DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 148
Judges: Brown, Dean, Fell, Mestbezat, Mestrezat, Mitchell, Potter
Filed Date: 1/5/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
There is but a single question in this case and that is whether real estate, purchased and held by the board of directors of sub-school districts in the city of Pittsburg, is liable to assessment for grading, paving and curbing a street on which said real estate abuts. The learned tiial judge answered the question in the negative and denied the right of the city to recover from a subdistrict the cost of the improvement.
By the Act of February 12, 1869, P. L. 150, the city of Pitts-burg was created an independent school district. A central board of education was established having corporate capacity, with certain powers over, and duties relative to, the schools and subdistrict schools of the city. The board is composed of one member elected by the board of directors of each of the sub-districts. It is required among other things to maintain one high school and one or more separate schools for children of color, and authorized to take and hold real estate for these purposes ; to assess and, through the city treasurer, collect sufficient taxes to establish and maintain the high school and schools for children of color and for the payment of the teachers of the several subdistrict schools. Each ward is made a sub-district and two school directors are to be elected annually
In 1891 the Sterrett subdistrict, the appellee, purchased a lob of ground within the subdistrict and erected a school building thereon, which, since its erection, has been used exclusively for school purposes. This property abuts on Linden avenue, a public street of the city, which in 1893 was graded, paved and curbed by the city. Viewers were appointed by the court of common pleas who assessed the property of the subdistrict with $1,336.65, as special benefits, which assessment was reported to, and duly confirmed by, the court. A municipal lien was filed by the city against the property under the Act of May 16, 1891, P. L. 75, and a scire facias thereon was issued to enforce payment of the claim against the premises. An affidavit of defense and plea were filed and no further proceedings were taken on the scire facias. About five years thereafter, the city issued a scire facias to revive and continue the lien and on the trial thereof the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, subject to the question “ whether real estate, the property of the subdistriet schools in the city of Pittsburg, is liable to assessment for municipal improvements.” Subsequently, on motion of appellee’s counsel, the court entered judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto, on the ground that the real estate
The provisions of the act of 1869, as referred to and quoted above, indicate sufficiently for the purposes of this case the powers and duties of the central board of education and of the board of directors of the respective subdistricts. The system of education created by the act requires the united action of the central and subdistrict boards of directors to render it complete and effective. When organized and in operation it is an efficient means of enforcing article 10, section 1, of the constitution, which provides that “ the general assembly shall provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of public schools, wherein all the children of this commonwealth, above the age of six years, may be educated.” While the city is the school district, yet the title to the real estate, necessary for subdistrict school purposes, is taken and held by the directors of the subdistricts. It is also true that the real estate in each subdistrict is purchased and paid for by the money of the subdistrict in which it is located. These facts, however, do not deprive it of the character of public property used for school purposes. It is one of the necessary and indispensable means which the state through the city uses in carrying out the system of public education commanded by the constitution of the commonwealth. Each of the subdistricts is charged with the same duty in this respect, and that the act of 1869 did not impose upon the city the power and the duty of purchasing and holding the title to the real estate cannot affect its character as public property, nor deny to the subdistricts their right to exemption from taxation or municipal assessments to which the city, as a school district, would be entitled if the title was vested in it. In either case, regardless of where the title is lodged, the property is taken, held and used “for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of public schools.” The burden imposed on sub-districts by the purchase of real estate for school purposes is equalized among the subdistricts by similar service to be per
Regarding the real estate in question as the property of a school district, “ a quasi corporation for the sole purpose of administering the commonwealth’s system of public education,” is it subject to an assessment for benefits received by reason of the improvement of the street on which it abuts-? Tha.act-ofMay 16, 1891, under which this lien was filed, provides that wllefieveT there shall be any final assessment made’ onany property or properties ” to pay for the cost, expenses and dam'ageB“Df"anymrunicipal improvements, the property so assessed shall be subject to a lien for the amount of such assessment. The act provides for the enforcement of the lien and the collec- / tion of the claim by sale of the real estate on a levari facias is-j sued on the judgment obtained on a scire facias. It will be Lobserved that the terms of the act do not limit its.application to private as distinguished from public property. The words employed in the statute are “ any property or properties,” and they are sufficiently comprehensive, if so intended by the legislature, to"include' all property, whether held for public use or owñed by a private individual. But in construing this legislation and in determining the intention of the legislature in its enactment, we must be guided by the well established rule that “ it is always to be assumed that the general language of statutes is made use of with reference to taxable subjects, and the property of municipalities is not in any proper sense taxable. It is therefore by clear implication excluded: ” Cooley on Taxation, 131; County of Erie v. City of Erie, 113 Pa. 360. In speaking of the presumption that public property is exempt from taxation, Judge Cooley (Cooley on Taxation, 130) says: “ Some things are always presumptively exempted from the operation, of general tax laws, becanse it is reasonable to sup
