18 Neb. 631 | Neb. | 1886
This is an original application for writ of mandamus to compel the respondent, who is the county treasurer of Rich-. ardson county, to levy upon the personal property of certain owners of real estate in said county, and sell the same for the purpose of collecting the real estate taxes due from such owners upon said real estate owned by them respectively.
The respondent appeared and demurred to the relation, thus presenting an issue of law, which may be stated as follows:
Is it the duty of the county treasurer to seize and sell the personal property situated in his county of the owner of real property, also situated in his county, for the purpose of collecting the taxes on such real property which are unpaid and delinquent ?
I think we may safely say that it will not be held to be ' his duty to seize and sell as above, capable of being enforced by mandamus, unless it be found that such duty is enjoined uponhim by statute. The duty of paying taxes by the owners of property, as well as the duty and power to collect them by the constituted authorities when their payment is neglected or refused, rests solely in this state upon constitutional and statute law, and in no degree upon the principles or authority of the common law of England. In this connection I yield to the inclination to say, that with the most profound respect for the court as coiistituted at the date of the judgment in the case of Johnson v. Hahn, 4 Neb., 139, and especially for the writer of the opinion in that case, and while it is not my purpose to criticise that case as a fair construction of the statutes then in force, yet, in so far as it invoked the authority of the common law and of general principles, I have failed in my efforts to
I think, therefore, that if we are to consider anything besides the letter and true intent and meaning of the statute as controlling the decision of the question in hand, and we find it necessary to guard one species of property more than another from the tax gatherer, we will find the object 'of our solicitude rather in the useful and necessary articles of personal property, than in his real estate.
The demurrer to the relation is therefore sustained, and the application dismissed.
Judgment accobdingly.