No. 877 | Utah | Feb 14, 1898

Miner, J.

(after stating the facts):

The above are substantially the facts as we glean them from the transcript. The abstract in this case is very defective, and does not contain material and important testimony given upon the trial. This court has been *334compelled to glean many of tbe facts from recitals and testimony contained in a poorly-executed type-written transcript. In many respects testimony as to important facts governing the decision in the case has been left out, or so loosely and imperfectly presented that it hás caused the court trouble and annoyance to ascertain what the actual facts are. • This doubtless arose through mistake, as similar mistakes have arisen in many other cases, and we call attention to the fact now that such errors may be avoided in the future in the preparation of abstracts. The abstract should contain such parts of the record and testimony, under the rules, as will fairly present the case for review in this court. Anything else renders it more troublesome and injurious than if no abstract were filed. After trial, the court found that when the assessment was made, on the 18th day of February, 1897, the defendant had no cause to believe that the plaintiff was likely to avoid the payment of the taxes on the sheep by disposing of them, or by removal thereof from the state; that defendant’s taking was wrongful; and as conclusions of law found that the defendant had no authority in law for assessing said sheep on the 18th day of February, 1897, nor at any time prior to the first day of March, 1897; that no justification was shown, and that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for the value of the sheep. Chapter 10, entitled “Revenue,” approved February 12, 1896, (Sess. Laws 1896, p. 86, § 4), reads as follows: “All real property in this state shall be listed on said blanks and assessed as owned and valued on the first Monday in March at 12 o’clock m., of the year in which the assessment is made. All personal property shall be listed and assessed any time after January 1st of each year and valued as of the date of its assessment.” Later, at the same session, the *335legislature passed the “Revenue Act” found on page 423, Sess. Laws 1896. This act was approved April 5, 1896. Included in such act is section 14, found on page 428, which reads as follows: “The assessor must, before the first Monday in June in each year, ascertain the names of all taxable inhabitants and all property in his county, subject to taxation, except such as is required to be assessed by the state board of equalization, and must assess such property to the person by whom it wrns owned or claimed, or in whose possession or control it was at 12 o’clock m. of the first Monday of March next preceding: provided, that nothing herein shall be taken to prevent the.assessor from assessing any personal property at any time before the first Monday in March in case he shall have cause to believe that the owner thereof is likely to avoid payment of the tax thereon by disposing of the property or by the removal thereof from the state.” Chapter 129, Sess. Laws 1896, enacted and approved after chapter 10 wras approved, is a revision of the revenue laws, of the state, and expressly repeals all laws in conflict therewith. Section 14 of this chapter is in conflict with chapter 10, inasmuch as section 14 requires the assessor, before the first Monday in June, to ascertain the names of all taxable inhabitants, and all property in the county, and assess the same to such persons by whom it was owned, etc., on the first Monday of March next preceding, and in certain specified cases and under certain circumstances permits the assessor to assess the property before the first Monday in March. Section 10 requires all personal property to be listed and assessed at any time after January 1st of each year, and to be valued at the date of the assessment, and all real property to be listed and assessed on the first Monday of March in each year. To permit both sections to remain in force would *336create confusion and uncertainty in assessment, as well as in the rights of persons resulting therefrom.

The next question to be determined is whether the assessor had jurisdiction, under the statute, to assess property on the 18th day of February, and to collect the tax in question by a sale of the property, under the facts shown. If the assessor had jurisdiction, and exercised his honest judgment in assessing and collecting the tax, If he acted in the performance of an official duty, and confined himself within the limits of the statute, and if his motives were honest, he should not” be held civilly liable, although he may have erred in his judgment. Discretion, when vested in an officer, however, does not mean absolute or arbitrary power. The discretion must be exercised in a reasonable manner, and not maliciously, wantonly, and arbitrarily to the wrong and injury of another. This is held to be the rule applicable to public officers who are bound to exercise their deliberate judgment in the discharge of their official duties, and is applicable to all inferior magistrates and others called to the performance of functions in their nature and character quasi judicial, while acting within their jurisdiction and the legal scope of their powers as fixed by law. City of Eureka v. Wilson, 15 Utah 53" court="Utah" date_filed="1897-02-11" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/eureka-city-v-wilson-8654061?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8654061">15 Utah 53; Mechem Pub Off. §§ 636-639; Kendall v. Stokes, 3 How. 86; Bish. Uoncont. Law §§ 785-788; Easton v. Calendar, 11 Wend. 90.

