69 Iowa 648 | Iowa | 1886
I. The agreed statement of facts, so far as it need be stated, is in the following language: “That the plaintiffs are residents of the township of Emmetsburg, in Palo Alto county, Iowa, and at the dates hereinafter mentioned were a firm composed of T. H. Tobin and J. F. Neary; and in the year 1881 said firm was the owner of lot No. eleven, (11) in block No. 26, in Emmetsburg, Iowa, and of the stock of goods in the store building thereon, which were subject to taxation for the year 1881, at the assessed value of $2,800; that E. J. Hartshorn is the treasurer of Palo Alto county, Iowa; that the Cedar Rapids, Iowa Falls and Northwestern Railroad Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Iowa; that in the year 1881 a five per cent tax was voted and levied upon all the taxable property in said township of Emmetsburg, Palo Alto county, Iowa, to aid in the construction of said Cedar Rapids, Iowa
The court below determined, and so decreed, that there is due and collectible upon the tax, the penalty, as provided by Code, § 866, from the date the tax became delinquent up to the first day of May, 1884, in whole amounting to sixty-nine per centum of the original tax, and interest upon the tax and penalty at the rate of six per centum per annum, from May 12, 1884, to the date of the judgment. All other penalties and interest were canceled and set aside.
the repeal. But the beneficiary of the tax had no vested right in penalties which might have accrued had there been no repeal of the statute authorizing the penalties upon taxes in aid of railroads, and the enactment of a provision taking away the penalties for the non-payment of such taxes. Laws 1884, ch. 194. As defendant had no vested right in the penalty because it had not accrued, it was competent for the legislature to repeal the statute authorizing it. While the penalty, when it accrued, became a part of the consideration inducing the corporation to build the railroad, it pertained to the remedy of the corporation; being the means to hasten or enforce the payment of the tax. See City of Burlington v. Burlington & M. R. R'y Co., 41 Iowa, 134. It vras therefore within the power of the legislature to take it away.
IT. Counsel for defendants insist that, as chapter 194 of the Laws of 1884, did not, by its terms, take effect until the second Tuesday of November, 1884, the penalties were not taken away, for the reason that the penalties provided by the substitute could not have applied to taxes bearing penalties under the statute which was in force until November. This is counsel’s position, as we understand it. But, whatever it may be, it is not sound, for the reason that penalties upon five per cent railroad taxes were not imposed by the statute repealed by chapter 194, Laws 1884, but by chapter 123, Laws 1876, which was repealed by chapter 159, Laws 1884, which took effect April 9, 18S4.
The foregoing discussion disposes of all questions in the case.
The judgment of the district court is, on both appeals,
Affirmed.