Belk's Department Store, Inc. v. . Guilford County

23 S.E.2d 897, 222 N.C. 441, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 350
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 8, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 23 S.E.2d 897 (Belk's Department Store, Inc. v. . Guilford County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belk's Department Store, Inc. v. . Guilford County, 23 S.E.2d 897, 222 N.C. 441, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 350 (N.C. 1943).

Opinions

STACY, C. J., dissenting. The plaintiff, a corporation under the laws of this State, is the owner of a lot and building thereon at the southeast corner of the intersection of South Elm Street and East Market Street, in the city of Greensboro, Guilford County. The property was listed for taxation as of 1 January, 1941, and appraised or valued for the purpose of tax assessment in regular course by the authorities established by law for that purpose.

In the county of Guilford a Revaluation Board of Assessors had been established by statute applicable to that county, chapter 86, Public-Local Laws of 1941, which, in the order of procedure provided, first undertook the appraisal of the property and made separate findings as to the value of the lot and the value of the building thereupon, and finding the total value of the property therefrom. The value of the land was fixed at $271,190.00 and a "tax value" of $230,511.50 resulted by reason of a rule, uniformly applied, that for taxing purposes 85% of the real value should be observed. The record does not disclose the total valuation of land and building together.

The plaintiff, contending that the valuation was excessive, filed a complaint before the Guilford County Board of Equalization and Review, a board created under authority of the above cited statute, ch. 86, Public-Local Laws of 1941, requesting a reduction of the valuation set on the land alone, not complaining of the value placed on the building. This complaint was filed 16 December, 1941. The plaintiff was represented at the hearing, which resulted in a reduction of $6,825.00, which it appears was to correct an error as to the frontage of the lot on Elm Street. Contending that the valuation was still excessive, plaintiff appealed from this board to the Board of County Commissioners of Guilford County, sitting as a Board of Equalization and Review. Machinery Act of 1939, sec. 1105, et seq. (Michie's Code of 1939, sec. 7971 [160], et seq.). The appeal was heard on 16 April, 1942, and on 15 June, 1942, the board denied any further reduction of the valuation. Appeal was *Page 443 then taken to the State Board of Assessment (q.v., Michie's Code of 1939, secs. 7971 [106]-7971 [110], Machinery Act of 1939, secs. 200204), where plaintiff was given a hearing on 29 July, 1942, as a result of which the valuation theretofore made was confirmed.

It is alleged in the petition that no oral testimony had been taken on the hearings; but that petitioner has filed statement of its contentions, "together with a tabulation of the figures involved," and that at the hearing before the State Board of Assessment, it introduced a "certificate of valuation" made by the Greensboro Real Estate Board, in which the value of petitioner's land was placed at $222,264.00. The petition recites various evidential matters in support of the merit of its contention that the value placed on the land is excessive.

As bearing on the right to the writ, plaintiff points out in the petition that there is no provision in the Machinery Act for an appeal from an adverse decision of the State Board of Assessment and avers that it is advised and believes that in such case access to the courts may be had bycertiorari. The prayer of the petition is for a writ of certiorari to the State Board of Assessment to bring up the cause for a hearing in the Superior Court.

The defendants moved to dismiss the petition, assigning as grounds: (1) That plaintiff paid taxes voluntarily for the year 1941 on the property as valued; (2) that petitioner's only remedy by way of attack on the assessment was to pay the taxes and sue for recovery; (3) for that petitioner seeks a review of a finding of fact by the State Board of Assessment without alleging any error of law, want of evidence to sustain the finding of fact, or any allegation of want of jurisdiction in the State Board of Assessment, and without any allegation that the valuation fixed on petitioner's property by the State Board of Assessment was not equalized with the valuation of other property in the county; and (4) that the petition discloses no ground entitling the petitioner to a writ ofcertiorari or a jury trial to determine the facts in the matter.

Upon the hearing, Judge Olive, holding the August, 1942, Term of Guilford Superior Court, overruled the motion to dismiss the petition, and ordered that the writ be issued as prayed for by plaintiff. From this order defendants appealed, assigning error. The plaintiff contends that the action of the State Board of Assessment in fixing the value of its property for purposes of taxation was aquasi-judicial act and, therefore, subject to court review, *Page 444 which may be had by certiorari, since the statute does not provide for an appeal to the court. Upon this theory, the propriety or necessity for review would be referred to the general power of the court to supervise inferior courts and tribunals with respect to judicial acts, and in this State the scope of such review would be controlled by the rules of the common law. But plaintiff is not content to rest its alleged right of review on this basis alone — probably because, where the practice obtains, review by certiorari on this principle is generally confined to errors of law — principally those affecting the jurisdiction of the board or the validity of the procedure — and does not include questions of fact or, to be specific, valuation of property for purposes of taxation. The plaintiff goes further than such a review would imply, and demands a de novo hearing in the Superior Court upon the merits, in which the value of the property may be fixed by a jury. Counsel for plaintiff in support of this demand call to our attention Article I, sec. 19, of the Constitution, relating to trial by jury, and cite certain decisions of this Court which they regard as having a favorable connotation: Dougan v.Arnold, 15 N.C. 99; Petty v. Jones, 23 N.C. 408; Lunceford v.McPherson, 48 N.C. 174; Hartsfield v. Jones, 49 N.C. 309; Walls v.Strickland, 174 N.C. 298.

It can readily be seen that where certiorari is used as a substitute for an appeal expressly provided in the law, which has been lost without the fault of the petitioner, the hearing in the court must necessarily be denovo, if the appeal provided is of that nature. It is otherwise whencertiorari is used as at common law to bring up for review the action of inferior courts or tribunals upon the principle that the acts sought to be reviewed are judicial or quasi-judicial, or within the supervisory or "superintending" power of the court. 10 Am. Jur., Certiorari, sec. 4;Hartsfield v. Jones, 49 N.C. 309, 310.

Rhyne v. Lipscombe, 122 N.C. 650, 29 S.E. 57, and Taylor v. Johnson,171 N.C. 84, 87 S.E. 981, rest upon the principle that the Legislature in creating an inferior court, without express right of appeal, cannot thus destroy the constitutional authority of the Superior Court or by act of the Legislature create courts of equal dignity and jurisdiction, and that in the absence of a provision for an appeal from such court, certiorari will lie as a substitute therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.E.2d 897, 222 N.C. 441, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belks-department-store-inc-v-guilford-county-nc-1943.