114 Mo. 1 | Mo. | 1893
This is an action to enforce the lien of the state for certain taxes alleged to be due and owing on certain real estate belonging to defendant in Jackson county. The taxes for which the action is brought are for the years 1886, 1887 and 1888.
The petition contains ten counts, but, inasmuch as the court rendered a final judgment for defendant on the sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth counts and plaintiff voluntarily dismissed as to the tenth count, the
The first, second and third counts declare for taxes of 1886, 1887 and 1888, respectively, on property described in the assessment, tax bill and petition as “the undivided half of Gilliss’ addition to the City of Kansas, Jackson county, Missouri, except all that part thereof returned to and assessed by the state board of equalisation.” The fourth and fifth counts seek to collect taxes for the years 1886 and 1887, respectively,’ on property described in the assessment and tax bill, as “All lots 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10, block 28, lying outside of the right of tvay, West Kansas addition number 1,” and in the petition in the same manner, with the addition of the words, “of defendant,” after “right of way.”
The answer was a general denial of each and every count. A jury was waived and the cause tried to the court as a jury.
For a better understanding the discussion will apply to the taxes on each tract separately.
Considering then first, the first three counts. The action is for the taxes of 1886, ’87, and ’88, on “the undivided half of Gilliss’ addition to the city of Kansas, in Jackson county, Missouri, except all that part thereof, returned to and assessed by the state board of equalization.” At the trial the defendant objected to any evidence in support of the petition because the description in the petition was too vague and indefinite to support a tax or judgment therefor. This objection was overruled. Then plaintiff offered a tax bill certified by the collector containing the same description. Defendant renewed its objection to the evidence as too uncertain, indefinite and vague to sustain a judgment and it was overruled. Plaintiff
The plaintiff offered in evidence the printed journals of the state board of equalization which showed that for each of the years 1886, 1887 and 1888, said board had assessed as property of defendant in Kansas township, Kansas City, three tenths of a mile of track at a valuation of $13,024.90 per mile and buildings at $4,000 for the year 1886 and the same property at substantially the same valuation in 1887 and 1888.
I. By section 7718 of the Revised Statutes of 1889, railroad companies are required to annually return to the state auditor in detail the total length of their road un this state, including branch or leased roads, the length of double and side-tracks, with depots, water-tanks and turn tables; the mileage of road and sidetracks in each county, township, city, town or village through which it is located, also all rolling stock. By section 7728 . all railroad property, both real and personal, not described in section 7718 is subject to local assessment and taxation, in the several counties, cities, towns and villages, in which it is situated “under the general revenue laws of the state and the municipal laws regulating the assessments of other local property in such counties, cities, incorporated
By section 7733 the county clerk is required to make out a separate tax book, to be known as the railroad tax book, in which he shall place first, the total valuation of the roadbed and rolling stock of each railroad company as equalized and apportioned to said county by the state board of equalization. “Second, a description of each tract of land, town lot or other real estate, including the machine and workshops and other buildings in numerical order,” etc. By section 7737 all the property of the railroad in the county is made liable for all the taxes assessed against such company in said county, and a lien is reserved to the state to enforce the payment thereof.
It is of course apparent that this action was commenced and prosecuted on the theory that the property described in the petition was subject to local assessment and taxation, and was not included in the return made to the state board of equalization, and by the laws relating to local assessment and taxation the validity of plaintiff’s proceedings leading up to this suit must be tested.
‘ ‘A valid assessment has invariably been held an essential prerequisite to the lawful exercise of the power of taxation.” Abbott v. Lindenbower, 42 Mo. 162. Now, by section 7728, we have seen this property, if local, as assumed by plaintiff, was required to be
In City of Jefferson v. Whipple, 71 Mo. 520, this court held that a description of a piece of real estate as “part of in-lot number 331 on the plat of said city,” was so vague and indefinite that no action could be maintained on it for the taxes. People v. Reat, 107 Ill. 581. The evidence in this case for the plaintiff shows that the property in the first three counts consists of city lots in an addition to the City of Kansas known as Grillis’s addition. These lots are numbered and their sizes indicated upon the plat of dedication. There are twenty-eight lots in the addition according to the plat on file.
