Court Opinion

ID: 8023876
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:28:50.094582+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:57.567056
License: Public Domain

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY
delivered the opinion of the court.
In this action the Northern Pacific Railway Company, as relator, asks a writ of mandate compelling respondent as county clerk to calculate and extend upon the assessment-book of Lewis and Clark county the taxable value of all improvements upon relator’s right of way, upon the basis of thirty per cent of the assessed value of such improvements. It is alleged that respondent, unless otherwise commanded by this court, will make the calculation on the basis of forty per cent, under an order of the state board of equalization, that board having instructed the county clerks of Montana to extend upon the assessment-books of their several counties the taxable value of buildings and improvements upon the rights of way of railways upon the forty rather than the thirty per cent basis.
*423The concrete question for decision is whether such improvements are embraced within class 4 or class 7 of section 1999,  Revised Codes of 1921, commonly known as the classification law. So far as is material here the provisions of that section are (it being conceded that the other classes have no application) : “For the purpose of taxation the taxable property of this state shall be classified as follows: * * * Class four. All land, town and city lots, with improvements, manufacturing and mining machinery, fixtures and supplies, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution of Montana. * * * Class Seven. All property not included in the six preceding classes. ’ ’
Section 2000 provides: “As a basis for the imposition of taxes upon the different classes of property specified in the preceding section, a percentage of the true and full value of the property of each class shall be taken as follows: * * * Class 4. Thirty per cent of its true and full value. * * * Class 7. Forty per cent of its true and full value. ’ ’
Respondent asserts that the subject is controlled by section 16 of Article XII of the Constitution, which declares: “All property shall be assessed in the manner prescribed by law except as is otherwise provided in this Constitution. The franchise, roadway, roadbed, rails and rolling stock of all railroads operated in more than one county in this state shall be assessed by the state board of equalization and the same shall -be apportioned to the counties, cities, towns, townships and school districts in which such railroads are located, in proportion to the number of miles of railway laid in such counties, cities, towns, townships and school districts.” His contention is that the roadway, which this court has held to mean the right of way, upon which the property in question is situated, is and must be assessed by the state board of equalization as a “roadway,” and not as “land.” To fortify this position he calls our attention to section 2023, Revised Codes of 1921, in which it is directed that the land must be *424assessed in parcels or subdivisions, and which section clearly does not intend to include roadways; and also to section 2026, which directs that all lands shall be classified into seven groups which are stated and none of which includes roadways. These two sections evidently are directions to the assessor and those who levy taxes upon his assessment, and have no reference to an assessment made primarily by the state board of equalization.
It is asserted that the improvements mentioned in class 4 of section 1999 apply only to those upon land, town and city lots, and as the improvements in question are not upon town or city lots, and not upon land because within a roadway, therefore the improvements in question do not come within class 4, and so inevitably must come within class 7.
By the provisions of the Constitution roadways are regarded as entities and are assessed as such. Improvements of the character of those involved in the present case have always been separately assessed from the roadway and both sides concede it should be so.
Subdivision 7 of section 2003 directs the assessor to require a statement under oath of “all depots, shops, stations, buildings, and other structures erected on the space covered by the right of way, and all other property owned, by any person, corporation, or association of persons owning or operating any railroad within the county.”
■Subdivision 3 of section 8 of Chapter 3 of the 1923 Session Laws, after giving directions respecting the assessment of roadways and other similar property constituting “a single and continuous property operated in more than one county in the state,” provides: “That lots and parcels of real estate not included in the right of way, with the buildings, structures, and improvements thereon, dams, and power-houses, depots, stations, shops, and other buildings, erected upon right of way, furniture, machinery, and other personal property, shall not be considered as a part of any such single and continuous property, but shall be considered as separate and distinct therefrom, and shall be *425assessed by the county assessor of the county wherein they are situate. ’ ’
But the fact is that section 16 of Article XII of the Constitution consists of two sentences, one a general mandate that “all property shall be assessed in the manner prescribed by law except as is otherwise provided in this Constitution,” and the other a specific one relating to the assessment of “the franchises, roadway, roadbed, rails and rolling stock of all railroads operated in more than one county in this state.” Further the language does not go. It simply directs that the property mentioned in the second sentence shall be assessed by the state board of equalization and not otherwise. The legislature is free to provide for the assessment of any other railroad property.
The fact is, too, that the improvements in question are situate upon land. Land is defined to be the solid material of the earth, whatever may be the ingredients of which it is composed, whether soil, rock or other substance (sec. 6668, Rev. Codes 1921) ; and section 1996, Revised Codes of 1921, declares: “Whenever the terms mentioned in this section are employed in dealing with the subject of taxation, they are employed in the sense hereafter afSxed to them.” Subdivision 3 of section 1996 says the term “improvements” includes all buildings, structures, fixtures, fences and improvements erected upon or affixed to .the land. Another statute (2001) provides that land and improvements thereon shall be separately assessed. In Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co. v. Murray, 55 Mont. 162, 174 Pac. 704, this court considered a roadway land and applied the statute which says that structures affixed to the realty are part of the realty to which they are affixed.
If we do not attempt to follow the strained construction contended for by saying what in fact is, is not, we see that the statute as respects the assessment of improvements both on and  off the right of way is not obscure. If respondent’s contention were correct we should have different valuations for the same kind of property. If a merchant owned a warehouse *426upon a tract of land, adjoining the railroad right of way, the warehouse would be in class 4, and taxed upon the thirty per cent basis. An adjoining and precisely similar warehouse owned by the railroad upon its right of way would be within class 7, and be taxed upon the forty per cent basis. Both warehouses would be upon land, could not be on anything else. By such construction we should have two classes of improvements precisely similar, without anything to distinguish one class from another, except that the property in one class belonged to a railroad and the other to an individual.
“Classification must be based upon substantial distinctions which make one class really different from another. (Northwestern Life Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin, 247 U. S. 132, 62 L. Ed. 1025, 38 Sup. Ct. Rep. 444).” (Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Sanders County, 66 Mont. 608, 214 Pac. 596.)
A classification such as respondent contends for would be arbitrary, discriminatory and unfair, and therefore would be unconstitutional. (Hilger v. Moore, 56 Mont. 146, 182 Pac.  477.) This court will always endeavor to sustain the constitutionality of an Act of the legislature. If two constructions are possible, one of which will result in declaring the law constitutional and the other unconstitutional, the court will prefer the former.
We hold that the improvements in question should be classified under subdivision 4, and it follows that relator’s position is well founded.
Let the writ issue.
Associate Justices Cooper, Holloway, Galen and Stark concur.