88 Tenn. 1 | Tenn. | 1889
Lead Opinion
The petitioner -applied for and obtained writs of certiorari and supersedeas. Upon motion, at the following term of the Circuit Court, his petition was dismissed. Iiis complaint is that the Tax Assessor of Grainger County has placed an excessive tax upon three parcels of land owned by him. He alleges that he made complaint before the Board of Equalization that his assessment was excessive, and produced and ' sought permission to examine witnesses to support his complaint; that the Board refused to allow him to examine these witnesses, or to grant him a subpoena for others that he proposed to bring before them; and that they adopted and approved the valuation fixed by the Assessor. The petition shows the ground upon which the Board refused to hear the witnesses, in that it states that they ruled that “ a complaining tax-payer had no right, under the law in such cases, to introduce evidence as to the value of his property claimed to bo excessively assessed, or -the Board any authority to hear and consider any evidence upon the subject, unless in the judgment of the Board justice demands that it should hear evidence, and then only such as the Board might see fit to call itself in its discretion.”
Petitioner then alleges that he prepared a bill of exceptions, which the Board refused to sign, and prayed an appeal to the Circuit Court, which
“That said Board of Equalization shall carefully examine and compare and equalize said assessments, and shall eliminate from the lists thereof all property exempt under this Act; and they are hereby empowered to hear and adjust complaints from any party feeling aggrieved on account of excessive assessments when in their judgment, justice-demands it, and to correct any and all errors arising from clerical mistakes, or otherwise; and the corrections made, if any, shall be entered upon the assessment book, without in any way altering the assessment lists, and the action of this Board as to valuation shall be final; and all complaints in this regard are hereby required to be made and acted upon by this Board during its session, which shall be from the first Monday to the third Monday in June. If complaint made is based on excessive values, said Board shall have the right to summon before them witnesses who shall be disinterested freeholders; and the sworn testimony of three such witnesses concerning same will be sufficient evidence upon which such Board may act.” The italics are ours.
It may be distinctly seen, from the plain words of the Act, that the legislative 'intention was that there should be no appeal or review, of the action of this Board upon the subject of valuations where*5 it has acted, upon a complaint. The law-maker has in so many words declared that its action in this regard “shall be final.” Where no right of appeal is given by the statute in express words or by necessary implication, an appeal will not lie, and it was therefore not error in the Board to refuse the appeal prayed for. Wade v. Murray, 2 Sneed, 50; W. A. Knight, ex parte, 3 Lea, 401.
But it is insisted that, where no appeal lies, the writ of certiorari may be used in lieu of or as a substitute for an appeal. Aid. VI., Sec. 10, of the State Constitution provides that: “The Judges or Justices of inferior courts of law and equity shall have power, in civil cases, to issue writs of certiorari to remove any cause, or the transcript of the record thereof, from any inferior jurisdiction into such court of law on sufficient cause, supported by oath or affirmation.”
What is “sufficient cause” must be defined by either statute or judicial decision. Judicial decision has established that where the law gives an appeal, and the party is deprived of it without any fault or negligence on his part, that is “sufficient cause,” if he shows in addition to it a meritorious case. History of a Lawsuit, Sec. 655 (old Ed.). But in the case before us the law gave no appeal. Hence the writ will not lie in lieu of or as a substitute for an appeal. But will it lie under any of the statutory definitions of “sufficient cause?” Code, § 3123, is as follows: “ The writ of certiorari .may be granted whenever authorized by law, and also*6 in all cases where an inferior tribunal, board, or officer exercising judicial functions has exceeded the jurisdiction conferred, or is acting illegally, when •in the judgment of the Court there is no other plain, speedy, or adequate remedy.”
