State v. Wiley , 176 Wash. 641 ( 1934 )


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  • HOLCOMB, J., dissents. The basic facts in this case are identical with the facts in the case of State ex rel. Showalter v. Cook, 175 Wash. 364,27 P.2d 1075.

    Defendant Wiley is assessor of Grays Harbor county. Pursuant to Rem. Rev. Stat., § 11220, he forwarded to the state board of equalization an abstract of the assessment roll for Grays Harbor county, which showed the assessed valuation of all the property in the county to be $23,483,853. The state board of equalization found this to be only forty-one per cent of the true and fair valuation of the taxable property in the county. Accordingly, the state board of equalization, for state purposes, raised the assessed valuation to $28,638,845, which it declared and found to be fifty per cent of the true and fair valuation of such property. In due course, the state auditor certified the valuation as found by the state board of equalization to defendant Wiley, to be extended on the tax rolls as provided in Rem. Rev. Stat., § 11224. This, the defendant Wiley declined to do. This action in mandamus was brought to compel him to perform that duty.

    We here come to the point of divergence between this case and the case of State ex rel. Showalter v. Cook, supra. Here, the defendant Wiley filed an affidavit in response to the alternative writ of mandate, to the effect that, after a careful study and survey of taxable property values in Grays Harbor county, he *Page 643 had fixed the assessed valuation of such property at $23,483,853; that such amount was, in fact, fifty per cent of the true and fair value of such property; that the state board of equalization, without any investigation whatever and without adequate knowledge, had, for state purposes, raised the assessed valuation to $28,638,845; that such amount was, in fact, seventy-three per cent of the true and fair value of such property; that the state board of equalization, in so raising the assessed valuation of such property, acted arbitrarily and capriciously and without authority in law.

    Bowes, a taxpayer, was permitted to intervene. He filed an affidavit of similar import.

    Plaintiff interposed demurrers to the affidavits. The demurrers being overruled and the plaintiff declining to plead further, a judgment of dismissal was entered. Plaintiff appeals.

    [1] The power and authority of the state board of equalization to fix valuations for state purposes different than those fixed by county assessors is no longer open to question.State ex rel. Showalter v. Cook, supra; State ex rel. Thompsonv. Nichols, 29 Wash. 159, 69 P. 771. The question here presented is whether a county assessor can challenge the exercise of that power. Put another way: Can a public officer, charged with the performance of a ministerial duty, refuse to perform that duty on the ground that a superior officer, under whose direction he is required to act, has proceeded arbitrarily, capriciously and on a fundamentally wrong basis? There is practical unanimity of authority that he cannot. People ex rel.v. Pitcher, 61 Colo. 149, 156 P. 812, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 1185;Inhabitants, etc. v. Clark, 33 Me. 482; People v. Halsey,37 N.Y. 344; People v. Salomon, 54 Ill. 39; *Page 644 Territory ex rel. Taylor v. Caffrey, 8 Okla. 193, 57 P. 204;Taylor v. State ex rel. Collins, 121 Miss. 771, 83 So. 810.

    In the case of Inhabitants, etc., v. Clark, supra, a tax collector had declined to proceed under a warrant issued by the county treasurer on the ground that he had been "advised and believes that the assessment was illegal." The court said:

    "The treasurer has the power to issue such a warrant, and in some cases it becomes his duty. The collector, having a warrant from competent authority, was bound to proceed under it. With the anterior proceedings he had no concern. An officer appointed to collect the public revenue must, ex necessitate rei, obey his warrant, and he will be protected in so doing. He holds in his hands the sinews of government, and neither his fears that individuals may be injured, nor his doubts about the validity of anterior proceedings, will excuse him. If individuals are injured they have their remedy at law, or they may see fit to waive any injury they have received. The collector has no judicial power. He is only to know whether his warrant proceeds from competent authority. If so, he must fulfill it as he is commanded."

