240 P. 837 | Mont. | 1925
It has commonly been held by the great weight of authority that an effort by a legislature or a municipality to make a special improvement district assessment a personal obligation of the owner of the land is unconstitutional and void under provisions of constitutions similar to ours, and also under the general "due process" clause of the Constitution. (5 McQuillin, sec. 2086; Taylor v. Palmer,
The argument that to make such taxes or assessments a personal liability would violate the "due process of law" clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is completely answered by the opinion in the case of Davidson v. New Orleans,
The only matter presented for determination is whether, in the[1] collection of a tax or assessment levied by an irrigation district for the payment of the interest on bonds issued by it, the county treasurer, in making such collection, is authorized to seize and sell personal property belonging to one who has allowed such tax or assessment levied against his land in the district to become delinquent.
Under section 7232, Revised Codes of 1921, all bonds and the interest thereon, issued by an irrigation district, must be paid by revenue derived from a special tax or assessment levied upon all of the lands in the district subject to such tax or assessment, and it is made the duty of the board of commissioners of the district, in the order or resolution adopted by it authorizing and directing the issuance of the bonds, to provide for the annual levy and collection of a special tax or assessment upon all the lands included in the district and subject to such assessment, sufficient in amount to meet the interest on said bonds promptly when and as the same accrues.
Section 7169 declares that the lands included in an irrigation district "shall constitute all the taxable and assessable property of such district," etc. *351
Section 7210, after describing the bonds which are authorized to be issued by the district, makes it the duty of the commissioners to "provide for the levy of a special tax or assessment * * * on all the lands in the district for the irrigation and benefit of which said district was organized"; and by section 7213 the bonds so issued are made "a lien upon all the lands originally or at any time included in the district," and, further: "All such lands shall be subject to a special tax or assessment for the payment of the interest on and principal of said bonds, * * * and said special tax or assessment, shall constitute a first and prior lien on the land against which levied, to the same extent and with like force and effect as taxes levied for state and county purposes." While the nature of the lien thus defined is the same as the lien for state and county taxes, its force and effect is limited to "the land against which levied."
Section 7240 makes it the duty of the board of commissioners of the district, on or before the second Monday in September of each year, to furnish the county clerk of the county in which the district land is situated a district assessment-roll containing a list of the lands located in the county and embraced within the district, together with the amount of the taxes or assessments against the same for district purposes, which amount shall be entered on the assessment-book of the county prior to the delivery of the duplicate assessment-book to the county treasurer, whereupon it is required that the county treasurer "shall collect such taxes or assessments at the same time and in the same manner as county and state taxes."
Section 7242 provides: "Delinquent sales of land for unpaid taxes or assessments shall be made in the same manner as for state and county taxes in the respective counties where such lands are situated," etc.
It thus appears that an irrigation district tax or assessment constitutes a lien upon the land, and that in collecting the *352 same the treasurer must follow the method prescribed for the collection of state and county taxes, which are made a lien upon real property.
It is the general rule that, when the statute which creates[2] the tax provides a special remedy for its collection, that remedy is exclusive. (Marion County v. Woodburn Merc. Co.,
An examination of our statutes discloses that the steps to be taken by the county treasurer in the collection of state and county taxes made a lien upon real property, are clearly and explicitly indicated. They are pointed out in Chapter 173, Part III, Revised Codes of 1921, as amended by Chapter 96 of the Session Laws of 1923. The requirements of these statutes are mandatory. The treasurer must advertise and sell the real property as therein commanded. He is not given the option to abandon a sale of the real property and pursue the personal property of the delinquent. The statutory procedure for collecting such taxes being adequate, it is exclusive.
The only exception to the above method which has come to our[3] attention is that mentioned in sections 2253 and 2254, which give the state auditor authority to direct the county treasurer not to proceed to the collection of any tax embraced in the delinquent tax list, when the same amounts to $300 or more, further than to offer for sale but once any property upon which the same is a lien. If there is no purchaser *353 when the property is thus offered for sale, the treasurer is required to report that fact to the state auditor, whereupon the state treasurer, or, in the event of his failure or neglect to do so, the auditor is empowered to bring a suit in the nature of a civil action for the collection of the tax, in which action a writ of attachment may issue.
In 25 R.C.L. 938, the rule deduced from a large number of cases which are cited is thus stated: "It is well settled that an exception in a statute amounts to an affirmation of the application of its provisions to all other cases not excepted, and excludes all other exceptions."
If the legislature had intended that in any other instance the treasurer should have the right to resort to a method other than the sale of land, for the collection of taxes of the character under consideration, it would have so declared. Not having made any other exception, all others are excluded. Expressio uniusest exclusio alterius.
To support their contention that the treasurer should be[4] compelled to collect the amount of these delinquent taxes out of the personal property of the delinquent taxpayers, counsel for relator rely solely upon the language of section 2152, Revised Codes of 1921, which declares: "Every lien created by this Title has the force and effect of an execution duly levied against all personal property of the delinquent." A sufficient answer to this contention is that the lien imposed upon land located in an irrigation district as security for payment of bonds issued by it, and the interest thereon, is not within the provisions of section 2152, for the reason that it is not created by the Title in which that section appears.
The provisions of this section (2152) first appear in the laws of this state as section 82 of an Act concerning revenue, passed by the Legislative Assembly in 1891 (Sess. Laws of 1891, p. 104), except that the words "by this Act" were used in place of the words "by this title." This was a general revenue measure covering the entire subject of the assessment, *354 levy and collection of taxes for the support of the state and county governments. This section was incorporated in the Political Code of 1895 as section 3827, except that the words "by this Act" were changed to read "by this Title," and the Title referred to embraced the entire general law relative to raising revenue for state and county purposes. In the Revised Codes of 1907 the section appears as 2600 of the Political Code, and is embraced in Part III, Title XII, which relates only to the levy and collection of revenue for state and county purposes. In this same Code the original law relative to irrigation districts, which was superseded by Chapter 146 of the Session Laws of 1909,supra, appears under Title X of Part III, being sections 2309 to 2393, inclusive. In the Revised Codes of 1921 the section appears in Part III of the Political Code, which embraces Chapters 157 to 191, inclusive, which cover the same subject mentioned in the Act of 1891 and the Codes of 1895 and 1907 above referred to; whereas the law relative to irrigation districts is found in Part IV, Chapters 29 to 38, inclusive, sections 7166 to 7264, inclusive, of the Civil Code.
From the foregoing it appears that the language of section 2152, upon which counsel rely, has reference only to the lien created by the general revenue laws of the state, and has no application to special taxes or assessments levied by an irrigation district.
Our conclusion is that, in the collection of a tax or assessment levied by an irrigation district for the payment of interest on bonds issued by it, the county treasurer is not authorized to seize and sell personal property belonging to one who has allowed such tax or assessment levied against his land in the district to become delinquent, but must follow the procedure indicated by Chapter 173, Part III, Political Code, Revised Codes of 1921, as amended.
This renders it unnecessary to consider the other interesting questions discussed by counsel in their briefs. *355
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the district court, with direction to dismiss the proceeding.
Reversed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES HOLLOWAY, GALEN and MATTHEWS concur.
Rehearing denied November 6, 1925.