15 Mont. 224 | Mont. | 1895
— This is an application for a writ of certiorari. The applicant is a resident taxpayer in the city of Bozeman in the county of Gallatin. The respondents comprise the board of county commissioners and the clerk of said county. The applicant is the owner of considerable real estate situate in said city of Bozeman. He alleges that about the nineteenth day of February, 1894, the board of appraisers of said county met and fixed the valuation of said real estate for said year, which he says was the true and fair value thereof; that thereafter the assessor of said county listed said real estate, and assessed the same in accordance with the valuation thereof fixed by said board of appraisers, and duly returned the same as so listed and assessed. That on or about the thirty-first day of July, 1894, the respondents, acting as the board of equalization oí said county, raised the valuation of said real estate, as fixed by said board of appraisers, and listed, assessed, and returned by said assessor. Notice of the intention of said board of equalization to raise or increase the valuation of the real estate of the applicant was duly served upon him, and he appeared before said board in pursuance thereof, and protested in writing against this contemplated action of said board. The applicant offered no evidence in support of his protest showing that any injury or injustice would result to him from the action of the said board, nor does he complain in this court that any injury or injustice has resulted from said action of said board. In his protest filed before said board of equalization the applicant contended, and in his application for the writ of certiorari in this court contends, that said board had no jurisdiction to raise or increase the valuation of his real estate, for the reason that the board of appraisers had fixed the true and fair value of said property.
The applicant also contends that the respondents took no evidence as to the value of real estate in said county before raising or increasing the valuation of his property; that to authorize said increase the board should have taken evidence of such value.
The respondents, in their return, say they had before them the assessment-books of the years 1893 and 1894, and that, by a comparison thereof, it was shown that the real estate situated in the city of Bozeman was assessed for the year 1894 at a rate of about forty per cent lower than for the year 1893, while the real estate outside of said city was assessed at the same rate for both of said years; that they also acted upon their personal knowledge of the value of real estate in said county, and that their action was had solely for the purpose of equalizing the assessment of real estate in said county. The board, from this showing, had some evidence before it upon which it acted in the premises. Our statute does not require, in terms, that the board in such cases shall take evidence.
It may be contended that the board acted without sufficient evidence, and therefore without proper discretion. But, if this
The writ of certiorari heretofore issued in this case is dismissed.
Writ dismissed.