Citation Numbers: 23 S.E.2d 897, 222 N.C. 441
Judges: Seawell, Stacy
Filed Date: 1/8/1943
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff contends that the action of the State Board of Assessment in fixing the value of its property for purposes of taxation was a quasi-judicial act and, therefore, subject to court review,
It can readily be seen that where certiorari is used as a substitute for an appeal expressly provided in the law, which has been lost without the fault of the petitioner, the hearing in the court must necessarily be de novo, if the appeal provided is of that nature. It is otherwise when certiorari is used as at common law to bring up for review the action of inferior courts or tribunals upon the principle that the acts sought to be-reviewed are judicial or quasi-judicial, or within the supervisory or “superintending” power of the court. 10 Am. Jur., Certiorari, sec. 4;. Hartsfield v. Jones, 49 N. C., 309, 310.
Rhyne v. Lipscombe, 122 N. C., 650, 29 S. E., 57, and Taylor v. Johnson, 171 N. C., 84, 87 S. E., 981, rest upon the principle that the Legislature in creating an inferior court, without express right of appeal, cannot thus destroy the constitutional authority of the Superior Court or by act of the Legislature create courts of equal dignity and jurisdiction, and that in the absence of a provision for an appeal from such court, certiorari will lie as a substitute therefor. There is no doubt that the function of such a writ would be the same as the appeal usually provided in connection with such courts and would, in proper instances,, bring up the case for a trial de novo. That principle has not been extended to a review by certiorari of the action of administrative bodies. When not otherwise provided by statute, the review is within the scope of common law rules.
Tbe statute restoring tbe writ of certiorari subsequent to tbe adoption of tbe Code of Civil Procedure, provides: “Writs of certiorari, recordari and supersedeas are authorized as heretofore in use.” C. S., 630. Its use here closely follows that of tbe common law; and our Beports disclose no instance in which it has been used for tbe purposes suggested by tbe appellee, and no case, which, in our judgment, serves as authority for such use.
Tbe scope of review under tbe writ as used at common law has been thus defined: “According to tbe weight of authority, where tbe scope of tbe writ has not been narrowed by statute, its office extends to tbe review of all questions of jurisdiction, power, and authority of tbe inferior tribunal to do tbe action complained of, and all questions of irregularity in tbe proceedings, that is, of tbe question whether tbe inferior tribunal has kept within tbe boundaries prescribed by tbe express terms of tbe statute law or well-settled principles of tbe common law.” 10 Am. Jur., p. 524, sec. 3.
When certiorari is addressed to boards of assessment or boards of assessment and equalization, where that practice is permitted, it is generally held that tbe power of review, as in other instances of its use under tbe common law, does not extend to questions of valuation, but only to jurisdictional or procedural irregularities or errors of law. State ex rel. American Exp. Co. v. State Board of Assessment and Equalization, 3 S. D., 338, 53 N. W., 192; People ex rel. Onderdonk v. Queens County, 1 Hill (N. Y.), 195; Tomlinson v. Board of Equalization, 88 Tenn., 1, 12 S. W., 414; State ex rel. Vance v. Dixie Portland Cement Co., 151 Tenn., 53, 267 S. W., 595; Colonial Trust Co. v. Scheffey (N. J.), 69 Atl., 455. In New York and New Jersey, and possibly some other states, certiorari has been made a special proceeding, giving to tbe reviewing court, under certain conditions, power to consider questions of valuation; Cooley on Taxation, section 1633; but even in those courts certiorari has been denied where tbe question raised as to valuation concerns only tbe exercise of a discretion on tbe part of tbe valuing board. Colonial Trust Co. v. Scheffey, supra; People ex rel. Onderdonk v. Queens County, supra.
In Cooley on Taxation, tbe outstanding authority on this subject, after reviewing numerous leading authorities on tbe subject, tbe author makes this observation: “Tbe following conclusions are deduced by tbe authorities from these general principles: — that assessments cannot be re
Consistently with this principle, certiorari has been recognized in this State as a proper writ to bring up for review and correction action of the State Board of Assessment involving errors of law and mistakes or defects of procedure. Power Co. v. Burke County, 201 N. C., 318, 160 S. E., 173; Caldwell County v. Doughton, 195 N. C., 62, 141 S. E., 289. Neither of these cases is authority for the contention of the plaintiff that certiorari will lie to review the valuation of property or redetermine it in court where no error in law is charged.
We do not regard the references to these cases in Hooker v. Pitt County, 202 N. C., 4-6, 161 S. E., 542, as justifying the use of the writ where only the simple question of valuation is involved, without any charge or showing that in such valuation the board exceeded its powers or abused its discretion. Upon the theory presented by the plaintiff, it would have as much right to appeal by way of certiorari had the overvaluation amounted only to a few dollars rather than a few thousand.
Some attention might be given here to the apparent assumption upon which this petition for certiorari proceeds — that every act of an administrative board involving the exercise of sound judgment and discretion must be submitted to court review on the theory that the act is judicial. It is not expected that the law will be administered by robots. It is inevitable that in following the ordinary procedure imposed upon them by statute, boards of this kind must perform some acts not purely ministerial, make some decisions to which sound judgment and discretion must be applied — as, for instance, in the ascertainment of facts and conditions as a basis for further administrative action. The simple fact that the result is reached by similar processes of reason, common to all men, does not expropriate the exercise of these faculties to the judiciary. The action could only be judicial in any proper sense if it went to the determination of some right the protection of which, under our system of jurisprudence, is the peculiar office of the courts. No such right was involved in the challenged action; but, however labeled, we do not find
2. The provision of the Constitution relating to trial by jury does not require court review of the valuation of land for taxation or determination of such value by a jury in a de novo hearing, and will not support resort to certiorari for that purpose.
