Alexander v. Commonwealth

120 S.E. 296, 137 Va. 477, 1923 Va. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 120 S.E. 296 (Alexander v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Commonwealth, 120 S.E. 296, 137 Va. 477, 1923 Va. LEXIS 172 (Va. 1923).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit in chancery by the Commonwealth of Virginia brought in June, 1917, against the appellant, John A. Alexander, to enforce a lien for taxes for the year 1916 on a tract of 23,400 acres of land, and the underlying minerals, and on the minerals underlying another tract of 1,500 acres. There is no controversy as to the latter and it may be dropped from further consideration. The bill was subsequently amended to introduce new parties who were supposed to have an interest in, or a lien upon, the land. In May, 1918, there was an order for an account of liens and their.relative priorities. In June, 1918, appellant appeared by counsel and suggested the pendency in the Circuit Court of Augusta county of an injunction suit seriously affecting his interest in the 23,400 acre tract, and in August, 1918, an order was made directing the master, to whom the case had been referred for account, not to report on the merits of the controversy in the suit in Augusta county. All further proceedings were thereupon suspended in the present suit until the latter part of 1920. In the meantime the controversy in the Augusta suit was decided in favor of the appellant. In December, 1920, the master, after notice to all the parties, began taking proof on the matters referred to him. His report was not filed till April, 1921. In his report he found the appellant indebted to the Commonwealth for taxes from 1915 to 1920, both inclusive, and for each of said years except 1920 the taxes were not only upon the assessed value of the surface, but also upon the assessed value of the underlying minerals and upon the improvements, machinery and fixtures on the land. The aggregate amount of all these taxes, including penalties and interest, was ascertained to be $4,609.48.

[481]*481In January, 1921, Alexander filed Ids petition in the Circuit Court of Rockingham county for the correction of the assessment of his land for the year 1920, in which he asserted that his land had been improperly classified as mineral land; that there were no underlying minerals of value and no improvements or fixtures on the land, and praying “that said assessment be corrected in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided,” and that his land be assessed as ordinary mountain land. At the following February term of the court, the application was heard on its merits, and it appearing to the court upon the evidence adduced that the said tract is unimproved mountain land and has virtually no mineral value, it was ordered that said land be assessed as land of the fair market value of seventy-five cents per acre. The land had been previously assessed at $1.00 per acre for the surface, $1.00 per acre for underlying minerals, and $1,500.00 for improvements, machinery and fixtures. The result of the court’s order was to reduce the taxes for 1920 from $876.47 to $341.58 and the latter sum was reported by the master as the tax for 1920.

After the Commonwealth had completed its evidence in the present suit and rested its case before the master, to-wit, on March 4, 1921, the appellant, Alexander, testified at length and in detail before the master, in his own behalf.

A few days after this, on the 12th day of March, 1921, appellant’s counsel mailed the master appellant’s answer, the exhibits referred to in his deposition, and a brief of authorities, with request that he have the clerk mark the answer filed. The master notified him that the Commonwealth objected to the answer as coming too late, and that he had the clerk make endorsement thereon showing that it had been filed in the office on March 25, 1921.

[482]*482The master completed and filed his report on the 19th day of April, 1921, and the case was set for argument on the 6th day of July, 1921. On that day counsel for appellant tendered in open court his answer, his several exceptions to the master’s report, and the case was argued on brief and orally; and on the 28th of October, 1921, the court entered the decree complained of, rejecting the answer, overruling the exceptions, confirming the report of the master, and decreeing a sale of the land for the taxes for the years 1915 to 1920, all based on the “special and separate” classification as “coal and other mineral land.”

The exceptions filed by the appellant to the master’s report were as follows:

“1. Because the master ascertains and reports that there is due from defendant the sum of $4,609.48, as of April 1, 1921, by way of unpaid taxes, for the years 1915 to 1920, both inclusive.
“2. Because the master fails to find that the assessment of the defendant’s land is illegal and void.
“2nd. Because the master fails to allow the defense set up in the answer and established by defendant’s evidence.
“3rd. Because the master fails to allow the defendant credit to the extent that the taxes asserted in the bill of complaint are based on values for underlying minerals, and improvements, machinery, etc., which are nonexistent.
“4th. Because the master does not find that the taxes in question .as levied on an erroneous classification of said lands as mineral lands under the special statute; and annul said assessment, charging the defendant in lieu thereof with the taxes for said year in a fair valuation of said lands as ordinary mountain lands on the same basis as lands of similar character in that section of the country.”

[483]*483The answer of the appellant was rejected because not filed within the time required by section 6122 of the Code. The appellant claimed that the section of the Code referred to had no application to the facts of this case.

The refusal to permit this answer to be filed is the first error assigned, but it is unnecessary to pass on it. If it was error it was harmless. The bill was not takeii for confessed as to the appellant. On the contrary, the case was heard upon his deposition, amongst others, and upon his exception to the report of the master. Every defense set up in his answer, was set up more in detail in his deposition, and his exceptions to the master’s report, which was acted upon by the court, set up every defense made in his answer. He was fully heard on the merits of his contention, both by the commission and by the court, and could not have been injured by the ruling on the filing of his answer.

The chief controversy arises on appellant’s second assignment of error, which is as follows:

“The refusal of the court to grant relief against the void, illegal, and erroneous taxes, and to reform the tax lien by charging defendant’s lands with the taxes properly chargeable thereon under a proper classification and valuation.”

Prior to 1915 the 23,400 acre tract had been assessed simply as mountain land, but in that year the assessing officers, in pursuance of section 172 of the Constitution and acts of 1912, page 162, classified it as mineral lands, assessing the surface at $23,400.00, the underlying minerals at $23,400.00 and improvements at $1,500.00. The contention of the appellant is that the classification and assessment are not simply erroneous but illegal and void, and that a court of [484]*484equity, in which he has been impleaded by the Commonwealth, will relieve against them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 296, 137 Va. 477, 1923 Va. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-commonwealth-va-1923.