63 Tex. 533 | Tex. | 1885
The question whether the legislature could lawfully confer power upon the city of Houston to cause its
The charter of the city of Houston provides that whenever, by a vote of two-thirds of the aldermen, it shall be declared necessary for the public interest to improve any street, a resolution shall be passed designating the street, or portions thereof, to be improved, the nature of the improvement to be made, and the material to be used, after which the mayor is required to have plans and specifications of such improvement to be made by the city engineer.
These plans and specifications, after being approved by the city council, are required to be advertised with the resolution before mentioned, and bids solicited for the construction of the work.
The charter further provides that, “after a bid for the construction of such improvement shall have been accepted by the council, it shall be the duty of the mayor to cause to be prepared by the city engineer a roll showing the number of lots and blocks fronting on such street, alley or avenue to be improved, the names of the owner or owners of each lot, part lot or block, and if unknown it shall be stated, the number of feet frontage owned separately by each person or jointly with others, the cost per square foot frontage of such improvement, and the total proportional cost of such improvement necessary to be paid by each property owner fronting thereon. The correctness of said roll shall be certified to by the city engineer, and the roll submitted to the council for its approval. If the roll is approved by the city council the sum of money therein stated and assessed against each property owner, or against one or more property owners jointly, shall be a tax against such owner or owners, and a lien, charge and incumbrance upon the property so held and owned by each.”
Ho other notice than such as is thus given to the property owner being required by the charter, for the reasons given in the case of Adams v. Fisher, before referred to, and in the cases therein cited, we are of the opinion that the assessment was legally made without further notice.
The averments of the petition as to the advertisement made of plans, specifications, resolutions, and solicitation for bids are general,
We, however, deem it proper to say, that in cases of inprovements made under the twenty-third section of the charter, where the cost of the improvements exceeds one thousand dollars, the provisions of section 40 are applicable, and must be complied with.
The first, third and fifth assignments need not be further considered.
The second assignment is:
“ The court erred in overruling defendant’s general demurrer, and first and second special exceptions (so called), because it does not appear from said petition that plaintiffs have any right or authority to maintain this suit, since that portion of said charter attempting to farm out the collection of said tax by authorizing the contractor making such improvements, or his assignee, to collect said tax, or to enforce the collection of the same, is contrary to the provisions of the constitution of this state, and therefore void.”
The charter provides that: “ The sum assessed against each property owner on said roll shall be divided into two equal parts, one to be payable when the improvements contracted to be made on each respective block shall be completed, and the balance shall be due six months thereafter; for such sums of money certificates shall be prepared and issued, signed by the mayor and attested by the city-secretary and treasurer under his official seal; each certificate shall show upon its face the amount for which it is drawn, the name of the property owner from whom the tax is owing, the number of feet frontage, and the number of the lot or lots and block upon which said sum of money is a lien; that said sum of money is a tax against the property owner named, and a lien upon the property described; the date when it will be payable; that it is issued for street paving, naming the street, the date of the resolution authorizing the street to be paved or improved, and that it was issued by authority of this section of the charter. Such certificates, when so issued, shall be delivered to the contractor or person authorized by him to receive the same, as follows: One certificate for one-half the sum assessed against each property owner, when the respective block in which such owner’s property is situated shall have been completed, and one certificate for the balance upon the completion of the contract, and the acceptance of the work by the mayor. Such certificate shall bear interest from the date thereof, at the rate
This action was brought on two certificates issued under this provision of the charter.
Article II of the constitution, to which appellant refers, certainly has no bearing upon the question presented by the assignment; nor can section 3 of article XIII, when considered in connection with the several sections of article XI, have any bearing upon the question. We see no valid objection to the maintenance of this action by the contractor, as fully as the city might have done had the work been done under its own direction and management, and not by a contractor, and especialty so when the law expressly authorizes the owner of such a certificate to sue.
This seems to be not an uncommon mode for collecting such assessments. Cooley on Taxation, 470; Chambers v. Satterlee, 40 Cal., 499; Taylor v. Palmer, 31 Cal., 248; N. I. R. R. Co. v. Connelly, 10 Ohio St., 160; City v. Hardy, 35 Mo., 264; City v. Armstrong, 37 Mo., 33; City v. Coons, 38 Mo., 48.
The fourth assignment is:
“The court erred in overruling defendant’s general demurrer and third special exception (so called) because it appears that the whole of said tax was levied on all of said three lots in gross, and a lien upon all of them jointly for the full amount of said tax was attempted to be fixed thereby, instead of said tax being apportioned among each of said lots respectively, and a separate lien fixed on each of said lots for its proportionate share of said tax, as required by the terms of said charter and by the provisions of the constitution of the state of Texas.”
