Aull v. Lidepa Corp.

159 So. 808, 118 Fla. 408, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1725
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 11, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 So. 808 (Aull v. Lidepa Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aull v. Lidepa Corp., 159 So. 808, 118 Fla. 408, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1725 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Buford, J.

On June 14, 1934, appellant exhibited his bill of complaint in the Circuit Court in and for Dade County, seeking to enjoin the issuance of a tax deed under certain tax sale certificates issued August 3, 1934, by the City of Coral Gables upon the sale of lands to enforce the collection of unpaid taxes assessed for the year 1930.

On August 14, 1934, amended bill of complaint was filed. We will deal only with the amended bill of complaint. It was termed a bill of complaint for cancellation of tax certificates to quiet title and for injunction.

The salient allegations of the bill were that complainant was the owner of lots 31 and 32 in block 4, section E of the City of Coral Gables; that the lots were vacant; they had a frontage of 50 ft. and depth of 150 ft. each; that the lots were sold on August 3, 1931, for the non-payment of taxes assessed against the lots for 1930; lot 31 was sold for $65.34; lot 32 was' sold for $77.94, being respectively the amounts assessed against each lot. That two lots adjoining these said lots were owned by one Louis Nixon, upon which said two lots Nos. 29 and 30, Louis Nixon had his residence; and that Louis Nixon was the purchaser of said lots Nos. 31 and 32 at said tax sale. That Nixon, on November 8, 1932, transferred and assigned the certificate to L. D. Pankey, and on April 23, 1934, L. D. Pankey assigned the certificates to the defendant Lidepa Corporation; ,that on May 17, 1934, Lidepa Corporation applied to the Clerk of the Circuit Court for tax deed. Whereupon notice of such application was given to the complainant and published by the Clerk of the Circuit Court warning the plaintiff that unless' the certificates were redeemed on or before June 14, 1934, by payment of the amount of the *410 certificates, with costs and interests, amounting to a total of $220.00, tax deed would issue and complainant averred that tax deed would issue unless restrained by the court.

The bill further alleges that the tax sale certificates' referred to were imposed in violation of the State and Federal Constitution, the laws of the State of Florida and the Charter of the City of Coral Gables, and constituted no valid lien or claim upon the lots, for the reason, as it is alleged, that the City of Coral Gables, through its Tax Assessor, assessed lot 31 at a valuation of $2055.00, and lot 32 at a valuation of $2465, when, in truth and in fact, said lots had a cash value not in excess of $500.00 each. That the excessive valuation so assessed against the lots were intentionally, deliberately, systematically, arbitrarily and fraudulently so assessed with the knowledge, consent and approval of the members of the Board of Commissioners and Board of Equalization of said city in power and office during that year and without regard to actual values or existing economic conditions and that the said city at that time and at all times since the creation of the City of Coral Gables, through its assessing officers, Commissioners and Boards of Equalization, had followed a deliberate scheme and taxing power of their own in place of the Constitution and Laws of the State of Florida and requirements of the City Charter in that such assessments as the assessment here involved were discriminatory in that for the year 1930, as well as during the preceding years beginning with 1925 the assessing officers of the City of Coral Gables with knowledge, consent and approval of members of the City Board of Commissioners and Board of Equalization, violated the provisions of equality and uniformity and just valuations and the laws of the City and State, “by placing no assessments whatever upon the great number of improvements, *411 consisting of business structures and dwelling houses in said city for the years 1925, 1926 and 1927, and by assessing but 10% of the cash value of such improvements for ■ the year 1928, and but 20% of the cash value of such improvements for the years 1929 and 1930, as against grossly excessive valuations placed upon the vacant lots and parcels of land in said city, including aforesaid 2 lots owned by plaintiff and now sought to be made subject to the defendant’s application for a tax deed; that during the spring of the year 1928 the City of Coral Gables, through its officers, agents and employees, caused to be made a full and complete appraisement of all improvements and structures throughout the city subject to taxation at the then known and existing low value of the cost of reproduction, which said appraisement was then and there adopted by the said Assessor as a basis for aforesaid 10% and-20% valuations against the improvements upon the lands or lots themselves and was adopted and used as such basis by the successor of the City Assessor for 1928 and during the subsequent years', including 1930; that aforesaid structures and improvements amounted to more than 1,800 in number; that their cash value amounted to more than $17,000,000.00, according to aforesaid official appraisement placed upon the official records of said city in the Spring of 1928, and well known to its assessing officers, to the members of said Board of Commissioners and to said Board of Equalization; that on January 1, 1930, the number of structures and other improvements upon, and lands and lots in said City of Coral Gables had increased to the extent of more than $600,000.00 ^according to the official appraisement of the City Assessor used by him as a basis for imposing a' 20% valuation upon such new improvements for 1930 in like manner as the method pursued for the years 1928 and 1929 following *412 aforesaid appraisement of structures and improvements upon lands and lots made and adopted by said assessing officer in the Spring of 1928; that while said city under aforesaid scheme and method of taxation for the years 1925, 26, 27, placed no assessment valuations whatever against the great amount of structures' and improvements in said city and but 10% of the value of said improvements for 1929 and but 20% of the value of said improvements for 1930, as hereinabove set forth, it did place upon the tax rolls of said city, following the collapse of the Florida boom, for the years 1926 to 1930, inclusive, assessment valuations as against the vacant lots and lands in said city, including plaintiff’s lots, amounting to more than 30 times the cash value of the vacant lots or lands in 1927, down to more than 4 to 10 times' the cash value of the vacant lots and lands in said city, being more than 30,000 in number and including plaintiff’s aforesaid lots, for the year 1930; that said discriminatory method of assessment valuations in favor of structures and improvements', as against the vacant lots and lands in said city, during all of the aforesaid years, was intentional, deliberate, systematic, arbitrary and fraudulent and for the purpose of minimizing the burden of taxation against structures' and improvements and placing the major burden of taxation upon said vacant lots; that aforesaid method of assessment was followed without any regard to the law of the land, actual value or existing economic conditions during any of the said years, including the year 1930, and that, as an illustration of the working of said unlawful and discriminatory taxing method, plaintiff would show that the Commissioners of said city holding office during the years of 1925 to 1928, themselves, profited enormously by the discrimination practiced as aforesaid, so that for three years they escaped *413

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Related

Herbert v. Tax Securities Co.
1 So. 2d 183 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1941)
Rio Vista Hotel & Improvement Co. v. Belle Mead Development Corp.
182 So. 417 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1937)
Coombes v. City of Coral Gables
168 So. 524 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1936)
Draughon v. Heitman
168 So. 838 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 So. 808, 118 Fla. 408, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aull-v-lidepa-corp-fla-1935.