Article I, sec. 19, of the Constitution provides: “In all controversies at law respecting property, the ancient mode of trial by jury is one of the best securities of the rights of the people, and ought to remain sacred and inviolable.”
Similar provisions are found in the constitutions of most of the American states. A summary of these expressions may be found in Page & Jones on Taxation, sec. 201.
Under this clause of the Constitution, trial by jury is only guaranteed where the prerogative existed at common law or by statute at the time the Constitution was adopted. Groves v. Ware, 182 N. C., 553, 109 S. E., 568; R. R. v. Parker, 105 N. C., 246, 11 S. E., 328.
In Page & Jones on Taxation, after the summary above noted, we find, sec. 202: “These provisions are held to be intended to secure and protect the right of trial by jury in cases where such right existed at common law. They are not intended, unless such affirmative intention is expressly stated, to extend the right of trial by jury to cases in which no such right existed at common law, as in cases of taxation.” Cooley on Taxation, sec. 1220.
A difference between the owner and the State Board of Assessment with regard to the proper value to be placed upon the land for the purpose of taxation is not a controversy at law respecting property within the meaning of the constitutional provision. The purpose of the valuation is merely to produce a yardstick by which the amount of the tax may be measured and equalized with other subjects of taxation within the same class. Of itself it does not affect any right in the property or in its use.
In Cowles v. Brittain, 9 N. C., 204, Chief Justice Taylor, speaking to this point, said :
“There is a tacit condition annexed to the ownership of property that it shall contribute to the public revenue in such mode and proportion as the legislative will shall direct; and if the officers entrusted with the execution of the laws transcend their powers to the injury of an individual the common law entitled him to redress. But to pursue every delinquent liable to pay taxes through the forms of process and a jury trial would materially impede, if not wholly obstruct, the collection of the revenue; and it is not believed that such a mode was contemplated by the
*448 Constitution.” Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Willis, 219 N. C., 709, 713, 15 S. E. (2d), 4.
3. Valuation under the current Machinery Act, where no error in law or abuse of discretion is alleged, is final and conclusive.
The distribution of the power of government in any state is a political privilege. Where the written Constitution does not otherwise direct, the Legislature may distribute these powers and functions as it may deem proper for the best interests of the public, and where notice and hearing is provided may make the action of administrative boards set up for that purpose final and conclusive, without violating due process of law. This is true with regard to the assessment of taxes. Cooley on Taxation, sec. 1118; Wade v. Commissioners, infra.
The section of the Machinery Act relating to the final disposition of the proceeding for valuation — Miehie’s Code of 1939, sec. 7971 (162)-— and providing that the valuation “shall be entered upon the fixed and permanent records and shall constitute the valuation for taxation,” in our opinion, contemplates that such valuation shall be final and conclusive. Wade v. Commissioners, 74 N. C., 81. It follows that the courts, acting only under such supervisory powers as they may have under the Constitution, have no power to interfere except where the jurisdiction is invoked for the review of errors in law.
This does not mean, of course, that under the guise of tax assessment a property owner may be made the victim of fraud or oppression, or subjected to a confiscation of his property, or otherwise injured by any illegal act on the part of the officials or boards charged with the administration of the law. This would make the valuation in point of law no valuation at all, and for such injuries the law is replete with remedy. It does mean that where the taxing laws and procedure are not themselves in contravention of the Constitution, and when boards and officers authorized to administer them act within their jurisdiction, in accordance with the procedure laid down, and without abuse of discretion, there is neither the necessity nor the legal ground of court review.
But while, appeal was not provided or expected under the former law, Wade v. Commissioners, supra, the plaintiff here has enjoyed the full right of appeal to three successive boards beyond the original board by which the property was valued, all of which were empowered to hear, and did hear, the matter upon the merits, and now wishes to be further heard before a jury as in a civil action.
In Tomlinson v. Board of Equalization, supra, referring to the question of valuation, the Court said: “Every interest of the state alike demands that such questions shall be settled cheaply and speedily. 'Where an act creating a special tribunal, even exercising judicial functions, gives it power and authority to settle particular grievances, such as this, and either expressly or by plain implication declares that the
Inasmuch as it appears that some five thousand complaints were disposed of by the Guilford County boards alone, the following quotation from Colonial Trust Co. v. Scheffey (N. J.), 69 Atl., 455, in denying a petition for certiorari, meets our approval: “The only substantial question sought to be raised before this court is one of fact or rather of opinion, viz., whether the assessment is too high. This question has already been disposed of adversely to the prosecutor by the county board of taxation and by the state board of equalization of taxes. The object of the creation and maintenance of these boards was, in part, to provide tribunals having peculiar opportunity and machinery for the investigation of questions of valuation, and, in part, to relieve the regular courts of this administrative function when disconnected with any violated principle of law. — Each of these objects will be frustrated if this court is to take on these cases of disputed valuation just as if no special tribunals for this purpose had been provided.”
4. We have tried to avoid the citation of decisions turning solely upon the application of local statute law, but we consider the cases cited as expressing the law in this jurisdiction as applied to the facts of this case. We do not intend to lay down any comprehensive rule regarding the use of the writ; that is a broader subject, to be dealt with when occasion arises. Limiting our opinion to the point involved in the appeal and in the petition for certiorari — the question of valuation — it is sufficient to say that in no aspect of the petition is the plaintiff entitled to the writ as an instrument of review or to secure a de novo trial upon the merits.
It would be a waste of time to speculate upon what the plaintiff’s remedy might be for grievances of which it does not complain.
The order of the court below directing the writ to issue is reversed. Judgment will be entered in the court below dismissing the petition.
Reversed.