35 S.C. 213 | S.C. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case before the Supreme Court on appeal from an order of Judge Hudson, made at Neivberry, directing a peremptory writ of mandamus to issue to Wallace C. Cromer, as auditor of Newberry County, and a case Ex parte The National Bank of Newberry, South Carolina,
We will first consider the appeal in the case against Wallace O. Cromer, as auditor of Newberry County. The facts alleged in the petition for 'writ of mandamus in this case are admitted to be true by the return of the respondent, Wallace.C. Cromer, the auditor, in which no new material fact is set up as an answer or defence to the case made by the petition. These facts will be found set out with more particularity and more in detail in the petition and return. They are, however, briefly as follows :
The petitioner, through its president, R. L. McCaughrin, in February, 1891, made the usual return of personal property for the fiscal year commencing 1st November, 1890, to Wallace C. Cromer, the auditor of Newberry County, in which said personal property was valued at $150,000. This return was verified bv the oath of the president and duly filed. This return was received without objection of any sort by the auditor, who did not take any steps looking to increasing the valuation of the said personal property, and the return was left unaltered by him in items and amounts. The township board of assessors passed this return without alteration or objection. Thereafter the county board of equalization, “after due and serious inquiries into the said valuation, approved and adopted the valuation in said return made.” Afterwards the said auditor added to the said valuation $80,000, and entered that property on his list and on his tax duplicate as of the value of $230,000, thus charging the said personal property with the payment of taxes amounting, in the aggregate to the sum of $8,105, instead of $2,025, as it had been. The said auditor alleged as his sole reason for such increased valuation the order of W. H. Ellerbe, comptroller general of the said State. The increase of the tax is, therefore, $1,-080.
The petition alleges that the said tax duplicate requires the county treasurer to collect the said sum of $3,105, and that he
The return of the auditor did not controvert any of these allegations of fact or raise any new issues of fact in the case.
The following is the order of Judge Hudson: “On hearing the return of the respondent, Wallace O. Cromer, auditor, to the order to show cause heretofore issued in this proceeding, and after argument of counsel, it is ordered, that the peremptory writ of mandamus applied for, be issued by the clerk of this court forthwith, requiring the said Wallace C. Cromer, as auditor of said County of Newberry, to forthwith correct his tax list and tax duplicates, so as to restore the valuation of the personal property of the said relator for the fiscal year commencing 1st November, 1890, to one hundred and fifty thousand dollars; and also requiring him, the said auditor, to make the corresponding reduction in taxes payable on personal property of the relator, the said National Bank of Newberry. The reasons moving the court to this decision will be filed hereafter, in writing, with the clerk of this court. J. H. HUDSON,
“November 18, 1891. Presiding Judge.”
Notice of intention to appeal was duly given. Subsequently Judge Hudson filed with the clerk his reasons for signing the above order.
There were two orders in reference to a stay in issuing the writ of mandamus. One was dated 20th November, 1891, re
The grounds of appeal are, that his honor erred, 1. In deciding that he had jurisdiction to hear the proceeding. 2. In deciding that the writ of mandamus was the proper remedy in this case. 3. In deciding that the court had full power to issue the writ. 4. In deciding that there is no other remedy known to the law by which the wrong complained of in this case could be redressed so speedily and so adequately. 5. In deciding that the auditor, the township board of assessors, and the board of equalization are the only persons having authority to assess for taxation the personal property of the people and such corporations or banks, and that with their valuation of personal property no officer of the State can interfere, and with their valuation of real estate no one can interfere except the State board of equalization. 6. In deciding that there is no appeal from the valuation placed on property by the board of township assessors and the county and State boards of equalization. 7. In deciding that the judgments of assessors and State and county boards of equalization, and the value they place on property is final and that the auditor must accept it and place the same on the tax list and duplicate; and that if he refuse to do so, may be compelled to do so by writ of mandamus. 8. In finding, as a matter of law, that the petitioner was entitled to the writ and in granting the same. 9. In deciding that sections 237, 268, and 269 of the General Statutes of South Carolina do not apply to a case like this. 10. In deciding that the petitioner herein is not
Several of these exceptions state the same propositions in different language, or, perhaps, with slight variations. The exceptions will not, therefore, be taken up seriatim, but we will consider the questions we think raised by them in what seems to us the most natural order.