We are not referred to any provision of the constitution which deprives the legislature of the power to impose a lien upon all the property a person may own abutting on a street or part of a street improved, to secure the payment of an assessment for such improvement.
The charter does not provide that the lien shall be imposed upon each particular lot, when one person owns more than one, for its proportion of the entire cost of the improvement, but requires the
The sixth assignment is:
“ Because the court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s exceptions to so much of defendant’s answer as set up that the costs of the improvement for which the suit was brought exceeded, in connection with the general taxes on said lots, the sum of two and one-half cents on the dollar of the value of said property,”
The answer alleged that the state, county and city tax levied on the lots, against which a lien is sought to be enforced in this case, amounted to two per cent, on their value, and that the assessment amounted to about two and a half per cent, on the value.
The charter of the city of Houston authorizes the collection of a tax not exceeding two per cent, ad valorem upon all real and personal property in the city not exempt from taxation, and also contains, before referred to, provisions for assessments.
If section 5, article 'XI, of the constitution has application to assessments for local improvement, then the assessment by force of that section would be invalid under the averments of the answer; for, within itself, it would amount to more than the charter of the city permits it to collect, the legislature having limited its general power of taxation to the levy and collection of a tax less than the maximum tax permitted by the constitution.
It then becomes necessary to inquire whether the section of the constitution referred to applies to assessments of the character of that involved in this case.
This section of the constitution bears evidence that it has reference to such taxes as are annually collected for the ordinary purposes of municipal government — to taxes based upon an estimation of the value of the entire taxable property in a city, from which an estimate is made of the per cent, of-taxation, on this value, which will raise, the sum necessary to be raised to meet the current annual want.
Assessments are not of that character, but are charges imposed for purposes which do not necessarily require that they be imposed annually, or with reference to time; nor are they usually based upon a percentage of the value of the taxable property of a city, but
The word “ taxes ” is defined as “ the enforced proportional contribution of persons and property levied by authority of the state for the support of government and for all public needs.”
As thus defined, assessments are or may be taxes, but do the provisions of the constitution of this state embrace assessments in the limitations imposed on the power of taxation?
The words “ tax,” “ taxes ” and “ taxation,” as used in the constitution, without some qualifying word in reference to property, evidently mean an ad valorem tax, taxes or taxation. Section 1, article 8, declares that “ all property in this state, whether owned by natural persons or corporations, shall be taxed in proportion to its value,” and to this the preceding provision, that “ taxation shall be equal and uniform,” applies.
It also declares that “ the legislature may impose a poll tax,” and that “ it may also impose occupation taxes,” and that “ it may also tax incomes;” but all these methods of taxation are subject to the rule requiring equality and uniformity, which, in reference to occupation taxes, is regulated by the class of subjects taxed. Such being the use of the words in article 7 of the constitution, when in no way qualified, it is to be presumed that they are used in the same sense in. article 11.
The words, when found in article 11, must refer to such taxation as the rule of equality and uniformity can, under well settled and long recognized rules, be applied to. It is also to be presumed, when similar language was found in former constitutions, that it was intended to use the same language in the present constitution in the sense which had been given to it in the courts of the state. The language used in the constitution preceding the one now in force was in most respects identical with that used in the present, and, prior to its adoption, it was settled that taxes for local improvements, usually termed assessments, were not subject to the rule requiring equality and uniformity Roundtree v. City of Galveston, 42 Tex., 626.
It must then be held that as the taxes referred to in the constitution, and upon which limitations are placed, are all taxes subject to the rule of equality and uniformity, that assessments for local improvement of streets and like works, by which benefit results to con
It is well settled that the rule that “ taxation shall be equal and uniform” has not been, and in the nature of things cannot be, applied to such local assessments. Roundtree v. City of Galveston, 42 Tex., 626; Allen v. Galveston, 55 Tex., 320; Cooley on Taxation, 444, 446; Dillon on Mun. Corp., 777, 778, 755 et seq.
The result of the cases bearing upon the question whether, under the words “ tax,” “ taxes ” and “ taxation,” assessments for local improvements are embraced, is thus stated: “ Some of the cases assume the narrow ground that the constitutional provisions refer solely to state taxation, or that, if they go further, to the general taxation for state, county and municipal purposes; but the view generally expressed is, that though assessments are laid under the taxing power, and are in a certain sense taxes, yet that they are a peculiar class of taxes and not within the meaning of that term as it is usually employed in our constitutions and statutes.” Cooley on Taxation, 446. The author here cites a large number of cases illustrating the question.
The same question is considered by the same author, and by another equally distinguished by his learning (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 618, 619; Dillon on Muncipal Corporations, 754-757, 777, 778), and in the notes to these citations give very full reference to cases illustrating the views of different courts upon the question, which, for the want of time, cannot be reviewed in this opinion.
