1 Idaho 770 | Idaho | 1880
delivered the opinion.
The plaintiff brought its action in equity to enjoin the defendant as district attorney, and his successors in that office, from further prosecuting an action instituted by him, in the district court of Oneida county, to recover of the plaintiff the sum of two thousand and sixty-eight dollars territorial and county taxes levied and assessed for the year 1878, upon that portion of its railroad line and track, including the rolling stock, depots, and buildings belonging to the same, situate within the exterior boundary lines of Oneida county.
The grounds upon which the injunction is claimed as set forth in the complaint are: 1. That the property assessed, or so much of it as lies in Idaho territory, was exempt from taxation under an act of the legislature approved January 9, 1878. 2. That a portion of the property so assessed is upon the Fort Hall Indian reservation, and therefore without the jurisdiction of the taxing officers of Oneida county, for the reason that said Indian reservation constitutes no portion of the territory of Idaho, or of the county of Oneida. 3. As a reason why this exemption and these facts were not set up by answer in the suit for the recovery of the taxes, that the plaintiff herein was not at liberty to do so under the statutes, but was and is prohibited therefrom by the provisions of section 39 of the revenue law.
The defendant demurred to the complaint on the grounds that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that another action is now pending in the same court between the same parties for the same cause. The district court sustained the demurrer, and rendered a judgment dismissing the complaint; from which judgment the plaintiff appealed to this court, and assigns the order sustaining the demurrer as error.
The first question that arises in this case is one of prac
These provisions abolish the circuitous, tedious, and expensive methods of the common law, and substitute rules
A defense to an action or a cause of action in the popular sense of the code, is a right possessed by the defendant, arising out of the facts alleged in his pleadings, which, either partially or wholly, defeats the plaintiff’s claim. Considering the complaint of the plaintiff in this action in connection with this definition, it clearly appears that the facts alleged therein were intended for no other purpose than to defeat the claim for the tases. The claim of the public is, that taxes are due from the railway company, for which judgment and execution is demanded as a remedy. The opposing defense of the railway company is that, under the provisions of an act of the legislative assembly of Idaho territory, the right of exemption from taxation was conferred on thé company, and that as the people had no right to tax the property, they are not entitled to the remedy demanded in the action to recover the taxes. The right which the railway company thus claim to be entitled to, and to be in possession of, is clearly, if established, defensive to the claim of the people for the taxes.
But it is insisted by the appellant, that they are prohibited by statute from alleging or claiming exemption from taxation, by answer in the action for the taxes; and therefore they must be permitted to assert their right in equity. If the premises upon which this proposition is based were correct, it would, perhaps, be a sufficient answer to the conclusion of counsel, based thereon, to say, if such exemption can not be alleged by answer, neither can it be allowed to be done by a complaint which contains matter of a defensive nature only, because it would be permitting to be done, indirectly, that which may not be done directly. If the matter contained in this complaint constitutes no defense to the action for taxes, neither does it constitute a cause of action against the people to prevent the recovery of the taxes, after action has been commenced for that purpose.
Section 4 of that act does not mention or include any railway, or the property of the appellant. It is said by counsel for the appellant, that inasmuch as it is within the power of the legislature to provide for the collection of taxes in a summary manner, and without suit, that it may limit the defenses to be interposed in an action for the taxes. Be this as it may, upon a careful examination of the history of this statute we find that it was originally enacted and approved February 4, 1864, 1 Session Laws, 412, that it was re-enacted January 13, 1869, 5 Session Laws 39, and that it was carried forward from the fifth session laws, to the compiled laws, and re-enacted January 15, 1875. It must therefore be regarded merely as a continuation of section 39 of the revenue law of the fifth session. At the time of the first enactment of that section, and until the passage of the act under which the appellant claims exemption from taxation, section 4 of the revenue act, designated all the kinds and classes of property excepted or exempted from taxes; so that the words “under the provisions of section 4 of this act,” contained in the subdivision of section 39 of the revenue law above quoted; were then meaningless. They did not restrict the answer to any particular kind or class, but all exemptions were allowed in defense notwithstanding those words. The evident intention of the legislature was to allow the defense to be set up in answer to a suit for taxes, in all cases where property was exempt by law, and there is nothing in the fact that these words have been car
To impute to the legislature an intention to confer upon parties an abstract right, while withholding all remedy for its enforcement, would be charging it with “keeping the word of promise to the ear, and breaking it to the hope;” in fine, of a gross absurdity. Remedial statutes should always be construed to prevent a failure of the remedy, and extended to later provisions by subsequent statutes, and this ease comes clearly within those rules.
The conclusion we thus arrive at, is that the appellant in this case, the defendant in the tax suit, if its property was exempt from taxation for the year 1878, must claim such exemption by answer in that suit, and that the demurrer to the complaint in this action was properly sustained.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.