Adams v. Lamb-Fish Lumber Co.

61 So. 6, 104 Miss. 48
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 61 So. 6 (Adams v. Lamb-Fish Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Lamb-Fish Lumber Co., 61 So. 6, 104 Miss. 48 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Lamb-Fish Lumber Company was assessed for taxes by the county assessor, and the roll as prepared by him was approved by the board of supervisors. This roll was copied by the town assessor, and either by nonaction, or by affirmative action, was approved by the board of aldermen during the months of September and October. In November the board of supervisors reduced the assessed valuation of the property of appellant as it appeared on the roll at the time the same was copied by the town assessor. In this suit by the revenue agent to enforce.the collection of the unpaid town taxes,, appellée answered that it was exempted from municipal taxation by ordinance duly and legally adopted by the authorities of the municipality. The contention of appellee was sustained [50]*50by the chancello,r, and this court, on appeal, reversed the chancellor, holding that the ordinance exempting appellee from the payment of town taxes for a period of eight years was ultra vires and void. The matter is now before the court upon the motion of the revenue agent to set aside the judgment reversing the cause, and for final judgment here for the amount due the town, upon the valuation of the property, as fixed by the roll approved by the board of supervisors, and copied by the town assessor and approved by the board of mayor and aldermen of the town of Charleston.

It is the contention of appellee that it should only be required to pay upon the valuation as reduced by the board of supervisors in November. The point presented is precise, and no middle ground exists. Sections 3421 and 3422 of the Code of 1906, in the chapter on “Municipalities,” contain the law controlling municipalities in the assessment and valuation of property embraced within the corporate limits. It is believed that the titles, of the two sections are, in some degree, significant, and throw light upon their proper construction. Section 3421 is entitled, “Revenue; the assessment.” Section 3422, ■“Assessment valuations.” The subject-matter treated in section 3421 is the assessment roll and what it shall contain, if the roll adopted be the roll approved by the board of supervisors, while section 3422 deals with the valuation of property assessed for the purpose of the municipality.

Of course, in its broader sense, assessment embraces valuation, but at the same time the assessment roll embraces, not only the valuation placed upon property, but the names of the owners thereof and an accurate description of same. It is observable, therefore, that valuation is only one of the elements of assessment — the most important element it is true, nevertheless, only one of the elements. Turning, now, to the chapter of Code of 1906, entitled “Revenue,” section 4312 provides that for certain causes the board of supervisors “shall have the [51]*51power at any time to change the assessment so as to reduce or increase the true valuation of the property.” Returning to section 3421, we find these words, “and all changes in the county assessment thereafter made shall likewise he made in the copy.” Upon the construction and application of this language, appellant and appellee part company, and the solution of this precise point is now submitted to this court.

In City of Biloxi v. Biloxi Real Estate Co., 94 Miss. 653, 48 South. 729, it is held that the board of mayor and aldermen have no power to equalize assessments after the expiration of October, because “it was plainly the purpose of the legislature to limit the time in which there shall be a preparation of the rolls for the purpose of taxation.” In the above-cited ease the exact point now before the court was not presented, but it is quite clear that the reasons given for the decision in that case are applicable to the present case. After October the board of mayor and aldermen are without power to change the rolls, because the rolls are then in the hands of the collector for the purpose of collecting the taxes, and for the further reason— and this is all-sufficient — the statute does not confer this authority upon the board of mayor and aldermen. Taking the provision in section 3421, which requires all changes in the county assessments to be made in the copy made for municipalities, disconnected from the general scheme for the collection of taxes, it would seem that, when the board of supervisors made changes in the county assessments under section 4312, the collectors of municipalities should immediately change their rolls to harmonize with the county roll.

The municipality, in this instance, instead of adopting a scheme of assessment of its own, elected to adopt the method of copying the county rolls; and, when the .rolls had passed from the control of the town board, the county reduced appellee’s assessment. Clearly the statute gives no power to the town board to change the assessment roll [52]*52after October. Then who is to make the change ? If the board of aldermen cannot do it, can the collector make the change? If the collector does not make the change, does the law work automatically? The perplexity results from the confusion of the assessment roll and the valuation of property. Section 3422, in the broadest terms, gives the mayor and board of aldermen of municipalities the power, at a regular, or special meeting to be held in September and October in each year, to increase or diminish the valuation of property assessed for taxation. So it is clear that the town board can increase or diminish the valuation of property, although the town board has. elected to copy the county assessment roll, and take that as a basis for municipal taxation. It is said that this construction nullifies section 3421, which requires all changes made in the county roll to be also made in the copy, and that, in order to harmonize' section 3422 and section 3421, it is necessary to hold that section 3422 only applies to those instances where municipalities have provided for a separate assessment according to the last sentence of section 3421. It will be noted that section 3422 is broad and sweeping in its terms, and that there could be no room for construction, but for the requirement of section 3421, that all changes made in the county rolls shall likewise be made in the copy.

It is inconceivable that the legislature intended that the town assessor, who may be an entirely different person from the collector, is required to keep tab on the action of the county board, and, when it makes a change in the county roll, he is required to immediately take charge of the town roll and make the change there so as to harmonize the valuation of property with the changed valuation of the county. The changes referred to by section 3421 must be changes of another sort — such as additions thereto, which were overlooked when the original roll was made up and approved. The law authorizing towns, cities, and villages to adopt the county rolls was designed [53]*53to simplify and cheapen the work of assessing the taxes for municipal taxation, and to obviate the necessity.for an elaborate separate scheme to be provided for by ordinance. It was for the convenience of the small towns and villages, and was never intended to deprive the town board of the power to fix the valuation of property for taxation for town purposes. It is within the power of the town board, under section 3122, to exercise its own discretion about valuations unaffected by the valuation put upon property embraced within its corporate limits by boards of supervisors for county purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 6, 104 Miss. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-lamb-fish-lumber-co-miss-1913.