13 N.M. 537 | N.M. | 1906
OPINION ÓP THE COURT.
— The question of law raised in the case involves the construction of the statutes relative to the compensation of county assessor with reference to liquor and gaming licenses collected within their respective counties, concerning which much confusion has arisen in the various counties of the Territory, and in discussing the same it is necessary to inquire into the method of compensating assessors in vogue here and their duties concerning such licenses, in order to arrive at the intent of the legislature.
It appears from the legislation on the subject that it is the established policy to pay our assessors upon a basis of a percentage, of the .taxes actually collected on their assessments, a policy pursued, no doubt, upon the theory that such a system would tend to make the assessors more active in obtaining correct assessments and less neglectful in allowing property subject to taxation to escape it, 'thus making their compensation reliant, solety, upon’the'vigilance with which his official duties are performed.
Section 1794, C. L. 1897, provided that “the assessors shall be paid four per cent of all taxes and licenses collected under their assessment in their respective counties, which per cent shall be payable to said assessors by the treasurer to whom said taxes and licenses are by law payable, out of any such taxes and licenses as paid in to said treasurers, and said per cent shall be due and payable to said assessors by said treasurers respectively, upon receipt by such treasurers of sufficient funds for that purpose from said taxes and licenses.”
This section appears as Section 2, Chapter 34, Session Laws 1895, and was approved and became effective February 28th, 1895.
' At the time this law was enacted, the duties of the iassessor with relation to gaming and liquor licenses were as set out in Section 4155 of the C. L. of 1897, he was ■required to-make out a -list'of all persons liable to pay licenses in his county, showing the names and residences of such persons, character and place of business, date of commencement, and duration thereof and amount due, This list was to be made up from the applications made for licenses or from any other information he might obtain'and was to be verified by him and returned to the 'county clerk in triplicate. Upon this list was endorsed an order fos collection under the seal of the county and the list was' delivered to the collector and became his authority to collect the license tax. It will be seen that this duty, when performed, was very much in the nature of an assessment, and upon the accuracy and correctness of this list depended largely the amount of revenue to be derived from that source, so that his compensation in that regard, as in the regular assessment of property for general taxation, depended upon his' own vigilance and effort. If perchance, he neglected to include persons in his list' he suffered the consequence in the loss of' his Commission.
The legislature of 1897, passed an act, which became law January 1st, 1899, changing the compensation of county assessors, Sec. 8, of Chap. 60, S. L. of 1897, provided:
“The county assessors of the several counties of this Territory shall be allowed for their services; two per cent upon all money collected upon assessments made by them, and no more under any circumstances whatever to be paid out of moneys collected on their' assessment.”
This act being wholly repugnant and irreconcilable with Sec. 1794, or at least so much of that section as provided for a commission of four per cent on the assessments made and collected, that that portion of Sec. 1794, was repealed by implication under the well known rule that a later statute,-wholly repugnant and irreconcilable with a former statute, repeals it by implication.
The legislature of 1899 amended the latter act by enacting Sec. 2 of Chap. 25, Session Laws of 1899, which reads as follows: “That Sec. 8 of Chap. 60, Session Laws of 1897, be and the same is hereby amended to read as follows: The county assessor of' the several counties of this Territory shall be allowed for 'their services, four per cent upon all monies collected upon assessments made by them and no more under any circumstances whatever, to be paid out of monies collected on the assessments.” And this' section, in connection with such portion of Sec: 1794, C. L., as is not repealed (as to when and in what manner it shall be paid) is the law today regarding the general compensation of county assessors.
It will be observed that the two last acts do not use the terms “Taxes and licenses collected under their assessments,” but “all monies collected upon assessments made by them.” However, we attach no particular significance to that fact 'as our inquiry only extends to the period subsequent to the act of 1901.
The legislature of 1901, however, passed two acts w-ith reference to license, which in our opinion changes the whole system of gaming and liquor licenses so far as the duties of the assessors are concerned. By Chapter 19, Section 1, the sheriff is made an inspector and inquirer into the question of whether- or not persons engaged in selling liquors or naming gaming tables, and apparatus are paying their licenses, and to report to the commissioners under oath all the information required on the subject, and to collect the licenses when given into his hands. He is not to collect upon any certified list made by the assessor and endorsed by an order of the board under seal; but upon the licenses themselves Chap. 108, by Sec. 5 amends Sec. 4155, so that the list made by the assessor is no longer the authority for the collection of the tax but it is merely a list kept by him and from which he is .required to notify the parties that they must pay licenses, and with a provision that he shall notify the district attorney in case of default, etc. Thus it will be seen that these two acts, passed bj* the same legislature, completely change the duties of the assessor; that no longer is his certified list the basis of tax to be collected and therefore the list, at least, cannot be said to be in any sense an assessment. The amount of taxes to be raised by liquor and gaming licenses does not depend upon his diligence or efficiency, but upon the diligence of the sheriff.
But Sec. 6 of the same act (Chap. 108, Laws of 1901) prescribes the duty of the assessor as to gaming and liquor licenses and, while it uses the word “assess” it cannot be said that the act which the assessor pterforms is an assessment in any sense of the word, he merely receives the application, indorses upon it the amount of the tax to be paid, which is already assessed and fixed by law, and which he cannot change or vary, and reports it to the clerk, a mere clerical act and for which the same law gives him a fee of 50 cents for each license to be paid by the applicant.
' We do not think the question of the repeal of Sec 2, Chap. 25, Laws of 1899, by implication, substitution or otherwise is involved here; it is a question rather of the repeal of those statutes which really require something of the assessor which could be construed into such an assessment as that law contemplates. It is evident that when the legislature provided for compensating the assessor by giving him a commission on the taxes and licenses, or upon all monies, as the case may be, collect* d upon his assessment, that it meant to pay him for sor « duty which he had performed and upon which these taxes were based; it certainly could not have been otherwise, else why should he be paid upen a basis of the amount actually collected and not upon the gross amount of taxes shown by the treasurer’s books to be collected? The legislature must be credited with a knowledge of the general and settled policy of paying assessors and when it changed the system of arriving at the amount to be ascertained, as to gaming and liquor licenses and left him only a clerical duty to be performed for which it provided a fee of 50 cents to be paid by the applicant its intention seems clear.
Sec. 5, Chap.. 108, Laws of 1901, effectually repealed Sec. 4155, or all that portion hereof not re-enacted by the amendment by amending it “so as to read” etc.
A statute amending a section “so as to read, etc.” repeals all that is contained in the section not re-enacted. 26 Am. & Eng. Ency. (2nd Ed.) 735; Gassler et al., v. Goodrich, 3 Cliff, (U. S.) 71; Columbia Wire Co. v. Boyce, 104 Fed. 172; People v. McNulty, 93 Cal. 427; People v. Bd. of Supervisors, 67 N. Y. 109.
And the same is true of Sec. 6, as to the amendment of See. 4153. '
We think, therefore, that the legislature intended by the amendment of these sections to change the' duties of the assessoi1, so that he no longer makes an assessment of, liquor and gaming licenses such as was originally contemplated by the statutes, allowing him a commission, and to remunerate him by his fee of 50 cents for his new duties.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed with' costs and it is so ordered.