By the succeeding section it is declared that the writ of -certiorari lies in the following cases: “ On suggestion of diminution; where no appeal is given; as a substitute for appeal; instead of audita querela; instead of writ of error.” This is a case which learned counsel contend comes under the provision for the writ in the section last .quoted — “where no appeal is given.” It is too plain for argument that if the writ cannot lie under this provision it will not under any of the other cases named in the statute. These two sections must be construed together. The statutory ground is, that the writ of certiorari will lie upon “ sufficient cause” shown, “where no appeal is given,” where “an inferior tribunal, board, or officer exercising judicial functions has exceeded the jurisdiction conferred, or is acting illegally, when in the judgment of the Court there is no other plain, speed}1', or adequate remedy.” Does petitioner present such a case ?
Waiving for the present any consideration of the question as to whether a Board of Equalization under our Act of 1887 is a judicial tribunal, or whether, in regard to its action upon a complaint of an excessive assessment, it is a Board “ exercising judicial functions,” we will first undertake to ascer
Finally, they are empowered to “hear and adjust complaints from any party feeling aggrieved on account of excessive taxation, when in their
To hold that it was their duty to permit the examination of witnesses offered by a complainant would imply a duty to the State and County to hear and examine witnesses to sustain the assessment. All this would imply a trial and a judgment upon weight of proof. The question of valuation is altogether a matter of opinion. Dpon questions of opinion the greatest diversity may be expected. The sessions of this Board terminate in two weeks, and at the end of that time they are required to return the assessment lists and their corrections to the Clerk of the County Court. In populous counties the assessments reach into the thousands. That each tax-payer should have the right to come with his witnesses, and have them heard and be heard by counsel, would result in such delay and embarrassment as to amount to a great public peril with regard to the assessment of the public revenues. No legislative body could have seriously contemplated such a tribunal to determine a mere question of an excessive valuation for purposes of assessment. Occasional instances of excessive assessments may occur, but they had better
The Boai’d was not “exceeding its jurisdiction” or “acting illegally” in refusing to hear the witnesses offered by petitioner, and it had a right to refuse to summon witnesses of its own selection if they deemed that justice did not demand evidence from witnesses. The next contention is that petitioner has the right to have the writ of certiorari, to the end that he may have the matter heard or retried upon the merits. This is based upon the proposition that if the Board had heard witnesses, or had decided the matter without witnesses, and upon their own knowledge, or upon a comparison of the assessment complained of with other assessments, that in any event their action in adopting and approving the assessment is a judgment, which they are entitled to have reviewed upon the merits; and that, inasmuch as it is a case where no appeal lies,
Every interest of the State alike demands that such questions shall be settled cheaply and speedily. When an act creating a special tribunal, even one
Wade v. Murray has been followed in the case of Knight ex parte, 3 Lea, 401, opinion by Judge McFarland, Judges Turney and Freeman dissenting.
The judgment of the Circuit Court dismissing the petition is affirmed with costs.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION.
delivered the following dissenting opinion:
By an Act passed March 25, 1887, creating a Board of Equalization in the assessment of taxes, it is provided in Section 42 “ that said' Board of Equalization shall carefully examine and compare and equalize said assessments, and shall eliminate from the lists thereof all property exempt under this Act; and they are hereby empowered to hear and adjust complaints from any party feeling aggrieved on account of excessive assessments when, in their judgment, justice demands it, and to correct any and all errors arising from clerical mistakes or otherwise; and the corrections made, if any, shall be entered upon the assessment book without in any way altering the assessment lists, and the action of this Board as to valuation shall be final; and all complaints in this regard are hereby required to be made and acted upon by this Board during its session, which shall be’ from the first Monday to the third Monday in June. If com
The Tax Assessor for Grainger County assessed three separate tracts of land of petitioner at seventy thousand dollars. On a day fixed for hearing his complaint petitioner appeared before the Board and filed a sworn exception to the assessment, alleging that it was thirty thousand dollars in excess of the value of the property. He offered to sustain his complaint by three competent witnesses. The Board refused to hear his proof, holding that petitioner had no right to introduce proof or be heard upon the subject of his complaint.
Petitioner prepared and tendered a bill of exceptions, which the Board refused to sign. He then prayed an appeal to the Circuit Court, which was refused.
