78 Va. 269 | Va. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant, the plaintiff in the circuit court, filed its bill in June, 1882, in the circuit court of Clarke to restrain the treasurer of Clarke county from selling the property of the company which had been levied on by him for the payment of county taxes, and from farther interference with the same, and to enjoin and restrain the board of supervisors of said county from taking any steps to enforce the collection of certain taxres assessed against the said plaintiff, and levied for by the said board of supervisors.
The plaintiff complained that the said board of supervisors, at its session on the 12th day of March, 1881, fixed the amount of the county levy for the year 1881, and closed said levy for that year, upon an examination of the books of the commissioner of the revenue of the county, which books furnished the basis of said assessments; that the said board of supervisors commenced making the assessments for 1881, at its meeting on the 10th day of November, 1880, and continued its work through several successive adjournments, until said 12th of March, 1881; that subsequently, without lawful authority, on the 8th day of December, 1881, .the said board of supervisors undertook to impose a tax on the roadway and track of the said plaintiff, and its fixtures, for school purposes, for district school purposes and for road purposes, omitting to levy for county purposes for the year 1881. That on the said 8th day of December, 1881, the commissioner of the revenue for said county had assessed the roadway and track at $15,000 per mile, fixing its length at sixteen miles, making the total value, including $2,100 added for depots, &c., $242,100, and charging ten cents on the $100 of value for county levy, thirty cents for railroad tax, ten cents for county school tax, five cents for district school tax, five cents for road tax, amounting to sixty cents in all, and making the large sum
The board of supervisors demurred and answered, as also did the county treasurer.
The demurrer was for want of equity, the remedy being ample at law.
The answer set forth that in November, 1880, at the meeting of the board of supervisors, the clerk of the board was directed to obtain from the auditor of public accounts information touching the valuation put by the proper authority upon the property of the railroad company. At the meeting in December, 1880, defendant had provided a
The cause came on to be heard on the 19th day of July, 1882, in vacation, when the injunction was dissolved by decree entered in the cause.
From this decree an appeal was applied for to this court, which was allowed.
The first question for consideration is that raised by the demurrer, the jurisdiction of a court of equity being denied, upon the ground that the complainant’s relief in a court of law is full and complete. Upon this question, there can be but little doubt. Such jurisdiction in a court of equity has been frequently sustained by this court, and cannot now be questioned, and the circuit court rightly so decided. See Goddin v. Crump, 8 Leigh, 121; Bull v. Read, 13 Gratt 78; Eyre v. Jacob, 14 Gratt. 422.
It is clear, and we think will not be questioned, that the county of Clarke could not tax the property of the railroad at a higher rate than that at which other property in the county was taxed, either by a larger tax in the first instance, or by enforcing a double tax. The constitution of Virginia provides that taxation, whether imposed by the State, county or corporate bodies, shall be equal and uniform, and all property, both real and personal, shall be taxed in pi’oportion to its value, to be ascertained as prescribed by law. Art. 10, § 1. In the case of Va. and Tenn. R. R. Co. v. Washington County, 30 Gratt. 471, it was decided by this court that the board of supervisors had no
Without this act the board of supervisors has been held to be without the power or lawful authority to levy a tax for county purposes, as we have seen in the case of the Va. & Tenn. R. R. Co. v. Washington County, supra.
But it is claimed that the mode of assessment upon which the county levy is made on railroad property, under this act, is unconstitutional, and therefore void. That act authorizes the supervisors of a county to levy a tax on the roadway and track, depots, depot grounds and lots, station buildings, and other real estate of a railroad company whose road passes through such county. Such tax shall be equal to the tax imposed upon other property for county and school purposes, and based upon the assessment per mile by the State for its purposes. The assessment for State purposes under t|ie law is made by the board of public works of the State, upon the estimated value reported by each company to the auditor of public accounts of the State. See Acts 1876-77, 138.
