State ex rel. Wilson v. Mastin

103 Mo. 508 | Mo. | 1890

Barclay, J.

The tax bills, in an action of this nature, are, by statute, prima facie evidence that the amount claimed therein is just and correct. R. S. 1889, sec. 7682, same as sec. 6837 in the revision of 1879. Such bills, duly authenticated, were admitted in evidence, without objection, indicating as due the amount of taxes for which the trial court ultimately gave the judgment for plaintiff now before us for review. It devolved on defendants (after the bills were thus received in evidence) to show, if possible, that the charge they purported to create upon the taxable property, described therein, was in some respect illegal.

■ It appears that a judgment was recovered, in 1880, in the United States circuit court for the western district of Missouri, upon certain municipal bonds of the “taxing district of Westport,” dated in 1871, which judgment remaining unsatisfied, a mandamus afterwards went from that court directing the county court of Jackson county to levy a special tax to satisfy it. After the alternative writ, proceedings were taken in the circuit court of Jackson county, under sections 6798 to 6803 (_ R. S. 1879, now 7653-7654, of 1889 ), in which that'court found that the levy was necessary, and that the assessment, levy and collection of the tax would not be in conflict with the constitution and laws of this state, and ordered the county court to assess, levy and collect it. In obedience to this order the county court made the assessment and levy upon the property chargeable with the tax for an amount necessary to comply with the mandamus. This is the tax which is challenged.

It should be observed at once, as a premise of vital importance in the consideration of the case, that defendants concede the validity of the bonds, and of the judgment given upon them in the federal court. This admission is expressly made. Indeed, it is difficult to see how they could successfully maintain any other position in that regard, since defendants, Thos. EL and *512John J. Mastín, were among those who, in 1871, signed the petition to the county court, requesting an election to determine whether the subscription should be made and the bonds issued therefor (payable at the banking house of John J. Mastín & Co. at Kansas City, Missouri), as was afterwards done, in June of that year, upon the affirmative vote of the citizens of the taxing district of Westport. Cross v City of Kansas (1886), 90 Mo. 16; Daniels v. Tearney (1880), 102 U. S. 415.

The contention of defendants is that the act, authorizing the subscription in aid of the street railroad, only sanctioned a tax of one-half of one per cent. (Sess. Acts, 1871, p. 197), whereas the tax levy in question is for one and one-half per cent.

The record does not disclose the assessment on which the disputed levy is predicated or otherwise furnish the facts from which we can determine what sum it would realize It must hence be assumed, by reason of the presumption of correctness of official action, in the absence of evidence to the contrary (Rutherford v. Hamilton (1888), 97 Mo. 543), that the amount of the levy is not greater than necessary to meet the indebtedness to which it is intended to be applied.

It should be noted that the act relating to West-port ( above cited) made no provision whatever for the issue of bonds in payment of the subscription. Such issue can only be supported under the terms of the “township aid act” (Sess. Acts, 1868, p. 92), to which a reference is made in the second section of the West-port act mentioned. It was so held by the federal court on the same facts. Henderson v. Jackson Co. (1881), 2 McCrary, 615. But, if the bonds and the judgment upon them are valid (as is conceded by defendants), the same statutory authority, which gives validity to the bonds, expressly sanctions the tax here sought to be imposed to meet them. If, therefore, defendants petitioned the county court in the first instance for the issue of these very bonds, and especially if they, at the *513present time, admit their binding force and the validity of the judgment thereon, it would seem necessarily to follow that the levy in question is valid as to them, • whatever the opinion of the court might be as to the constitutional power of the municipality to put the bonds in circulation, if that question were otherwise presented as an original one. Ferguson v. Landram (1868), 5 Bush, 230 ; Cross v. City of Kansas, 90 Mo. 16. The bonds and the tax to meet them are referable to a common source of authority, namely, the township aid act of 1868, and if the former are admitted to be valid, by virtue of that statute, the tax is equally valid under its provisions.

As the indebtedness, which this . tax is intended to discharge, antedates the adoption of the present constitution, no question arises, on this record, concerning the application to the present case of its limitations upon municipal taxation. Const. 1875, art. 10, sec. 11.

In view of the somewhat peculiar state of facts here presented, we entertain no doubt that the taxable property of the defendants within the district mentioned is justly chargeable with the tax in question.

The circuit court so ruled, and we all agree to affirm its judgment.

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