    In People v. Salomon, supra, the defendant was charged with contempt for refusing to comply with a writ of mandate directing him to extend on the tax rolls of Cook county valuations asraised by the state board of equalization. The court, addressing defendant directly, said:

    "The law under which this additional tax was imposed, had passed the legislature under all the forms of the constitution, and had received executive sanction, and became, by its own intrinsic force, the law to you, to every other public officer in the State, and to all the people. You assumed the responsibility of declaring the law unconstitutional, and at once determined to disregard it, to set up your own judgment *Page 645 as superior to the expressed will of the legislature, asserting, in fact, an entire independence thereof. This is the first case in our judicial history, in which a ministerial officer has taken upon himself the responsibility of nullifying an act of the legislature for the better collection of the public revenue — of arresting its operation — of disobeying its behests, and placing his own judgment above legislative authority expressed in the form of law.

    "To the law every man owes homage, `the very least as needing its care, the greatest as not exempted from its power.' To allow a ministerial officer to decide upon the validity of a law, would be subversive of the great objects and purposes of government, for if one such officer may assume infallibility, all other like officers may do the same, and thus an end be put to civil government, one of whose cardinal principles is, subjection to the laws.

    "Being a ministerial officer, the path of duty was plain before you. You strayed from it, and became a volunteer in the effort to arrest the law, and it was successful. Had the property owners, who were subjected to this additional tax, considered the law unconstitutional, they could, in the proper courts, have tested the question, and it was their undoubted right so to do. Your only duty was obedience. The collected will of the whole people was embodied in that law. A decent respect to them required that all their servants should obey it."

    The case of People v. Pitcher, supra, is indistinguishable in its essential facts from the case at bar. In that case, as in this, the action was for mandamus. There, as here, the state board of equalization had raised the valuations as fixed by the county assessor. There, as here, the county assessor resisted, on the ground that the valuations fixed by the state board "were made arbitrarily, capriciously and unlawfully, and as a matter of guess or chance, and without the exercise of any method or system whatever." Denying the assessor had any right to question the values *Page 646 as fixed by the state board of equalization, the court said:

    "If it be true (as held by the court in overruling the demurrer) that the State Board of Equalization has the power to `raise or lower the valuation of any part or parcel whatsoever of the property of any county,' then when duly convened for the purpose of such duty, at the time and place appointed by the law for that purpose, it enters an order fixing the values, that order is necessarily conclusive in a collateral proceeding such as this, unless something appears on the face of such order disclosing its invalidity. The Board of Equalization when so acting is a quasi court invested by the constitution with the duty to ascertain and determine certain facts, and its determination thereof is a judgment. In mandamus proceedings to enforce that judgment against a ministerial officer, whose duty to obey it is imposed by law, no inquiry into its regularity can be permitted. . . .

    "After respondent had completed his assessment and submitted his assessment roll to the County Board of Equalization, . . . and transmitted his abstract of assessment to the Colorado Tax Commission, . . . his quasi judicial functions were ended, and his duties thereafter to be performed were purely ministerial, and that which is subsequently done by other boards, with jurisdiction to act in the premises, cannot be changed or questioned by him. . . .

    "Indeed, the rule seems universal that `when mandamus is resorted to in order to compel the assessment or collection of taxes the respondent may defend upon the ground of satisfaction, impossibility, or want of jurisdiction. But it is not a good return to plead irregularities in prior proceedings, another remedy, or a custom not authorized by law.' 13 Encyc. of Plead. Prac., p. 743.

    "It is the imperative duty of a ministerial officer to obey the act of a tribunal invested with authority in the premises directing his action; not to question or decide upon its validity. This applies with the same force whether the direction be embodied in a *Page 647 legislative act or in the pronouncement of a governmental agency invested with power in the premises. The maxim lies at the very foundation of jurisprudence, and without its observance government would cease to exist. . . .

    "`The reasons for this rule are apparent. Public policy and public necessity require prompt and efficient action from such officers, and when intrusted with the assessment of taxes and the collection and disbursement of revenue, they had no right to refuse to perform ministerial duties prescribed by law because of any apprehension on their part that others may be injuriously affected by it, or that the statute prescribing such duties may be unconstitutional.' . . .

