State v. Ebbs

89 Mo. App. 95 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901

SMITH, P. J.

The defendant was prosecuted and convicted under an information based on section 3867, Eevised Statutes 1889. Tbe charge of tbe information was that, when requested by tbe assessor, defendant bad unlawfully and knowingly failed to give a true list of bis taxable property. Tbe defendant brings tbe case here for review on a writ of error.

Every person is required by section 7531, Eevised Statutes 1889, to make a list of bis property and to enter a true and correct statement thereof in a printed or written blank, signed, sworn to and delivered to tbe assessor. Section 3867 provides: “Every person who shall, when requested’ by tbe assessor, fail to give a true list of all bis taxable property, or take and subscribe to an oath or affirmation in that behalf as required by law, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor,” etc. Section 7537 further provides: “If any person shall,' with an intent to defraud, deliver to any assessor a false statement of bis property, etc., be shall be liable to be punished for perjury.”

At tbe trial,- tbe evidence introduced by tbe State tended to prove that tbe defendant, on November 4, 1896, made out and delivered to the county assessor tbe list which purported on its face to be that required by said section 7531, supra. Tbe defendant, it appears, owned a note for $1,700 which, at tbe time be delivered tbe list of bis taxable property, was hypothecated with a bank as collateral security for a loan. This note was not included in bis said tax list. He testified that it was dated a year earlier than be thought and that be did not find out different until tbe next spring after be delivered bis list *98to the assessor; that he was under the impression that he was not required to return it in his list for that year, but that on discovering his error he corrected it by adding it (the note) thereto. The defendant now contends that the offense, if such it was, is not within said section 3867, and therefore the prosecution must fail.

The general purpose and object of a statute is never to be overlooked in its construction and application, and it should always have a reasonable construction. Ross v. Kansas City, 111 Mo. 18. Statutes in pari materia are to be treated as embodied in one section and considered together in order to elucidate the legislative intent in their enactment. State v. Slover, 126 Mo. 652; St. Louis v. Howard, 119 Mo. 41. Though section 3867 is found in chapter 47 of the statute relating to crimes and punishments, while section 7537 is embraced in chapter 138 in relation to the assessment and collection of the revenue, they both touch the same subject, and therefore should be treated and considered in accordance with the rule just referred to.

It was the manifest intention of the Legislature in enacting these sections to provide for the punishment of any person who should attempt to avoid his just proportion of the burdens of taxation in any of the following cases:

1. Where he, when requested by the assessor, shall fail to give a true list of Ms taxable property.

2. Where he shall refuse to take and subscribe to an oath or affirmation to such list as required by section 7534.

3. Where, with an intent to defraud, he shall deliver to any assessor a false list of his taxable property, subscribed and sworn to.

The list which the assessor is authorized to request is that defined in said section 7531, and none other. If a person be requested by that officer to deliver to him such a tax list and *99he refuse to do so, he violates said section 3867. If, however, he pretends to comply with the request of the assessor and delivers to him a tax list subscribed and sworn to, as here, and that list does not contain a true and correct statement of his taxable property, then he is guilty of perjury and his case is within the purview of said section 7537.

It is most unreasonable to suppose that in a case where a person has willfully made out and delivered to the assessor a list of his taxable property, subscribed and sworn, which is not a true and correct statement thereof, that the Legislature intended by the enactment of said sections that such a person should escape the consequences of his criminal conduct by the payment of a mere fine as provided in said section 3867. • If such a list of taxable property, so subscribed and sworn to, be made in good faith and be the result of mistake, then there would be no offense under either section. The defendant, on the undisputed facts which the evidence tends to prove, was either guilty of perjury or nothing. No case is made' out by the evidence which is covered by the section on which the information was based.

The evidence of the State showed the defendant guilty, if guilty at all, under section 7537, while he was proceeded against tinder a different section — 3867. The defense denounced by the former is quite different from that denounced by the latter. Under one the offense is but a misdemeanor while under the other it is a felony. The element of fraud and corruption does not enter into the one while in the other it does. An indictment or information under one of these sections can not be sustained by evidence which would make out an offense under the other. Section 3867, on which the information was based, has no application to a case of this kind where the false tax list delivered to the assessor is subscribed .and sworn to. In all such cases the prosecution must be *100founded on the other section — 7537.

There were a number of other points discussed in the briefs of counsel but these need not be noticed since that hereinbefore determined by us is fatal to the whole case.

The judgment must accordingly be reversed and the defendant discharged.

All concur.