79 Neb. 455 | Neb. | 1907
The county of Platte and the treasurer of said county have asked this court for a peremptory writ of mandamus
The petition alleges, after the usual formal allegations, that, “heretofore, to wit, on the 1st day of June, 1907, the defendants, while convened and regularly in session as a state board of equalization and assessment, and having oefore it all information contemplated or required by law in relation to the value of said railroad (the road of the fTnion Pacific Railroad Company), including tangible property and franchises, did proceed to find, and did find and fix, the true value thereof at $75,000 a mile for each and every mile of said railroad in Nebraska, and did at the same time find and fix the assessed value of each and every mile of said railroad in Nebraska at 20 per cent, of the true or actual-value thereof. The valuation of each mile of said road was by said board ascertained and determined by dividing the whole value thereof in this state by the number of miles of main track in this state, as required by section 89, art. I, ch. 77, Comp. St. 1905. The said county is, and for many years last past has been, under township organization. The county seat is the city of Columbus, a duly organized city of the second class having a population of between 4,000 and 5,000. About 20 miles of the main track of said railroad runs in a substantially easterly and westerly direction through said city and through the townships of Columbus and Butler in said county. Between 40 and 45 miles of the main track of said railroad runs in a substantially northerly and westerly direction from said city, through the townships of Columbus, Lost Creek, Monroe, Burrows and Granville, in said county. Although this road, running northerly and westerly from said city, is commonly known as the Omaha & Republican Valley Railroad, it is owned, controlled and operated by the Union Pacific Railroad
The ‘ contention of the relators is that the board is required by statute to distribute the total valuation of this railroad property in the state to each county in proportion to the mileage of the road in such county, in-
The solution of the question thus presented depends upon the construction to be given to sections 87, 89, 90
“A correct return of the value of all tools and materials used for repairs, and of all other personal property in the state of Nebraska, together with such other information as the state board of equalization and assessment may require in order to enable them to apportion such rolling stock between the main line and branches of said road.”
“The valuation of each mile to be determined by dividing the whole value by the number of miles of the main track of each road or line.”
The former assumes that the board will “apportion such rolling stock between the main line and branches of said road.” The relators suggested that the section in which this language occurs relates to all persons, companies or corporations owning, operating or controlling any railroad or railroad service, as well as to railroad companies themselves, and that it is the rolling stock alone that it is assumed will be apportioned between “the main line and branches”; that this rolling stock is to be apportioned only to those lines and branches over which it is used, and that therefore subdivision 7 does not assume that the total valuation of the road is to be apportioned among the main lines and branches. This reasoning upon this point is very convincing, and it would seem that the construction so contended for was the one most natural to be derived from the language used; but' it does not account for the use of the word “between” instead of the word “among,” and the use of the word “between” may be thought to indicate that it was contemplated that the apportionment to the main line, upon the one hand, and the branches, .upon the other, would be the principal feature of this part of the board’s duties.
Again, although it may be thought that the natural
From these considerations, it follows that the peremptory writ of mandamus must be denied.
Writ denied.