In the case of State v. County Treasurer (4 S. C., 520), the statute, as it then stood, was held constitutional by a divided court, Chief Justice Moses dissenting. This was a case against the county treasurer for a writ of prohibition, in which the opinion of the court was delivered by Associate Justice Willard, and in which Associate Justice Wright concurred. In the case of State v. Gaillard (11 S. C., 309), the application was to this court for a writ of mandamus, directed to the county treasurer, commanding him to receive bills of the Bank of the State of South Carolina for taxes. In this case Chief Justice Mclver, then Associate Justice, concurred, solely on the ground that the
In Chamblee v. Tribble (23 S. C., 70), the action was brought to enjoin the county treasurer from collecting certain taxes for railroad purposes. The constitutionality of these provisions was again the subject of discussion. Mr. Justice Mclver concurred with Chief Justice Simpson as to their constitutionality, the former solely on the ground that the matter had been settled in the preceding cases. Mr. Justice McGowan, Associate Justice, dissented in an opinion, in which he quotes from the dissenting-opinion of Chief Justice Moses in State v. The County Treasurer, supra, the following language: “The power to tax is the most extensive and unlimited of all the powers which a legislative body can exert. It is without restraint, except by constitutional limitations. To tie up the hand that can alone resist its unlawful encroachments would not only render uncertain the tenure by which the citizen holds his property, but make it tributary to the unrestrained demands of the legislature.” This language is quoted to show the importance of a strict construction of these sections of the General Statutes which prohibit the courts from exercising powers given to them by the constitution to protect the citizen in his rights of property against the demands of a public officer, which he claims to be, without authority of law.
It will be noticed that all three of these cases arose in reference to the officers charged with the collection of taxes. In the first case the prayer ivas for a writ of prohibition, in the second for a writ of mandamus, and in the third for a writ of injunction. In Ex Parte Lynch (16 S. C., 32), the application was for mandamus against the comptroller general, an officer whose dudes refer to the listing and assessment of property for taxation. Constitutional questions were raised in the case. The mandamus was refused ; but it is important to notice that in that case no claim was made that the prohibitions of sections 171 and 269 applied to the comptroller general. There was no interference with the collection of taxes.
It has never been questioned that the validity of an assessment of property for taxes, so far as depends on the regularity
We hold, therefore, that there is nothing in sections 171 and 269 which .prohibits the courts from exercising proper control over officers charged with the listing and assessment of the property of citizens for the purpose of taxation where they proceed contrary to law.
II. The next question which arises in the case is, whether the assessment of the personal property of the relator at $2-30,000, charged with a tax of $3,105, is valid, or whether the original assessment of the personal property at $150,000, charged with a tax of $2,025, is the valid one? It is not a question here as to which is the true valuation of the property, but which is the valuation ascertained by the officers and in the manner provided by law. The valuation of the property at $150,000 w7as duly sworn to in the return by the proper officer of the relator, The National Bank of Newberry, South Carolina. This valuation was not objected to by the township board of assessors, and was then approved by the county board of equalization.
“VI. That so the matter'stood until the month of , 1891, when the said auditor added to the valuation of the said personal property $80,000, and entered that property on his list and his tax duplicate as of the value of $230,000, and thereby charged that property and your petitioner with the payment of taxes amounting in the aggregate to $3,105, instead of $2,025, which would have been the tax on said property at the valuation of $150,000, alleging, as the sole reason for such increased valuation (and no doubt correctly) the order of one W. H. Ellerbe, styling himself comptroller general of the said State.”
By section 229, General Statutes, the auditor is expressly forbidden to increase the return as made by any taxpayer or his agent, except by authority of the board of assessors. In this case it is not claimed that the auditor proceeded as in a case where the property has not been listed at all, as in section 229, or that there have been any proper proceedings under sections 239, 240, 241, and 242. If the assessment, as it now stands, is valid, it is solely on the ground that the same was increased by order of the comptroller general. It is true, that the conduct of the auditor is placed on apparently a different ground in the case of the same relator against the county treasurer, but we are confined to the facts as they were admitted to be when the case was before Judge Hudson, from whose rulings this appeal has been taken.
We conclude, therefore, thát in making the order relied on the comptroller general transcended his jurisdiction, and that the auditor had no right to obey the order and thus place upon his tax list and duplicate a valuation of this personal property, or to charge the taxes on that valuation other than the valuation of $150,000, as the same stood when it came to his hands, sworn to bv the president of the bank, without objection by one board, and with the approval of the other board, and upon which the taxes should be charged on his duplicate.
For these reasons we think that the relator is entitled to relief, and that a writ of mandamus is the proper remedy.
It is, therefore, ordered and adjudged, that the exceptions be overruled, and that the judgment and order appealed from be affirmed.
Next case infra, p. 233.