Section 2, chapter 41, page 23, Acts 28th General Assembly, as amended by chapter 43, page 37, Acts 30th General Assembly, provides that “ no . . .. municipal corporation . . . shall be allowed to become indebted, in any manner or for any purpose, to an amount in the aggregate exceeding one and one-fourth per centum on the actual value of the property within such . . . corporation, to be ascertained by the last state and county tax list previous to the incurring of such indebtedness: . provided, however, that . . . cities of the second class for the purpose of erecting or purchasing water-works and a system of sevters, shall be allowed to become indebted for said purpose to an amount aggregating, with all other indebtedness, ... in a sum not exceeding two and one-half per centum of the actual value of the property within said city, to be ascertained in the manner and form aforesaid.” It is then further provided by the statute that before any such indebtedness can be contracted in excess of 1% per centum an election shall be held, at which the question of the issuance of bonds for the' purposes designated shall be-submitted to a vote of the electors of the city. The defendant city of Belle Plaine is a city of the second class in this state, and the defendant W. A. Montgomery is the treasurer thereof. It is conceded that the actual value of the property subject to taxation situated within the limits of said city, as determined by the assessor, and as shown by the state and county tax lists for the year 1903, was the sum of $1,578,576; further, that the total indebtedness of the city, apart from the proposed bond issue, presently to be referred to-, was the sum of $80,000. Acting upon the provisions of statute stated foregoing, and in June, 1904, there was duly submitted to the voters of the defendant city a proposition to issue the bonds thereof in the sum of $30,000 for the purpose of erecting a system of water-works and sewers in said city. The proposition received the requisite number of affirmative votes, and was declared to be duly *469 carried. Thereafter the city advertised for bids for the purchase of such bonds, and in connection therewith made the requirement that each bidder should accompany his bid with money' in the sum of $3,000 as evidence of good faith, and’ wliich money, in the case of the successful bidder, should be applied in part payment of the purchase price of the bonds. The plaintiff company was a bidder for the Bonds, and accompanied its bid by a deposit with the defendant Montgomery, as city treasurer, of the sum of $3,000, ás required. Upon the bids being opened, plaintiff was found to be the successful bidder, and the bonds were declared sold to it. Thereafter tender of the bonds was made, and payment demanded, whereupon plaintiff refused to receive the same and pay therefor. Such refusal was based upon the sole ground that the indebtedness to be represented by the proposed bonds, added to the indebtedness already existing as against said city, would exceed the debt limit as prescribed by the Constitution of the state. Plaintiff, in turn, demanded of the city and said Montgomery, treasurer, a return of the sum of $3,000 so deposited by it as above stated. The demand for a repayment being refused, this action followed.
The constitutional provision invoked by plaintiff, and under which it seeks to justify its refusal to accept of the-bonds and predicates its demand for repayment of the deposit money, reads as follows: “No municipal corporation shall be allowed to become indebted in any manner, or for any purpose, to an amount in the aggregate exceeding five per centum on the value of the taxable property within such’ . . corporation — to be ascertained by the last state, and county tax lists, previous to the incurring of such in-debtedness.” Constitution, section 3, article 11. In view of the figures already given, and to bring the case within the operation of such provision, plaintiff also invokes and relies upon the provisions of amended section 1305 of the Code, which reads as follows: “All property subject to *470 taxation shall be valued at its actual value . . . and shall be assessed at twenty-five per cent, of such value. Such assessed value shall be taken and considered as the taxable value of such property, upon which the levy shall be made. Actual value of property as used in this chapter shall mean its value in the market in the ordinary course, of trade.” Precisely. stated, the contention of plaintiff is that, as taxes cannot'be levied or exacted otherwise than on the basis of taxable value — that is, 25 per cent, of actual value —' such taxable value must- be accepted as the “ value of the taxable property,” within the meaning of that expression as found in the Constitution. Prom this we have the argument that the provisions of the amended act of the Twenty-Eighth General Assembly, under which the defendant city assumed to proceed, in so far, at least, as the same can be said to operate as a grant of authority for an increase of indebtedness beyond the limit of 5 per centum of the “ taxable value ” of the property in- the city, are violative of the constitutional provision, and void. It is the contention of defendants, on the other hand, that the debt limit provision of the Constitution has relation only to the actual valuation of property as the same may be found and returned by the assessor for taxation • purposes; accordingly, that an indebtedness which stands the prescribed test in that it does i not exceed 5 per centum of the value of the property subject to taxation “valued at its actual value,” cannot be held to be violative of such provision.
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How, then, is the situation affected by the appearance, of Code section 1305 upon the statute book? The. reason for the enactment of that section is not difficult of ascertainment. It is common knowledge that prior thereto the law on the subject of making assessments was persistently and universally violated, and the purpose and intent of the enactment in question was to secure as nearly as possible a compliance with the law requiring assessors to find and return properties at the full value thereof, and to the end that uniformity might obtain. The provision that taxes should be imposed only on the basis of twenty-five per cent, must be said to have been matter of inducement only. Certainly it was no.t intended to change the duty of assessors in making assessments. With each of them the duty is now, as before, to enter upon the assessment roll the full value of property, each within his respective district. The difference —■ and it is the only one — is that when ■the tax levy comes to be spread upon the treasurer’s book a basis of twenty-five per cent, of the assessed or actual value is required to be adopted for the purpose. Such a provision cannot, therefore, be said to change or give a new meaning to the expression as found -in the Constitution, “ the value of the taxable property.” Moreover, .the “ taxable value ” could not, by any reasonable interpretation, be held to be synonymous with, or the equivalent of, “ the value of the taxable property.” That it was not intended by section 1305 to accomplish more than to bring about uniform
*474
ity in property valuations for the purposes of taxation finds, a measure of confirmation in the provisions of statutes soon thereafter enacted, and which appear as the acts of the-Twenty-Eighth and Thirtieth General Assemblies, and to which reference has hereinbefore been made. Conscious of the basis upon which in fact assessments had theretofore-been made, and realizing that assessments at full value-would, unless restrained, operate to authorize municipal corporations to largely increase their indebtedness, the limitation acts referred to were adopted. Such amounted to a legislative construction of section 1305, and should be given weight of authority accordingly. Lewis’ Sutherland on Statutory■ Construction, Section 472 (2d Ed.). We are-aware that a holding seemingly in conflict with the views as expressed by us above has been made by the Illinois-court.
Chicago v.
Fishburn,
It follows from what we have said that the judgment of the court below must be and it is affirmed.
