102 Minn. 50 | Minn. | 1907
This is a proceeding to enforce the collection of personal taxes for the year 1904 assessed against the defendant. The answer of the defendant was to the effect that its personal property in the year 1904 was assessed by the city assessor of the city of Minneapolis, and equalized by the city and county boards, respectively, at $247,490, which the state board of equalization assumed to increase to $296,820, and that this action of the state board, by reason of omissions and irregularities on its part and that of its secretary, was void. It, however, made no claim, by answer or otherwise, that it did not have taxable
On the trial the state introduced in evidence the list of delinquent personal property taxes in the county of Hennepin for the year 1904, which showed a levy of personal property taxes for that year against the defendant in the sum of $8,518.73. This list established a prima facie case for the state; it being prima facie evidence that all the provisions of law in relation to the assessment and levy of the taxes had been complied with. Laws 1899, p. 285, c. 246, § 1. The burden, then, was upon the defendant, not only to show errors in the proceedings culminating in the levy of the taxes, but also to show that such errors resulted to its prejudice and that such taxes were unfairly or unequally assessed. R. L. 1905, § 896; G. S. 1894, § 1569; State v. Wm. Deering & Co., 56 Minn. 24, 57 N. W. 313.
This the defendant did not attempt to do, but it offered evidence which would require a finding that the formal and final record of the proceedings of the state board of equalization was not made until about January 1, 1905, and that the board adjourned October 11, 1904, and that immediately upon such adjournment the state auditor, as secretary of the board, transmitted to the auditor of the county of Hennepin an abstract of the proceedings of the board, specifying the changes made by the board in the valuation of each class of real and personal property in the county, which changes were made by the county auditor according to such abstract. The evidence shows that minutes, notes, and memoranda of the proceedings of the state board were made upon loose sheets of paper by the secretary or his deputy during its sessions. It was from such notes and memoranda that the final and formal record was made. Now, if it be conceded that the method in which the record of the state board was kept and finally made up was an irregularity, yet it does not follow that the irregularity invalidates the equalization, or constitutes a defense in this case. The defendant having failed to show that any irregularity or omission
Order affirmed.