The prayer of the petition is that said Board be restrained from returning said excessive assessment; that the matter be brought into the Circuit Court; that the property be lawfully and justly assessed, or that said erroneous and unjust assessment be reviewed and corrected.
The Board moved the Court to dismiss the petition, because the statute provided the action of the Board should be final, and that petitioner’s remedy to compel the examination of witnesses
Every man has the right to be heard before he can be lawfully condemned in person or property.
Is the writ of certiorari a proper remedy under this petition ?
. By § 3838 of Code (M. & V.) it is provided: “ The writ of certiorari may be granted whenever authorized by law, and also in all cases when an inferior tribunal, board, or officer exercising judicial functions has exceeded the jurisdiction conferred, or is acting illegally, when, in the judgment of the Court, there is no other plain, speedy, or adequate remedy.”
By § 3839 “ certiorari lies when no appeal is given.”
For the purposes of the questions, we treat the petition as true. We have a Board exercising judicial functions, exceeding the jurisdiction conferred in its refusal to hear proof as directed by the Act, and therefore acting illegally.
No appeal is given by the Act, and for that
In Dodd v. Weaver, 2 Sneed, 672, it is said: “ If there be no appeal, then the certiorari, which is a constitutional wifit, is a proper remedy by which any injurious irregularity in the proceeding may be corrected or a trial de novo had. The maxim of the law is that there is no wrong without a remedy, and it is a particular rule that a certiorari will lie to all inferior jurisdictions the proceedings of which cannot be corrected by writ of error, to remove their proceedings into the Superior .Court, to be there affirmed or quashed, or otherwise corrected as law and justice shall require.” In Sanders v. Russell, 10 Lea, 295, this Court holds: “The writ of certiorari is in this State a constitutional writ, and has always had a more extended application than in England, and been used for purposes unknown to the common law. It is the universal method by which the Circuit Courts exercise control over all inferior jurisdictions, however
In Burroughs on Taxation, 242, 243, it is said: “In Swift v. Poughkeepie, to determine the validity of a tax on bank shares, where the bank claimed an exemption to the extent of its capital invested in United States bonds, and finally to examine into the action of Assessors so as to look into the evidence before the Assessors and correct mere questions of valuation, the Court say: ‘-It has been finally settled that a common law certiorari to review the proceedings of Assessors brings up the merits as well as questions of jurisdiction and regularity, and that w;here Assessors have neither exceeded their powers nor been irregular in exercising them, the Court will still, upon the facts appearing in the returns, examine and correct their decisions if erroneous/ The cases in other States sustain those -in Hew York as to the functions of the certiorari
To the argument that if this petition is allowed to prevail it will multiply suits, and thereby cripple the State in the collection of taxes, it is sufficient to say that the State is ordinarily as much bound by the Constitution and laws thereunder as the citizen, and it is its duty to protect and not oppress the citizen. "While every legitimate aid will be given to the State in collecting its,revenue, the Courts must see that their aid is authorized, remembering the State is the creature and not the creator of the Constitution.
If the action of the Board is to he final, it can only be so after the law has been obeyed, which cannot be, done under a rule that the Board may, in its arbitrary discretion, as was done here, reject a main provision. The Board is a judicial tribunal to try questions of fact and of law. In this case it passed alone upon that of law, its construction of the statute holding that petitioner had no right to introduce proof or be heard upon the subject of his complaint. It construed the law for itself and by itself. It said to petitioner: “ The law does not mean what you claim it to mean. We -are the sole and exclusive judges of the meaning of the words of the Act, and of the intention of the Legislature in the employment of these words.” Row, if the Legislature may confer such judicial functions on this Board, I can see no reason why it may not say that Magistrates, County, Circuit, and Chanceiy, and “such other inferior” Courts as •• it may establish, shall have exclusive jurisdiction in such matters -as the Legislature may name, and their respective actions, judgments, and decrees “ shall be final.” The Board of Equalization is a