.40 per mile. The total valuation, upon this basis, was $200,124.11. The total valuation of taxable property in said‘county, except railroad property, as returned by the county clerk to the state auditor, was $3,782,071. The state board of equalization, for the purpose of equalization, raised the assessed value of the property as returned by the clerk, except railroad property, nine per cent., and apportioned to Miami county $21,071.17 as its proportion of state taxes. The board of county comissioners did not adopt this valuation as a basis for the levy; hence the clerk increased the rate per cent, of the levy. Plaintiff claims that by this act 'it was made to pay the same rate per cent, on a valuation nine per cent, higher than other property in the county " .
The petition also contained the statement of a second cause of action based upon similar facts occurring, in 1897, alleging payment of said claims under protest, and praying for judgment against the defendant for the two items, making a total of $2868.02, -with interest.
Where the state board of equalization raises the-valuation of the property of .a county, under section 7702, General Statutes of 1901, the board of county commissioners is not bound to adopt that valuation in making a levy for state and other purposes, but the county clerk may proceed, under section 7611, General Statutes of 1901, to raise the rate per cent, sufficiently to provide the county's proportion of state taxes.' (Geary County v. Railway Co., 62 Kan. 168, 61 Pac. 693.) Plaintiff contends that because the board of county
This contention rests upon the assumption that the state board .of equalization determines and fixes the valuation of the taxable property in the different counties; that it determined in this case that the assessed value of the property in Miami county, as returned by the county clerk, was below its actual value, and raised it nine per cent., to its true value. The state board of equalization does not determine or fix' the value of the taxable property in any county ;" its only duty is to equalize the values between the several counties. The valuation returned in all the other counties in the state may have been greater than the actual value of the property, or the valuation returned by the county clerk of Miami county may have been the full value of the taxable property in that county. The only duty of the board of equalization is to equalize the assessed value of the different counties.
It was not shoym that any of the property in Miami county was assessed at less than its actual value. The petition does state that all property, except railroad property, was assessed at less than its actual value, but this conclusion of the plaintiff in error is drawn from the previously stated fact that the state board of equalization had raised the assesséd value on all such
After the dismissal of the injunction action, the county treasurer issued his warrant for the collection of the original taxes, penalties, and interest from the date of the injunction at the rate of fifty per cent, per annum. Section 7658, General Statutes of 1901, fully authorizes this. It reads :
“In case the county treasurer shall be restrained from selling any real estate by reason of an injunction, and the injunction shall be dissolved,- the treasurer, at the sale provided for in the preceding section, shall include all penalties and interest that would have accrued had the sale taken place at the time fixed by law. And in cases where the county treasurer or sheriff shall, by injunction, be restrained from the collection of taxes due upon personal property, and - the injunction be dissolved, the county treasurer or ' sheriff shall collect the original taxes and penalties, with interest from the date of the injunction at the rate of fifty per cent, per annum.”
It is contended that this section is violative of section'1, article 11, of the constitution of the state of Kansas, which declares that “the legislature shall provide for a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation,” and that-it is violative of section 17, article 2, which provides that “all laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation throughout the state; and in all cases where a general law can be made applicable, no special law shall be enacted.” It is argued that if an injunction brought to restrain the collection of taxes on real estate be dissolved, all that can be collected by the treasurer is the penalty;
The rules laid down in the constitution controlling the legislature in providing for a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation, and providing that all laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation throughout the state, are not limitations on its power to fix a penalty for the non-payment of taxes, or a limitation on it in fixing different penalties for the non-payment of taxes on different kinds of property. It is within the knowledge of all that' there is more danger of the state’s losing its taxes on personal than on real property. This of itself is a sufficient reason, if one need be given, why different penalties should •be provided for the non-payment of taxes on these different kinds of property. There is no constitutional inhibition on tho legislature’s fixing any penalty for the non-payment of taxes.' There is no distinction between the penalties attached for the non-payment of taxes on different classes of personal property. In this respect the laiv has a uniform operation throughout the state ; it operates on all alike, and is, therefore, not subject to the criticism made on it.
It is contended that the right of way, together with the road-bed, buildings and superstructures erected thereon, is real estate, and included in the definition of “real estate,” as expressed in the first sentence of section 7503, General Statutes of 1901, which reads:
“That the terms ‘real property,’ ‘real estate,’ and ‘land,’ when used in this act, except as otherwise specifically provided, shall include not only the land itself, but all buildings, fixtures, improvements. , . .”
“The term ‘personal property’ shall inpJude . . . all ‘property’ owned, leased, used, occupied or employed by any railway or telegraph company or corporation within this state, situate on the right of way . of any railway.”
The plaintiff’s property upon which this tax was levied falls exactly within this definition. It is, therefore, plain that its contention1 upon this point must be denied, if the legislature has the right to classify property for the purpose of taxation.
The power thus to classify property for the purpose of taxation appears to be generally conceded. In Cooley on Taxation, second edition, page 366, it is said:
“It is customary to classify property for taxation as real and personal, and to assess the two classes on somewhat different principles. The classification is commonly made on common-law distinctions, but this is not necessarily the case, and it will frequently be found that the enumeration of property in statutes as real or personal for the purposes of taxation differs considerably from what it would be for other purposes in the same state.”
In Desty on Taxation, volume 1, page 96, it is said :
“The legislature may classify the subjects of taxation. The division of property into real, personal and mixed is a mere arbitrary division, which the legislature may or may not regard in the imposition of taxes. ... The legislature may make any kind of property personalty for the purposes of taxation, although it be real estate by. the common law, and for all other purposes.”
The judgment is affirmed.