The evidence further discloses that there were two railroad tracks of the Hannibal & St. Joseph railroad and two tracks of the Chicago & Alton and one track and a switch of the Chicago & Alton, all located upon and through this addition. Neither the assessment or the tax bill listed the lots by their number as required by the statute, but the whole addition is assessed together, “less that part assessed by the state board.”
The defendant contends that inasmuch as the state board kept no record of its findings it is impossible for defendant to know what part of its real estate entered into its assessment. The statute 7723 expressly authorizes the state board in assessing and equalizing railroad property to reach its conclusions upon its own knowledge. It is not bound by the returns of the company or the evidence it hears.
Now this court in State ex rel. v. Railroad, 89 Mo. 98, held that the property assessable by that board “embraced the road bed, all real property connected ivit-h it necessary to the operation of the road, and all the movable property of the company.” If, under this
This court has been very liberal in upholding descriptions in sheriff’s sales, but in each case it has based its decision upon some recital or reference to some fact “in pais” well known, by which the said tract could be identified, but it has uniformly declared the rule to be that the description and “the intention of the parties must be contained in the instrument or its references, expressed or implied, with such certainty that the locality of the land can be ascertained from it.”
Tested by this rule, we think the exception in this assessment and tax-bill rendered the whole too vague and uncertain to be the legitimate basis of a t2tx proceeding. “The result of the whole is that where the
We think the court most clearly erred in admitting parol evidence to supply a description of this property, and to make that description the basis of its action and judgment. The assessment is the basis of the tax. If the assessment is void the tax is void. ‘ ‘Assessment is, from its legal requirement and the necessity of preserving its evidence, a written entry,” and must depend upon the assessment rolls, as returned by the assessor and approved by the court. This the law requires to be authenticated, and has not left to the uncertain memory of witnesses or parol testimony. Philadelphia v. Miller, 49 Pa. St. 440. Upon the assessor is devolved the duty of making the assessments. Neither the county or circuit courts can assess property. Railroad v. Cass Co., 53 Mo. 17.
The judgment on the first three counts is therefore reversed.
This brings us then to a consideration of the fourth and fifth counts. The taxes are for the same years. 1886, 1887 and 1888. The property to be charged is “all of lots 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10, block 28, lying outside the right of %oay,” West Kansas addition number 1, Here the lots are assessed by numbers; but when we come to consider what part of these lots lies outside of the right of way, the uncertainty of the description increases, until it becomes absolutely unintelligible. Mr. Knight, the plaintiff’s witness, who surveyed these lots, testified they were all cut by railroad tracks, but whose tracks they were he could not tell. The lots
Every judgment or decree of a court of justice should be based upon established facts. While it is too often true that the evidence by which these facts must be found is not as satisfactory as could be desired, still no judgment should be based upon conjecture or speculation alone. It is the duty of the party demanding the judgment to furnish the evidence. This case furnishes a striking example. The attempt is to levy a local tax upon certain real estate over which the main tracks of a railroad leading into a great union depot are located, fifteen in number. Under the laws of this state the lands so occupied by the tracks are assessable by the state board of equalization, but the contention is, that some portion of these lots lie outside of the right of way and hence are assessable by local authorities. This the company denies. Without surveying or ascertaining in a definite manner otherwise, the assessor lists all these lots in a group in defiance of the statute, and then excepts “right of way.,; Now, right of way, of course, is the land occupied for the easement, but it has no fixed definite width in our law. Railroad •companies may condemn generally a strip one hundred feet wide in the country, but not necessarily so much in a city, nor are they restricted to any number of feet for terminal facilities for a great road terminating at a great city like Kansas City, the great distributing point for both freight and passenger traffic between the east •and the west. Hence, this exception is utterly uncertain without extrinsic aid. But it is when we seek the aid of a surveyor to clear .up this uncertainty that it becomes apparent that the assessor himself had no conception of the quantity and location of the portion he sought to assess for local purposes. The assessment and tax bill were uncertain and vague and the testimony