Behan v. Board of Assessors

46 La. Ann. 870
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1894
DocketNo. 11,500
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 La. Ann. 870 (Behan v. Board of Assessors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Behan v. Board of Assessors, 46 La. Ann. 870 (La. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

Alleging themselves to be the joint owners of certain real property situated in the city of New Orleans, and described in their petition, together with all of the buildings and improvements thereon, as well as all of the rights, ways, servitudes and privileges thereto appertaining, and also of the entire machinery, engines, boilers, loom, frames, shaftings, pulleys, elevator, etc., thereon situated — the whole constituting the plant and fixtures of said property — the petitioners represent that, on the 3d day of May, 1893, same was purchased for their account at sheriff’s sale, [871]*871and that the proces verbal of adjudication thereof was duly registered in the conveyance records of the parish of Orleans on the 19th of July, 1893.

That, upon examination of the tax records and the recorder’s office, they Arid certain assessments against the property, which, in their estimation, are null and void, and should be so adjudged and declared, and canceled and erased for the following reasons — same being summarized in the plaintiff’s brief, as follows, viz.:

“ The points for which we contend, and upon which we rely to establish the absolute nullity of the second assessment, are as follows, to-wit:
“ 1. That the assessment for machinery and appurtenances is a dual assessment, as this property is covered by the assessment of the real estate upon which it is located.
“2. That even if it be not a dual assessment, it is null and void, because it is an assessment of Axtures or immovables by destination separate from the real estate to which the same are attached.
“And even if the assessment be not entirely null and void, we claim that it does not operate a lien upon the property of the plaintiffs, for the reason that they acquired this property at sheriff’s sale before the taxes for the year 1893 had matured so as to become a lien.”

The prayer of the petition is, in substance, that the judgment of the court decree that the assessment placed by the Board of Assessors on the assessment rolls of 1893, for the sum of one hundred and twenty thousand six hundred dollars, “ on the jute factory, all machinery and appurtenances, locomotive and all other motive powers,” is absolutely null and void and of no effect; or that in the alternative, it decree that said assessment does not bear a lien and privilege upon said property; and that in the event both the assessment and lien be maintained, that the latter be so reduced as to correspond with the true value thereof.

The answer of the Board of Assessors and tax collector is a general denial.

On these issues the case was tried and judgment rendered in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs have appealed.

The case of the plaintiffs is very carefully stated in their counsel’s brief, and for the purpose of being accurate we extract the portion that is deemed most pertinent, to-wit: “That both [872]*872of said assessments are in the name of the Crescent Jute Manufacturing Company; that they are both on the same property; that all of the machinery, appurtenances and motive power of every description whatsoever, in the jute factory at the corner of Chartres and St. Ferdinand streets, are upon the real estate described in the first of said assessments, and are appurtenances and a part of said real estate, and are immovables by destination. That said assessment, upon the cash value of lands and lots of ground aforesaid, including buildings and improvements of whatever kind, assessed at twenty-nine thousand four hundred dollars, exhausted the power of the Board of Assessors, and that said second assessment is a duplicate or dual assessment, and therefore null and void; that the Crescent Jute Manufacturing Company, which was the owner of said property at the time when the assessment rolls of the parish of Orleans were exposed for inspection in the year 1893, applied for thq cancellation of said assessment to said Board of Assessors during the time prescribed by law, but that the assessors, nevertheless, failed to cancel the said assessment, and that the assessment is null, not only because it is a dual assessment, but also because the said machinery, motive power and everything included in said assessment of one hundred and twenty thousand six hundred dollars constitutes machinery and property employed in the manufacture of textile fabrics in a factory, wherein more than five hands are and were employed, and that the same is therefore exempt from taxation by Art. 207 of the Constitution, for the year 1879; that the sum of twenty-nine thousand four hundred dollars, at which the said real estate is assessed, is greater than the full market value of the real estate, and of all the machinery, appurtenances and improvements thereupon, including the property covered by said second assessment, and that the real value of all of said property, so assessed at twenty-nine thousand four hundred dollars, does not and did not at the time of the assessment exceed twenty thousand dollars; that even if the assessment on machinery was not a dual assessment, it is null and void because an assessment of improvements on real estate separate from the real estate upon which the same are located contrary to the laws of this State; that even if the assessment be declared to be a legal and valid assessment against the Crescent Jute Manufacturing Company, it is, nevertheless, inoperative, in so far as the property acquired by petitioners is eon[873]*873cerned, and does not bear a lien or privilege upon the same because the same was acquired by petitioners at sheriff’s sale, prior to the time when the same became a lien upon said property under the laws of the State of Louisiana.”

(a) The following is a verified copy of the assessment complained of, viz.:

u Assessment Roll for the Parish of Orleans, 1893.

The foregoing constitutes a single assessment, and is not in any. sense a dual or double assessment, or one that was made by piecemeal, and at different times or dates.

The roll — an extract from which is brought up in the original— plainly shows that under heading No. 1, “Cash value of all lands and lots * * including buildings and improvements of whatever kind,” the lots of ground and the buildings and improvements thereon belonging to the Crescent Jute Manufacturing Company, were assessed at twenty-nine thousand four hundred dollars; while under heading No. 13, “ All machinery and appurtenances, locomotive and all other motive power” belonging to said company were assessed at one hundred and twenty thousand six hundred dollars. This assessment was made in exact compliance with the blanks furnished to and in use by the parish assessors.

An examination of Sec. 1 of Act 106 of 1890 shows that the assessment was made in exact conformity to its provisions, the act in terms requiring an assessment of “ all real estate, with the buildings and improvements thereon or thereto attached,” as one item of [874]*874property that is subject to assessment; and separate and apart from this is the assessment of “engines, boilers, apparatus, appurtenances, appliances and attachments for steam, electric and other engines,” and the like.

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Related

Comegys v. Louisiana Tax Commission
130 So. 654 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 La. Ann. 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/behan-v-board-of-assessors-la-1894.