It is claimed that the mode in which all other real estate in the State is assessed is by officers of the county upon actual inspection, and that the law authorizing the assessment of railroad property by a State board, and directing the board of supervisors to follow the State assessment, is violative of the seventh article of the State constitution, section second, which directs the supervisors to assemble at the courthouse thereof on the fourth Monday in July
And any rule of construction which would give to the counties a power of taxation under the constitution, independent of legislative supervision and control, is in violation of the uniform policy of the State, and contrary to the true principles of the government.
When, therefore, the constitution gives the supervisors authority to fix the county levies, it only means that they shall ascertain and fix the amount of such levies, and the amount thus ascertained is to be collected from subjects of taxation as are prescribed by the legislature. Va. & Tenn. R. R. v. Washington Co., 30 Gratt. If the commissioner of the revenue in the different counties should make an assessment of the railroad track, or other property within the county limits, such assessment would constitute no just basis of taxation.
A part of a railroad running through one county may be of little value, but if taken in connection with the whole, it may be as valuable as any other part. A railroad, from
The supreme court of Kentucky, in passing upon this subject, declared that the railroad was not a fit subject for local taxation by the several counties through which it runs. 3 Bush. R. 648. “ A railroad is an entire thing and should be assessed as a whole. It would be almost as reasonable and easy to divide a house or a locomotive into portions, and assess each portion separately, as to divide a railroad into portions, and assess each portion separately.” Gulf R. R. v. Morris, 7 Kansas R. 210. Gulf R. R. v. Morris is cited in Va. & Tenn. R. R. v. Washington County, with the following comment: “ The policy of Virginia has uniformly been in accordance with the views expressed in these cases. Prior to the war the assessment and taxation were based upon the dividends, or upon the receipts of the companies, ascertained by reference to the amount of passengers or the amount of freight transported. Since the war the tax has been upon the net earnings of the respective roads paid quarterly into the treasury. The State has, therefore, never regarded any mere local assessment of a part of a railroad within a county as furnishing any reliable basis of taxation.”
The assessments made by the commissioners in different counties, for State and county purposes, were not intended to include the portions of the property of a railroad lying in the county.
At one time the railroads assessed and valued their own property, and that assessment was the basis of taxation. The board of public works now makes the assessment for the State. Prior to the act of 1880, the supervisors had no authority to assess the property of railroads, but by that act which was passed subsequently to the decision of this court in the Va. & Tenn. R. R. v. Washington County, it is enacted that it shall be lawful, and authority is given
As we have seen, the county supervisors had no authority to assess or levy a tax for county purposes upon the railroad property in question, except under this last named act, and under that act the basis of their taxation was to be upon the State valuation and assessment for its purposes. Now, the board of public works did not make this assessment until the 28th day of September, 1881. The reports of the railroads were not required to be filed before the'auditor until June, and in March there had been no assessment by the State; but under the law the State authorities in September made the assessment, as of the 1st day of February, 1881, from the reports made June 1st, 1881, to the auditor of public accounts, pursuant to sections 20 and 21 of the act for the assessment of taxes on persons, property, income, licenses, &c., and imposing taxes thereon for the support of the government and the free schools, and to pay the interest on the public debt, approved March 27th, 1876, as amended by the acts approved March 13th and 20th, 1877. The report by the railroad companies to the auditor does not give the value of the real and personal property held by them in each county. The act of March 15th, 1872, provided, that where a railroad or canal shall pass through more than one of the counties of the State, the report should show the estimated value of the property, herein above classified, -'that may be within the limits of each of said counties ,* and it shall be the duty of the auditor of public accounts to furnish the board of supervisors of each of the counties of the State through which any railroad or canal passes,
This court in the Va. & Tenn. R. R. v. Washington County, cited above, speaking of such county levies, says: “ It is most obvious that the legislature, so far from making any provision for imposing the county levies upon the railroads of the State, has plainly evinced a purpose to prohibit the imposition of county levies in such cases. And until the legislature makes the necessary provision for carrying the constitution into effect in this particular, neither the supervisors of the counties nor the courts can furnish a remedy nor supply the want of proper legislation”; and, citing from Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, says: “Constitutional provisions requiring the legislature to provide by law uniform and just rules for the assessment and collection of taxes must be dormant until the legislation is had.” This legislation is no longer wanting; but the legislature has provided "for this taxation in the manner seen above, which is not in violation of any
