13 Neb. 166 | Neb. | 1882
This case was before the court in 1879, and is reported
No motion for a rehearing was filed. We might therefore affirm the judgment without further examination. But inasmuch as the attorneys for the plaintiff have filed elaborate briefs, in which they particularly insist that No. 9 being formed from No. 6, the latter district is entitled to all the corporate property, we will therefore review that question.
In the case of North Hempstead v. Hempstead, 2 Wend., 109, it was held that on the division of a town, or public corporation possessing corporate property, into two separate towns, each, in the absence of legislation regulating the matter, is entitled to hold in severalty the public property which fell within its limits.
In the ‘case of Windham v. Portland, 4 Mass., 384, it was held that where a new corporation was created out of part of the territory of an old corporation, the latter, in the absence of legislation in respect to the matter, is entitled to all the property and is solely answerable for all
Sec, 7 of the act approved Eeb. 15, 1869 (G. S., 962), which was in force when this school district was formed, provided that: “ When a new district is formed in whole or in part from one or more districts possessed of a school-house or other property, the county superintendent at the time of forming such new district, or as soon thereafter as may be, shall ascertain and determine the amount justly due to such new district from any district or districts out of which it may have been in whole or in part formed, which amount shall be ascertained and determined according to the relative value of the taxable property in the respective parts of such former district or districts at the time of such division.”
• Sec. 8 provided that: “The amount of such proportion, when so ascertained and determined, shall be certified by the county superintendent to the county clerk, who shall present the said amount to the county commissioners at the July session next succeeding, whose duty it shall be to assess the same upon the taxable property of the district retaining the school-house or other property of the former district in the same manner as if the same had been authorized by a vote of such district, and the money so assessed shall be placed to the credit of the taxable property taken from the former district, and shall be in reduction of any tax imposed in the new district on said taxable property for school district purposes.”
Sec. 9 provided that: “When collected, such amount
It will be seen at once that the special provisions of the statute were designed to require the old district retaining the corporate property to pay to the new district the fair proportion of its value. If a school-house has been built, or other property has been acquired by the old corporation, it is not to be permitted to retain the same without compensation, but must pay to the new district such sum as the county superintendent shall find to be just. The rule of law cited by the plaintiff has been changed by the statute of this state and has no application. Suppose no change had been made in the boundaries of No. 6 until after the tax in question had been collected and the money thus raised had been expended in building a school-house in that district, upon a division of the district could No. 6 have retained the school-house without making any compensation to No. 9, from which the money was collected? Clearly not; because under the statute No. 6 must pay to' No. 9 a fair proportion of the value of the corporate property.
But the rule contended for has no application for another reason. In all of the cases cited the corporation which was divided, and a portion set off to form a new corporation, had been an actual corporation, having erected buildings or acquired property, incurred obligations which would .•remain as a debt against the old corporation.
Take the case of Morgan Co. v. Hendricks, 32 Ind., 235, as an illustration. In that case Morgan county had existed for many years. It was exercising corporate powers. A division was made, leaving it responsible for the debts, and the court, treating the assessment and the levy of taxes as property, decided that it was entitled to the same.
In the case of Morgan v. Beloit, 7 Wall, 613, the action was brought by a creditor in equity against the city and town of Beloit to compel the two corporations to pay certain judgments in the proportion which each ought to pay. The town of Beloit had subscribed for stock in a railroad company and issued bonds to pay therefor. Afterwards the city was created and organized from a portion of the territory which had constituted the town. In the city charter there was a provision that the principal and interest on all bonds which had been issued by the town should
The plaintiff’s case, however, is not within any one of these decisions. Here was a new corporation organized less than two months, without property, and having done no corporate act apparently, except to hold the annual meeting on the first Monday in April. This corporation on paper, covering one-half of a township', had added to its territory a week before the annual meeting two and one-half townships, which were stricken off and formed into No. 9 a week afterwards.
