i. taxation: railroads. I. Chapter 26, Laws Fourteenth General Assembly, approved April 6,1872, provides a mode for the assessment of railroad property used in-'the operation'of the. road, and repeals all statutes inconsistent therewith. Section one of this chapter makes it the duty of the Census Board to assess such railroad property on the first Monday of March in each year'. Section twelve provides that for the' year 1872 the assessment shall be made in July.
Section 2, chapter 100, Laws of Twelfth General Assembly, provides that the township- trustees, at their annual meeting,to be held on the second Mqnday in April, shall determine upon the amount of property tax to be levied for roads, bridges, plows, scrapers, tools and machinery adapted to the construction and repair of roads, and for the payment of indebtedness, and shall levy the same, which shall not be more than three mills, nor less than one mill; on the amount of the township assessment for that year. Sec. 892 of the Revision provides that the township clerk shall, within four weeks after the levy, make out a tax-list in tabular form and alphabetical order, for each road district in his township, and that, to enable him to make out such list, the assessor shall furnish the township clerk of each township with a correct copy of the assessment lists of -the township for that year, which list shall be the basis of the tax list. Sec. 893 provides that the township clerk shall attach to the list his warrant, in general terms, requiring the supervisors of the district to collect the taxes, and that he shall cause such list to be delivered to the proper supervisors by the first day of May after the levy, which list shall be sufficient authority for the supervisor to collect all taxes charged therein against any resident property holder in his district.
Section 895, Revision, makes it the duty of the township trustees, on the second Monday in April, to determine the price of labor for men and teams. Section 896, Revision, prescribes *64the notice which the road supervisor shall give to all persons in his district charged with a road tax, of the days he will superintend the work on the roads in his district, and makes it the duty of the person so notified to meet the supervisor at the time and place designated, and provides that, in case of failure to attend, the supervisor shall commence suit for the collection of the tax which such person is liable to pay.
Section 3, chapter 100, Laws Twelfth General Assembly, is as follows: “ The supervisor shall, within ten days after receiving the tax-list specified in sections 892 and 893 of the Revision of 1860, post up, in three conspicuous places within his district, written notices of the amount of road tax assessed to each tax payer in said district, and in case of a failure to pay said tax by the first Monday in October, in each year, the supervisor shall report the same to the township trustees, the same as tax on non-resident lands, and the tax thereon shall be collected in the same manner, and the same penalties, as in the case of non-resident lands.”
Section 1, chapter 76 of the Laws of the Twelfth General Assembly provides: “ That the township clerks shall, on or before the second Monday of October, in each year, make out a correct list of all non-resident land and town lots, on which the road tax has not been paid, and the amount of tax charged on each piece of land and town lot, designating the district in which said land or town lot is situated, and transmit a certified copy of the same to the clerk of the Board of Supervisors of the proper county, who shall enter the amount of tax on each piece of land and town lot on the tax list, opposite such piece of land and town lot respectively, in the column ruled for that purpose, the same as other taxes, and deliver the same to the county treasurer, charging him with the saíne, which shall be collected by such treasurer in the same manner that county taxes are collected.”
The petition alleges that the Census Board of the State assessed the property of plaintiff on or about the 31st day of July, 1872, and it tacitly admits that the township trustees, at the proper time, levied the proper rate of tax for road purposes.
*65The objections urged against the tax are that the assessment was not entered upon the original assessment books of the townships named; that it did not appear upon any of the copies thereof furnished to the township clerks; that it did not appear upon any assessment book at the time of the-levy of road taxes for the year 1872, by the township trustees; that the assessment or any tax thereon did not appear upon the tax lists made out by the clerks of the townships in question, and delivered to the road supervisors; that no road supervisor in either of said townships posted a notice of any road tax, or reported to any township trustee of their township any road tax unpaid or assessed to plaintiff; that the clerks of the townships named did not transmit to the clerk of the Board of Supervisors a list containing any tax on the assessment against ■ plaintiff, and that the clerk of the Board of Supervisors of Kossuth county on his own motion, and without authority of law extended upon the tax rolls of the county, the tax in question.
It is conceded that the provisions of the statutes which we have enumerated, and on account of a disregard of which it is claimed the tax in question' is void, could not in the nature of things have been complied with for the year 1872, for they are all based upon an assessment previously made, and most of them are directed to he done before any assessment of railroad property could, occur under section 12, chapter 26, Laws Fourteenth General Assembly.
One of two conclusions must be true. The legislature intended that, -for the year 1872, a road tax against railroads should be valid without complying with these conditions, or it intended that for the year 1872 railroads should escape taxation for road purposes.
Section 6, chapter 26, Laws Fourteenth General Assembly, is as follows: “All such railroad property shall be taxable upon said assessment at the same rates, by the same officers, and for the same purposes as the property of individuals within such counties, cities, towns, townships and lesser taxing districts.” This clearly indicates an intention that the property in question should be taxed at the same rate, and for *66the same purposes for the year 1872, as the property of individuals. We conclude, therefore, that the legislature did not intend that the property in question should escape road taxes for the year named.