    "The respondent herein has no more interest in that which some other tribunal did within its jurisdiction relating to the matter of fixing values for the purposes of taxation than the treasurer. The treasurer, upon receiving a warrant from the proper authorities to collect the taxes, is under the necessity of rendering obedience thereto and may not question the regularity of the proceedings resulting in the warrant. It is equally true that if the State Board of Equalization had jurisdiction, as held by the trial court, and actually made the raise it did, its judgment constituted a warrant which the respondent was bound to obey. . . .

    "So here, the duties of respondent in relation to the matters in question are ministerial and if the facts upon which he is to act were properly certified to him from a tribunal with jurisdiction in the premises, that order constitutes his warrant and he is bound to proceed under it. His only concern is to know whether `his warrant proceeds from competent authority,' and, if so, fulfill it as he is commanded. If he may interpose the defense herein relied upon, every other assessor, dissatisfied with the action and direction of the State Board of Equalization, may do likewise. Is it possible that each of the assessors in this state can be permitted, against instructions from a constitutional tribunal having state wide jurisdiction in the matter, to decide for himself whether he will obey *Page 648 those instructions? If this be so, what would or could be the remedy by which the proper subjects of taxation could be listed and valued in accordance with the constitutional mandate that taxation shall be equal and uniform? If the assessors are the sole judges, and may defy the instructions of their superiors, it would depend upon the judgment or caprice, it might be, of each assessor what property he would list and value, and that which he would refuse to assess; and if one assessor were removed or indicted it would have no effect upon the others; or it might be that no one would take the trouble to see whether he was doing his duty, and the property would escape its just share of the burdens of government, the revenues be diminished and thereby the affairs of the public detrimentally affected or suspended. There would and could be no uniformity or equality in taxation under such a system. If each of the assessors is permitted to decide for himself what property shall be taxed and what exempted, what values shall be placed thereon, and defy the instructions of the State Board of Equalization in the discharge of duties imposed upon it by the Constitution, upon the alleged ground that it reached its conclusion without proper evidence, there is not only a failure to have taxation equal and uniform throughout the state, but as said in State v. Buchanan, supra [24 W. Va. 362]; `such a course if upheld and justified . . . tends directly, not only to insubordination, and the destruction of good government, but to anarchy and confusion'."

    In face of this overwhelming weight of authority against him, respondent Wiley seeks to justify his conduct on the authority ofMacLaren v. Ferry County, 135 Wash. 517, 238 P. 579, andState ex rel. State Tax Commission v. Redd, 166 Wash. 132,6 P.2d 619. Neither of these cases touch the problem here involved, namely, the refusal of a public officer to perform a purely ministerial duty. In the MacLaren case, the action of the assessor was sustained in relation to what is described inPeople v. Pitcher, supra, *Page 649 as his quasi judicial function of fixing valuations. In theRedd case, we simply held that chapter 106, Laws of 1931, p. 306, Rem. Rev. Stat., § 11301 et seq., was unconstitutional in so far as it attempted to empower the state tax commission to reassess, for purposes of local taxation, property within a county, city, town or other municipal corporation. To that extent, the act was held to be in contravention of article XI, § 12, of the constitution. The power of the state board of equalization to fix valuations for state purposes was not there involved. As we have pointed out, that power is established.State ex rel. Showalter v. Cook, supra. Directions under that power to the county assessor to extend the raised valuations on the tax rolls "proceeds from competent authority." His duty is to proceed as directed. He has no alternative under Rem. Rev. Stat., § 11224.

    The respondent Bowes seeks to sustain his position here under authority of the case of Denny v. Wooster, 175 Wash. 272,27 P.2d 328. That case is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. While the action there was nominally against the assessor, its real purpose was to have eliminated from the budgets of King county and the city of Seattle certain items alleged to have been illegally included. No question of valuation placed on the taxpayer's property was involved. The taxpayer can have no interest in the valuation placed on any property but his own. No doubt, in a proper proceeding, he may contest the valuation placed upon his own property for state purposes by the state board of equalization, if he deems that valuation to exceed fifty per cent of its true and fair value.

    The demurrers to the affidavits should have been sustained. The judgment is therefore reversed. *Page 650

    BEALS, C.J., MILLARD, MAIN, STEINERT, and MITCHELL, JJ., concur.

    GERAGHTY, J., concurs in the result.

    TOLMAN, J., dissents.