This brings us to the inquiry as to whether the defend- . ant, in assessing, levying upon, and selling the property in question, was acting with jurisdiction, as provided by the statute. Section 39, p. 435, of the revenue laws, reads as follows: “Where horses, mules, cattle or sheep are assessed in the county in which the owner of said stock is a resident, the assessor of said county is hereby authorized, at the time of said assessment, to make and deliver to *337said owner a certificate of said assessment, which certificate, upon being delivered to any assessor, shall exempt said stock from further assessment. Provided, that if said stock are summered and wintered in another county, the county where said stock are assessed shall on application of the county in which such stock have summered or wintered, remit half of the county tax to the county making the application.” The testimony shows that some time before the sale of the sheep the defendant was furnished with a certificate of assessment of these sheep for the year 1897, signed by the deputy assessor of Utah county, and was duly notified that the owner was a resident of Utah county, and that he had paid the taxes on the sheep for the year 1896. The delivery to the defendant of this certificate of the assessment by the assessor of Utah county under section 39 exempted the stock from further assessment or sale for taxes in any other county for that year, and such other county where such stock were wintering or summering would have a right, on proper application to the county where the stock were assessed, to its proportionate share of the county tax so assessed. The evident object of the several provisions of the statute was to render such assessment uniform, and the collection of the tax certain, and at the same time allow the county where the stock were wintered or summered its proportion of the tax assessed upon the owner in the county where he resides. Section 34 provides, among other things, that, where stock are wintered in one county and summered in another, or if they range interchangeably in two contiguous counties the larger part of the year, when the owner is not a resident of either county, the tax may be assessed and collected in either county where the assessment is first made. In order to make an assessment under that section *338before the first Monday in March, the facts, as stated in section 34, should appear to exist, and the assessor must also have cause to believe that the owner is likely to avoid the payment of the tax by disposing of the property, or by removal thereof from the state, as provided in section 14. Under section 35, if the stock were owned in one county, summered in another, and taken into another to be wintered before .such time as they could be assessed in the county where owned, the assessor of the county where the stock were transient should list the same, and transmit the list to the assessor of the county where the stock is owned, and the duty of such assessor would be to assess the stock in the county where the owner lived, including an assessment for a special school tax as provided in this section. Under section 14 of this act it would be competent for the assessor to assess any personal property at any time before the first Monday in March, in case he should have cause to believe that the owner is likely to avoid the1 payment of the tax by disposing of the property, or by removal thereof from the state. At the time this assessment was made the assessor- had simply heard that the sheep would be moved onto the reservation in March following. He says he had no information that the sheep were to be moved out of the state. He did not understand that the owner was going to dispose of the property to avoid the payment of the tax. The defendant says that he acted simply because he believed the owner was not in the habit of paying his taxes. Such officer could hardly be said to have such “cause to believe” when he is satisfied that the owner will not dispose of the property, or remove it from the state to avoid such payment. The assessor should not assume that a fact or “cause” exists when he knows or has good reason *339to believe to the contrary. The “cause to believe” should be a good cause to believe, and based upon some fact within his knowledge, or upon some reliable information that carries conviction to his mind as an honest man, that the owner is likely to avoid the payment of the tax by disposing of the property or by removing it from the state. Neither could such officer have just cause to assess or sell the property when it consists of animals that he knows are owned in another county by a party who paid the taxes for the previous year, and that the assessor of the county where the owner resides has issued a certificate of assessment to the owner under section 39, reciting that the same property has been assessed for the same year, and that the stock is exempt from further assessment. The error committed by the assessor was not an error of judgment, when acting with jurisdiction, but an error of law, when acting without jurisdiction. We hold that the assessment and sale were illegal, and that the assessor had no jurisdiction, under the statute, to assess and sell the property under his assessment of February 18, 1897.

The record also shows great informality in the sale. It appears that a flock of 3,500. sheep were levied upon to satisfy the tax and costs; that enough sheep in the flock, without specifying the number or bind, were offered for sale to satisfy the same; that enough sheep were sold at 75 cents per head* to bring the desired amount, and that this required 152 sheep. These sheep were not separated from the rest of the flock, but sold indiscriminately in the flock, and a bill of sale executed by the assessor to the purchaser, who afterwards selected and separated 152 sheep from the flock and drove them away. This proceeding was entirely improper and cannot be upheld, even if the purchaser consented to it. *340No question as to the constitutionality or legality of tbe statute has been raised by either party, and therefore that question is not before this court. We find no error in the findings, decree, or judgment. The case is remanded to the district court, with directions to affirm the5 judgment appealed from.

ZaNe, C. J., and Bartch, J., concur.
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