2 _._. of6supervi-ld s°rs. How then is this intention to be effectuated and enforced? 'The tax cannot be extended upon any list made out by the township clerk, for he was required to make out kd¡3 list, and deliver it to the road supervisor, before the property in question was assessed. Some one must perform this merely clerical duty, or the tax must fail, and the legislative will must be defeated. It is the duty of the clerk of the Board of Supervisors to enter in a suitable book, provided him for that purpose, the names of tax payers, descriptions of lands, number of acres and value, number of town lots and value, and value of personal property, and each description of tax. Revision of 1860, section 715. The provisions of this section we concede apply primarily to State, county and school taxes, and those for repairing bridges, and such road taxes as are properly certified by the township trustees. But the language is broad enough to include all taxes. And, when the legislature authorized the collection of a road tax, and authorized no one to extend the tax upon the tax list, the effect of such legislation was to enlarge the primary signification of section 715, and to impose that duty upon the clerk of the Board of Supervisors.
We conclude that the road tax in question is legal, and that the demurrer to the first count in the petition was properly sustained.
3 _.__. diyision'of township. II. The objections to the taxes for teacher’s and contingent fund involve the same questions, and may be considered together. Section 31, chapter 172, Laws of the Ninth General Assembly, provides that the Board 0f Supervisors shall, at their regular meeting in April in each year, determine the amount necessary to be levied on the property in the district for the teacher’s and contingent fund, and cause the same to be certified to the county Board of Supervisors, who shall cause the same to be *67levied and collected as other district taxes. This section fixes, no limit upon the amount of levy.
Section 1, chapter 31, Laws Fourteenth General Assembly, provides: “That the amount of tax levied under section 31, chapter 172, Acts of the Ninth General Assembly shall hereafter be limited as follows: The amount to be raised for contingent fund shall not exceed five dollars per scholar, and the amount raised for teachers’ fund, including the amount received from the semi-annual apportionment, shall not exceed fifteen dollars per scholar, for each scholar residing in the district township or independent district for which the tax is levied. The number of persons between the ages of five and twenty-one years, as shown by the last report of the county superintendent, shall, for the purposes of this act, be deemed the number of scholars in each school district.”
Section 70, chapter 172, Laws of the Ninth General Assembly, requires that the county superintendent shall, on the 5th day of October of each year report to the clerk -of the Board of Supervisors the number of persons between the ages of five and twenty-one years, in each school district in the county. From the stipulation of the parties, which is to be regarded as a part of the petition, it appears that in the year 1871 the Board of Supervisors divided the township of Algona, creating the new township of Wesley, that this division for. school purposes took effect at the March election, 1872, and that in the meantime the county superintendent made his return of the scholars in the then district of Algona, but made no separate return for the portion now constituting the township of Wesley.
As the county superintendent was required to make his report for 1871 on the 5th day of October, which was before the division of the township took effect, -he could do no other than report all of the scholars in the district as it existed at the time. When the tax for 1872 was levied, there was, and in the nature of things could be, no report of the number of scholars in the new district of Wesley.
If a literal and strict construction must be placed upon the statutes which have been considered, it follows that no legal *68school tax could be raised in the district township of Wesley, for the year 1872, notwithstanding the fact that the division was complete in March of that year. But certainly the legislature did hot intend that a new district township should be deprived of the right of levying taxes for the year in which it was created. We must look then to the spirit, and not to the mere letter, of these statutes. Qui haeret in litera, haeret in eortice.
We are of opinion that, if the taxes levied in the new district townships of Wesley and Algona, for the year 1872, are not in excess of $15 per scholar for the teachers fund, and $5 per scholar for the contingent fund, as shown by the report of the county superintendent in October 1871, for the old district township of Algona, there has been no violation of the spirit of these provisions.
The petition does not allege, in the second and third counts, that the tax levied is in excess of the limit above named, and the demurref thereto was properly sustained.
4__. leyy neraoi siib-" mission. III. The Board of Supervisors of Kossuth county at their •regular session in June, A. D. 1871, adopted a resolution that the question of issuing the bonds of the county for $25,000.00, for the purpose of erecting a court house, and of levying a tax of five mills on the dollar for the year 1872, to be continued from year to year until the.amount of said bonds is paid, be submitted to the people of the county at the next regular election. The resolution prescribed that the form of ballot should be, for those voting for the proposition, “For court house bonds,” and for those voting against the proposition, “Against court house bonds.”
The petition alleges that a majoritj^ of the ballots cast at the election were “for court house bonds,” but that none of them adopted airy tax wherewith to pay them. The position is not sound. The proposition submitted was to issue bonds and provide a tax'for their payment.
The Board of Supervisors prescribed a form of ballot, a form not intelligible to one having no knowledge of the resolution, but perfectly clear to one possessed of such knowledge. *69They also required their clerk to cause due and legal publication and posting of the resolution. This required that not only the question submitted, but the form in which the vote •would be taken, should be published. Eevision, section 251. It is presumed in the absence of any averment to the contrary that proper publication 'of the question was made. When, therefore, any one voted “ for court house 'bonds,” he voted that a tax of five mills on the dollar should be levied for paying them, just as much as he voted that the county should issue bonds to the extent of $25,000, for the erection of a court house. And the aggregate vote of the county “for court house bonds,” was also a vote that a tax of five mills on the dollar be levied for the purpose of discharging them. State v. Bissell, 4 G. Greene, 328; McMillan v. Lee County, 3 Iowa, 311.
The demurrer to the fourth count was properly sustained.
Aeeirmed.