30 P. 689 | Nev. | 1892
The facts sufficiently appear in the opinion.
In this case there are cross appeals which will be considered together. The action was brought to recover taxes for the year 1889 upon the same lands as those under consideration in the cases of State v. CentralPac. R. Co.,
The only other question involved is that concerning a plea of estoppel by a former judgment, set up by the defendant.
By this plea, and the proofs, it appeared that an action had been commenced against the defendant to recover the taxes due upon this land, as well as a large amount of other property assessed to it in the same year; that upon the trial of that action the district attorney dismissed as to all of said lands, no evidence was offered concerning them, and the case then went to judgment upon the issues raised concerning the taxes due upon the other property. Does this constitute a bar to the maintenance of this action?
In actions between individuals, a single cause of action, either upon contract or for a tort, will support but one action. If a single cause is split up, and two or more actions brought upon it, a judgment entered in one of them is held to be res adjudicata as to the whole cause of action, and will be a bar to the maintenance of the others. (Freem. Judgm. Sec. 238; Black, Judgm. Sec. 734.) This is the general rule, not by reason of any statutory provision to that effect, but as a general principle of the common law, which, subject to certain exceptions unnecessary to be noticed here, is usually recognized and enforced.
This principle, however, like all common law rights which have not been perpetuated by our constitution or the constitution of the United States, is subject to legislative control and direction, and may be annulled, or certain cases excepted from its operation, at the pleasure of that body. It is claimed that this has been done by Gen. Stat. Sec. 1108 (re-enacted, Stat. 1891, p. 135), which after enumerating certain defenses which a defendant in an action to recover taxes may make by answer, and which do not include that of a former recovery, further provides that "no other answer shall be permitted."
On the other hand it is contended that the legislature has no power under the constitution to exclude anything in a tax action that would be available as a defense in other actions, and although there has never been any direct decision upon the point in this court, it must be admitted that it has several times been intimated that the legislature has no such power, and that the defense of a former recovery is as valid in such actions as in any other. We are of the opinion, however, that a careful consideration of the principles governing the assessment and *264 collection of taxes will show that in regard to some defenses it does have this right, while perhaps us to others it does not.
The right to collect revenue for the support of the government is one of the highest attributes of sovereignty, and belongs inherently to every political community. "The legislature of every free state will possess it under the general grant of the legislative power, whether particularly specified in the constitution among the powers to be exercised by it or not." (Cooley Const. Lim. 6 ed. 587.) Chief Justice Marshall, in the celebrated case ofMcCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 428, uses this language: "The power of taxing the people and their property is essential to the very existence of government, and may be legitimately exercised on the objects to which it is applicable to the utmost extent which the government may choose to carry it." This right to tax, which from necessity is inherent in every form of government, is vested with us in the legislature; and is unlimited, except as restricted by the constitution of our state or that of the United States. (Gibson v. Mason,
These principles being admitted, or established, we may direct our attention at once to the constitution, to ascertain whether any provision therein contained requires that the defense set up in this action shall be permitted, or forbids the legislature from excluding it.
It will be observed that the plea we are considering does not allege that the taxes sued for were not properly levied or assessed or a proper charge against the defendant — in fact we have determined that a part of them are proper — nor does it assert that they have been paid. The defense is one purely technical, and founded on what was clearly an irregularity upon the part of the district attorney in the management of the former case. The only suggestion made is that the statute excluding it is in conflict with section 8, art. 1, of the constitution of this state, which declares that "no person shall * * * be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." *265
But it may be confidently asserted that this provision is only applicable to a limited extent to a proceeding to collect taxes. It certainly does not mean that there must necessarily be a decree or judgment or any action of a court whatever, to authorize the legal taking of property for taxes. (State v. Allen, 2 McCord, 55, 60;McMillen v. Anderson,
A statute of the United States, providing for the imposition and collection of direct taxes, authorized the officer selling under summary process to issue a certificate to the purchaser which was to be prima facie
evidence of the regularity and validity of the tax sale, and of the title of the purchaser under it, and enacted that it should only be affected by proof that the lands were not subject to the tax, or that it had been paid previous to the the sale, or the land redeemed subsequently. This statute was reviewed in De Treville v. Smalls,
In Iowa, a statute providing for summary sales of land for taxes enacted that the deed issued upon such sale should be prima facie evidence of certain facts, and conclusive evidence of others, which, of course, had the effect of declaring that the latter facts should not constitute any defense in an action between the owner of the land and the purchaser at a tax sale. In passing upon the validity of such legislation, the court, inAllen v. Armstrong,
In Abbott v. Lindenbower,
In Gibbs v. Dortch,
In the cases of State v. Min. Co.,
Revenue — money is what the state needs and must have to maintain its credit and keep the machinery of government in motion. Taxes are assessed upon the property of the people for the purpose of obtaining it. While the constitution requires that property shall not be taken from the owner, either for taxes *270 or anything else without clue process of law, that provision, as applied to the collection of taxes, requires the observance only of the most essential and fundamental steps. While the rights of the individual must be protected, the government should not be unnecessarily hampered in its efforts to make collections, and certainly a law should not be declared to be beyond the power of the legislature, unless it appears without reasonable doubt that that body has exceeded the authority conferred upon it by the constitution. We know of no reason why a judgment entered for a part of a cause of action should not be a bar to another action, in tax cases as well as in others, except that the legislature has ordained otherwise, and in that respect the will of that body is supreme. Certainly it is to the interest of all that tax proceedings should be as simple, as inexpensive and as certain as possible, but as stated in De Treville v. Smalls, supra, and admitted by Judge Cooley (Cooley, Tax'n, 354), the history of legislation upon this subject exhibits a continual struggle between the legislatures and the courts — the former endeavoring to clear the matter from technicalities, and the latter hedging it about by judicial refinement. Our own state is no exception to this tendency, but we do not think it should be carried further in that direction. We think the power of that body to exclude the defense offered in this case is clear and unmistakable, and that it is the duty of the court to follow the law as so established.
The judgment and the orders overruling the motions for new trial are affirmed.