
    CONYNGHAM SCHOOL DISTRICT APPEAL.
    The levy of a tax of thirteen wills for school purposes is legal.
    Error to the Common Fleas of Columbia County.
   Opinion delivered by

Gordon, J.

The Locust Mountain Coal Company in its bill, in this case, sets forth inter alia, that it is the owner of large tracts of coal lands in Conyngham township, Columbia county, upon which, for school purposes, for the year 1874, the appellants illegally levied a tax of thirteen mills upon each dollar of the valuation thereof, whereas by the Act of Assembly of 1854 they have authority to levy an amount not greater than that which the law authorizes to be levied for county purposes, to wit, ten mills. The court below adopted this view of the case and granted a preliminary injunction to restrain the collection of the excess of said taxes over ten mills. A careful examination of the Act of 1854 compels us to dissent from this conclusion.

Section 29 of that Act requires the County Commissioners to furnish the President and Secretary of the School Board, “ with a correct copy of the last adjusted valuation of proper subjects and things made taxable in the same, for State and County purposes, which said property, subjects, and things are hereby made taxable for school purposes, according to the provisions of this Act. This section furnishes to the Board of Directors a schedule of those objects upon which they may assess their tax. Now it matters not that certain articles found in these assessment lists are taxable only for State and others only for County purposes, because all are made taxable for school purposes, without distinction.

The Act refers in general terms to subjects taxable for State and County purposes, in order that the valuations may be uniform, and that those made for the County Commissioners become valuations for the school assessments; uniformity is thus obtained and expense avoided. Nevertheless those school assessments are none the less separate and independent because based on the County and State valuations.

Let us select for example three subjects, pleasure-carriages, lands, and horses, the first liable only to State, the second only to County taxes, and the third to both State and County taxes. All, however, are subjective to school levies, and for such purposes they form a separate and independent schedule, and the school officer is not bound to know for which of the above-named purposes they are taxable. It is enough that they are *taxable for either, Then, having the schedule, the next inquiry is what amount may be levied thereon? The 31st section of the Act of 1854 furnishes the answer: “The Board of Directors * * * shall proceed to levy and apportion said school tax, pursuant to this Act, not exceeding the amount of State and County tax authorized by law, on all objects * * * made or to be made taxable for State or County purposes.” Now as the obvious grammatical structure of this section requires that the first clause be immediately connected with the last, and that the middle one be transposed to read parenthetically, we may arrange them thus : Shall proceed to levy and apportion said school tax on all objects * * * made or to be made taxable for State or County purposes, not exceeding the amount of State and County tax authorized by law.”

We can hardly conceive of anything more definite than this language. The School Director says—-I have now a lawful list of the subjects which I may tax, now what is the amount I may levy ? Answer—An amount not exceeding the amount, that is, the aggregate, the sum total of the State and i. e., added to (for this conjunction implies addition) the County tax. We are therefore to take the amount of the County tax authorized by law at the time when the school tax is assessed, now ten mills, and add thereto the amount of the State tax, in like manner authorized at the time of said assessment, now three mills, and this sum gives us the maximum rate for the school assessment. According to the construction contended for by the appellee, the above rule would apply only to articles taxable for both State and County purposes, while another must be adopted for those taxable only for County, and a third for such as are taxable only for State purposes. Thus the tax on horses must be thirteen mills, upon lands ten, and upon watches and pleasure carriages three mills. The objection to this construction is, that it destroys both the uniformity and simplicity of a tax system in which both these elements are important, and worse than all, it does not properly express the Legislative will. Again, if our construction of this enactment be not correct, how shall we interpret the 6th Sec. of the Act of April 11th, 1862, Ph. L. 472, which reads in this wise : “ The school tax on all watches and pleasure carriages shall be at the same rate on the adjusted valuation thereof, as upon other property taxable by rate in the proper (School) District.” Now adopt the rule claimed by the counsel for the plaintiff as the true one, and we may well ask what rate, and what “ other property” are here meant ? Shall we levy three, ten or thirteen mills? For according to his exposition, the “other property” is taxable at all these rates. Clearly the Legislature of 1862 understood as we do, that the Act of 1854 authorized but one uniform rate of assessment on *all property made subject to school tax, and, with that understanding, its enactment is free from obscurity and within the comprehension of the most ordinary mind. We are therefore the more confirmed in the adoption of this exposition because it accords with legislative interpretation and because it exhibits a coherent, simple, and uniform system.

The decree of the court below is therefore reversed, at the costs, of the appellees, and the preliminary injunction is dissolved and set aside.  