When the county authorities of Washington county undertook under the constitution of the State to tax the railroad property as other property within the limits of the county, the railroad company objected that no legislation had been had to give effect to the constitutional provision ■cited above; and this objection was sustained by the courts. Legislation having been since had providing for this taxation, in accordance with the suggestions of this court in the above cited case, it is now objected that the legislation is unconstitutional, because the mode in which the assessment is made is different for railroad property from that for other property situated in a county. As we have seen above, it was held by this court that there could be no just and satisfactory system of taxation provided by a fragmentary system of assessment, by sections, in each county, and that a railroad must be regarded, assessed and taxed as an entire thing, and equalization would result to the railroad,' the taxed subject, if not to the several counties, and thus the object and spirit of the constitution would not be violated. This question was in effect decided by this court in the recent case of the Baltimore, and Ohio R. R. Co. v. Koontz, Treasurer, 77 Va. 698. The act cannot be held to be in violation of the constitution of the State, but must be regarded as not only competent, but proper and necessary legislation to give effect thereto. Nor can we see any reason for saying that the supervisors having made their levy in March, 1881, as to property in the county generally, were without power to act afterwards, and that their levy in December, 1881, was without lawful authority. We think
But it is claimed that the State assessment of the property of a railroad is not only unconstitutional, because the mode of assessment is different for that property from the mode of assessment for other property in the county, but that the measure and methods for relief for the railroad property, if erroneously assessed, are different from those provided for other property within the county. That for all other property within the county redress can be had on application to the court in which the assessor gave bond and qualified; that the appellant can have no such relief under the law. The law in question provides that any person assessed with taxes, by any entry in either book ^the land book and personal property book), may, within two years after the delivery of said book to the treasurer aforesaid, apply for relief to the court in which the assessor or commissioner gave bond and qualified, &c. If the court be satisfied that the applicant is erroneously charged on such book, &c., relief may be granted upon certain condition.
It certainly has not been contended otherwise in this case, as the learned counsel for the appellee has insisted here, that such was the proper course and such the proper forum for relief for the appellant in this case. The language of the law is general, any person > certainly it so appears • as to the county taxes, assessed under the act of February, 1880. The act o,f 1876-77, as to the assessment for State taxes, has been hereinbefore considered, and its provisions appear to be violative of no principle of the constitution of the State. We are of opinion that there is no error in levying a tax for county road purposes, and that such expenses are obviously part of the county expenses, and taxes raised for that purpose are raised for county purposes.
It is further assigned as error, that a tax was levied to pay the interest, &c., on the bonds of the county which were given to raise money for a subscription to this very road. This objection is more specious than real. The railroad is not required to pay this tax because it was a subscription to it, nor is it excused from paying its due share of this, like any other county tax, in so far as it becomes a property owner in the county, along with all other property-owners in said county, all paying a uniform tax in proportion to their respective possessions, assessed upon the same uniform basis.
But there is one more assignment of error which it is necessary to farther notice: “That the assessments against-the railroad, for road purposes and county school purposes,
This day came again the parties by their counsel, and' the court, having maturely considered the transcript of the-record of the decree aforesaid, and the argument of counsel, is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the circuit court of Clarke county erred in dissolving the injunction in this cause without first'correcting and equalizing the rate of taxation against the complainant company, so as to make the same correspond with 'the rate of taxation against all other property in the county of Clarke for similar purposes.
It is therefore considered by the court that the said decree of the said circuit court be reversed and annulled, and i that the appellee pay to the appellant its costs by it expended in the prosecution of its appeal and supersedeas here; and it is further considered by the court, that this cause be remanded to the said circuit court of Clarke county for further proceedings to be had therein, in accordance with the foregoing opinion and the views herein.
All which, with a certified copy of said written opinion, is ordered to be certified to the said circuit court of Clarke county.
Decree reversed.