The attorneys for the plaintiff very strenuously insist that the act of voting taxes by a school district is equivalent to a levy of the same, and that therefore the taxes were actually levied at the time of the division of the districts. That this proposition cannot be maintained will readily be seen. The act of voting taxes by a school district is an important prerequisite to the right to levy, as no tax that requires the affirmative vote of the district to give it validity can be imposed without such action. But the act of voting taxes is not a levy. It is merely determining the amount that shall be levied. As the law stood at the time these taxes were voted the vote was taken in April, and the taxes levied by the county commissioners in July, three months afterwards. Now suppose that No. 6 had possessed a school-house and other property, and that the county superintendent, upon dividing the district, had assigned to No. 9 its proportion of the value of the schoolhouse, would this sum have been levied upon the territory of No. 9? The statute says it shall be assessed “upon the taxable property of the district retaining the school-house or other property of the former district.” This, then, determines upon what territory such tax is to be levied. The levy is to be limited to the district voting the tax.
The case of Morgan Co. v. Hendricks Co., 32 Ind., 234, Avas decided, as we have heretofore said, largely upon the construction given to the statute. The facts were as follows: “A majority of the legal voters residing in territory constituting a part of Morgan county, abutting upon Hendricks, petitioned the boards of commissioners of these counties for such change in the boundaries thereof that said territory should be detached from Morgan and annexed to Hendricks. The order granting the change was made by the commissioners of Morgan county on the eighth, and by the commissioners of Hendricks county on the ninth of June, 1868. The rate of taxation Avas fixed by tire commissioners of Morgan county on the ninth, and by the commissioners of Hendricks on the eleventh of June, 1868. Prior to the making of any of said orders, the assessors of the townships of Morgan county embracing the detached territory had made their enlistments and returned their lists of taxables to the auditor of Morgan county, Avho placed all the persons and property on the Tax duplicate’ for the year 1868. At the proper-time this duplicate was placed in the hands of the treasurer of Morgan county, who proceeded to collect the taxes thus assessed from the persons residing in said detached territory. Upon these facts the parties submitted the legal questions involved to the court below.” The court say: “The statute provides, that 'all liens, either by judgment, by mortgage, or otherwise, shall continue in full force in all respects, as if no change had been made in the bound
“We must give the words Levied and assessed’ a reasonable construction in view of the entire provisions of the act authorizing the change of county boundaries. Hendricks county could not, under the law, have made the enlistment after the ninth of June. There is an entire absence of any
In the case of Moss v. Shear, 25 Cal., 38,. it was held that a change of county boundaries, made after land had been assessed for taxes, did not divest the lien of the tax, and the tax collector of the old county might enforce the collection of the tax on land by a sale; and Harman v. New Marlborough, 9 Cush., 525, was of similar import. These cases were all examined when this case was formerly before this court, and were then not considered applicable. As great stress was laid upon them by the attorneys for the plaintiff, we have again carefully examined them, and we are fully convinced that our former decision is correct.
The division of school districts in this state is regulated by statute, and this statute contains an express provision that the district retaining the school-house or other property shall pay to the new district such proportion of the value of the same as may be “justly due.” This is the statutory mode by which a school district can retain a school-house, or other property erected or purchased at joint expense. But there is no pretense that any portion of the money in dispute was collected from the territory of No, 6. The entire sum was raised from the territory set off as No. 9. It is in no sense a joint property, nor has No. 6 any legal or equitable right to the same. "Whatever may have been the object in attaching two and one-half townships of land to No. 6 immediately preceding the annual meeting, thus forming a district eighteen miles in length by six in width, the practice of forming such large districts, apparently for the sole purpose of taxation, is very objectionable. It may be said that the object is a meritorious one, and the county being sparsely settled and but little taxable property therein it is necessary to make the districts very large in order to raise a sufficient amount of
In 9 Neb., 337, when this case was formerly before the court, it is said: “Each district being thus required to raise its own taxes, school district No. 6 has no interest in the money in question. This money was raised upon the taxable property of district No. 9 for school purposes, and it should be applied in the district to the purposes for which it was raised. District No. 9 has therefore an equitable right to the money in question.” This was the finding. The judgment of the court was that the “judgment of the district court is reversed; and for the purpose of doing complete justice between parties and ending the litigation, it appearing probable that other districts have been formed in the large extent of territory originally comprising No. 9, the case is remanded to the district court with instructions to permit all the school districts now formed in the original territory of district No. 9 to join as plain
Judgment affirmed.