60 Mo. 101 | Mo. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court.
The petitioner sued out of the Clinton Circuit Court a writ of certiorari which was directed to the County Court of said county for the purpose of reviewing their action in reference to the assessment of certain taxes on property belonging to him. After the return of the writ the case was examined and judgment rendered in favor of the defendant; whereupon the plaintiff appealed to this court.
The complainant prayed that said assessment and fax entered on the tax book of the collector of said county, being illegal and void, the said court would abate and set aside said assessment, etc.
. This petition was verified by affidavit, of complainant’s attorney to the effect that he believed it to be true.
The said County Court after having heard and considered said petition dismissed the same for the reason that they had no jurisdiction over the matter.
The complainant afterwards on the 28t.h day of April, 1874, appeared in the Clinton Circuit Court and on his application a writ of certiorari, was issued out of said Circuit Court directed to said County Court requiring it to send up a transcript of the proceedings had in said cause. This writ was served and the Comity Court made a return thereto in which it set forth the petition filed in said court by the complainant, in substance as has hereinbefore been stated, together with a a copy of the assessment made against complainant and the proceeding had in said court on said petition, which said copy from the tax book and proceedings in the County Court is as follows:
. Tax book of personal property of the county of Clinton, State of Missouri for the year 1873, assessed''August l,st., 1873. page 95, Jarvis S. Rogers (Cameron) Exchange Broker, total .personal property $5,000, State taxes, $22.50, county taxes $27.50, road tax $7.50,-.railroad sinking fun,d $7.50, school-tax-$100, aggregate $165.” .
The copy from the entries made in the County Court was as follows: “’Now at this day here comes Jarvis S. Rogers by his attorney and presents a petition praying the court to
After this return was made by the County Court to the Circuit Court on the 7th day of May, 1871, the cause came on for hearing in said Circuit Court. It is admitted by the parties that no evidence was offered by either part}’, but that the case or matter was submitted to the court on the petition of the complainant, and the return made to the writ of certiorari. The Circuit Court found for the defendant and rendered a judgment against the complainant for costs. The com plain an tilled his motion fora new trial which being overruled he excepted, and appealed to this court.
The complainant in this case, in the Circuit Court, asked the court to make several declarations of law as applicable to the case, but as there was no evidence given on the trial we cannot say whether said declarations of law were, applicable to the case or not; and we are left in the same state of uncertainty in reference to the decision and judgment of the court.
The certiorari only bronght the record and proceedings in the County Court before the Circuit Court. When the record came to the Circuit Court, the case was there to be tried and the essential matters of fact stated in the complainant’s petition to show that the assessment against him was illegal should have been proved, unless they, in some way, were admitted on the record ; but the complainant simply presented his petition to the court and asked the court, without evidence, to assume that the petition contains the truth.
In such a case we would not be authorized to say that the judgment of the Circuit Court was wrong.
The judgment will be affirmed;