It is contended, however, that an assessment for a local improvement is not taxation in its general form and hence is not subject to the rule that statutes imposing taxation do not apply to or impose a tax upon property held by the state or one of its municipalities unless it is expressly so provided. In support of this position, the learned counsel for the appellant rely upon Sewickley M. E. Church’s Appeal, 165 Pa. 475, and two kindred cases decided by this court. The question in those cases,' however, was, as the appellant’s counsel concede, whether the constitutional exemption from taxation applies to municipal assessments. It was held that it did not apply to such assessments and only relieves from the obligation to pay the ordinary taxes levied for general purposes. There can be but little doubt that such is now the settled rule in this state. It was admitted, however, by Chief Justice Sterrett in Church’s Appeal, that these assessments, resting for their final reason, upon special local benefits, are referable to the taxing power, and are, therefore, not improperly recognized as a species of taxation. Such assessments have been recognized as an exercise of the taxing power in numerous other decisions of this court and in the decisions of the courts of other states: Hammett v. Philadelphia, 65 Pa. 146; Washington Ave., supra; Olive Cemetery Company v. Philadelphia, 93 Pa. 129; Erie v. First Universalist Church, 105 Pa. 278; McKeesport Boro. v. Fidler, 147 Pa. 532; Board of Improvement v. School District (Ark.), 35 Am. St. Rep. 108; Worcester County v. Worcester (Mass.), 17 Am. St. Rep. 159. In Olive Cemetery Company v. Philadelphia, supra, Sterrett, J., delivering the opinion, says: “ It is conceded, however, that the authority to make and collect such assessments is delegated by the commonwealth. If it does not emanate from the inherent powers of a government to levy and collect taxes, it is difficult to understand whence it comes. The only warrant for delegating such authority must be either in the right of eminent domain or in the taxing power. It cannot be found in the former and hence it must be in the latter.” In Erie v. Church, supra, Gordon, J., approvingly repeats this language and adds : “ Scarcely less emphatic is the declaration of Mr. Justice Shárswood, in Ham
These authorities conclusively show that statutes imposing assessments for local improvements are enacted in the exercise of the taxing power of the legislature. They, therefore, notwithstanding the generality of the enumeration of the property affected, do not apply or relate to property held or used for public purposes by the state or any of its political subdivisions. The reasons for this rule given in the authorities cited above are convincing and amply sufficient to sustain it. The imposi
The mode provided in the act of 1891 for enforcing the assessment also leads to the conclusion that the legislature did not intend that it should apply to the property of school districts. The statute provides that the collection of the claim shall be by “ writ of scire facias, in accordance with the course of the common law,” on which a judgment shall be entered for the debt, interest and cost of the lien. A writ of levari facias shall issue on the judgment and by virtue. thereof the.sheriff shall sell the property. As the proceeding is statutory it is exclusive and must be pursued in the enforcement of the claim. There is no personal liability against the owner which can be enforced by an ordinary action at law. Here the claim cannot be paid by the school board of the subdistrict as it has no funds with which to make payment. As we have seen by reference to the act of 1869, the subdistrict school boards are authorized to levy a tax solely for the purpose of purchasing school sites, for the erection and repair of school buildings, for the purchase of school apparatus and to pay for fuel and for janitor service. For no other purpose and to meet no other indebtedness can
In contemplation of the constitutional provision relative to our public schools and statutory enactments to enforce it, the school districts or subdistricts of the state are the agents of the commonwealth in the administration of its system of public education. They are made quasi corporations for that purpose: Ford v. Kendall Boro. School District, 121 Pa. 543. They, therefore, hold the property as the agent of the state and for the purpose of making its public school system effective. (Taxation of any kind whatever imposed upon the property would interfere with and defeat the commonwealth in maintaining the system of education required by the constitution. Such an in-'( tentiou should not be attributed to the legislature in the enactment of either special or general tax laws unless it is manifested J by clear and explicit language. ‘
We think it clear, therefore, on reason and authority, that the language used in the act of 1891 does not apply to property
The question raised here has been directly adjudicated in some of the states. In Board of Improvement v. School District, supra, the supreme court of Arkansas held that an assessment of public school property for local improvements is not authorized by a statute, which, in general terms, requires the assessment to be upon all real property situate in the district. Hemingway, J., delivering the opinion, holds that public property is exempt from special taxation, and after citing numerous authorities to support his position, says: “ It is argued that even if public property is exempt, the exemption does not extend to the property of public school districts, inasmuch as they are not, strictly speaking, municipal corporations, and education is not a governmental function. The constitution provides that the state shall ever maintain free public schools, and in performing this duty it exercises a function strictly public and governmental. It created school districts and imposed upon them in part this duty, and in order to discharge it they own schoolhouses. They have no other duty than to perform for the state this public function, and only that they may do it is the house held. The state may abolish them, take the property, and undertake directly or through other agencies this public function. The means of controlling the property would thereby be changed, but its use would be unchanged; and there is nothing in the policy of the law to exempt the property while held and controlled by the state, which would deny the exemption while held by the state’s agent and used in the performance of its duties : Green v. U. S., 9 Wall. 655.”
In City of Hartford v. West Middle District, 29 Am. St. Rep. 687, the supreme court of Connecticut holds that land occupied by a schoolhouse and used solely for school purposes cannot be assessed for the laying out of an adjoining street. In support of his conclusion, Granger, J., delivering the opinion, says : “ How could the defendants, as a school district, be bene
In the recent case of Witter v. Mission School District, 66 Am. St. Rep. 33, the supreme court of California held that a lot belonging to a school district is not liable for an assessment for street improvements if used for school purposes. The court conceding that there might be exemption from “ taxation ” where there would not necessarily be exemption from “ assessments,” put its decision on the ground “ that the state is not bound by general words in a statute which would operate to trench upon its sovereign rights, injuriously affect its capacity to perform its functions, or establish a right of action against it.”
We are aware that in some jurisdictions it is held that public property is subject to general as well as special taxation, where it is not excepted in the statute imposing the tax. We think, however, the contrary is the better view and that it is supported by reason and the great weight of authority.
In accordance with the views above expressed, we are of opinion that the real estate of the subschool districts of the city of Pittsburg is not subject to an assessment for the cost and expenses of local improvements.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.