The power of the legislature over the ■ subject of assessments for local improvements is to be measured by its own will, in the absence of some constitutional restriction; and we find none such in the constitution of this state, where the power is used for the purposes for which that method of taxation has so long been deemed lawful.
The eighth assignment is:
“ Because the court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff, since the evidence introduced on said trial was insufficient to prove the necessary allegations in said petition, in this: (1) No evidence was introduced showing that said certificates were issued in accordance with the provisions of section 23 of said charter. (2) No evidence was introduced showing that said contract made by G. A. Hill & Co. with said city was in fact assigned to plaintiffs, or that such assignment was made with the consent of said city, as alleged (3) No evidence was introduced showing that either before or after*543 the issuance of said certificates, or before or after the delivery of the same, said contract was performed in good faith and completed, and the work accepted by the mayor, as required by said charter. (4) Because no evidence was introduced showing that defendant is or ever was the owner of said three lots.”
This action, as before stated, was brought on two certificates issued in accordance with the requirements, as to form and substance, of that part of section 23 of the charter of the city of Houston which is hereinbefore set out.
The petition avers a substantial compliance with the requisitions of that section of the charter, and the performance of the street work, to entitle the appellees to the certificate; but there was no proof whatever to support the averments of the petition except such as the certificates alone under the law furnish.
The certificates purport to have been signed by the officers required by the charter to sign them, and purport to be under the corporate seal of the city of Houston, and they come from the hands of the persons whose right they evidence; and this, we are of the opinion, was sufficient to show that they were signed and delivered by the proper officers of the city to the appellees, which was an issuance. There was no objection urged to their introduction on the ground that there was no proof of the genuineness of the signatures of the mayor and secretary and treasurer.
The sole objection went to the fact that there was no proof, outside of that furnished by the certificates themselves, that the facts existed which authorized the officers to issue the certificates.
We have, then, the naked question, whether the declaration contained in the charter, that “ such certificate, . . . when issued in accordance with the provisions of this section, shall be evidence that all the requirements and prerequisites of the law have been complied with,” shall be given the effect which the ordinary use of the language used would entitle it to.
The word “ evidence,” as here used, is used in the sense of the word “ proof,” but the statute does not declare that it shall be conclusive evidence. It means, then, that the certificate shall be $rim.a facie proof of some fact or facts. What are those facts ? It is given for the express purpose of evidencing the liability of the appellant, and his duty to pay to the appellees the sum of money named in the certificate.
Upon what did the liability of the appellant to pay, and the right of the appellees to receive, the sums named in the certificates depend?
These were the “requirements and prerequisites of the law”-—■ - the things essential to and preceding the liability of the appellant’s property and the appellees’ right to receive the named sums, and to enforce the payment of the same through the lien given by the charter.
The charter declares that the certificate, when issued in accordance with the provisions of this section, shall be evidence that all these things existed prior to the issuance of the certificate.
The contents of the certificates are most minutely prescribed in the charter, and we see no good reason for holding that' they were not prima facie evidence of every fact necessary to be proved by the appellees to maintain their action.
This, however, did not interfere with the right of the appellant to defeat the case thus made, by opposing evidence, but he offered none.
The proposition of the appellant is, that it was incumbent on the appellees to prove every fact which entitled them to the certificates, and gave power to the officers to issue them. That the certificates only become evidence when the requirements and prerequisites of the law have been otherwise proved; if this were true, as evidence the certificates would be valueless, for they could only be used when they were no longer necessary.
In support of this proposition we are referred to the line of decisions made under the act of 1848 (H. D., 3145), beginning with the case of Yenda v. Wheeler, 9 Tex., 409.
That statute provided that a tax collector’s deed, “ when recorded according to law, shall boprima facie evidence that all the requisitions of the law have been complied with in making such sale; ” and the cases referred to very properly held, under this statute, that the deed was only primeo facie evidence of the regularity of the sale, but not evidence of the facts which would give power to sell. The statute limited the operation of the deed in this respect.
Such, however, is not the character of the statute under consideration.
Many instances are found in the books in which tax deeds and other instruments, under statutes so declaring, have been held prima facie evidence of facts which the law declares they shall so evi
Where certificates issued by a city engineer were delivered to a contractor who had made local improvements, as the evidence of his right to recover against the property charged, under a statute very similar to that before us, declaring the certificate prima facie evidence of the contractor’s right to recover, such was held to be the effect of the certificate. City v. Hardy, 35 Mo., 264; City v. Armstrong, 37 Mo., 33; City v. Coons, 38 Mo., 48.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered March 27, 1885.]