Biltmore Hotel Court, Inc. v. City of Berry Hill

390 S.W.2d 223, 216 Tenn. 62, 20 McCanless 62, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 654
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 390 S.W.2d 223 (Biltmore Hotel Court, Inc. v. City of Berry Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biltmore Hotel Court, Inc. v. City of Berry Hill, 390 S.W.2d 223, 216 Tenn. 62, 20 McCanless 62, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 654 (Tenn. 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by the complainants from a decree of the Chancery Court of Davidson County sustaining *65 the demurrer filed by the defendant to the original bill of complainants. The bill, insofar as material to the questions raised by the assignments of error, alleges that the complainants are the owners of certain personal property located within the city limits of the City of Berry Hill, which is a municipal corporation created and operating under the authority of T.C.A. Title 6, Chapters 18-23. On October 2, 1963 the Commissioners of the City of Berry Hill enacted an ordinance which levied a tax on personalty in that city in the amount of $1.50 on each $100.00 assessed value for the year 1963. The bill alleges this ordinance is void because (a) it was amended on the third and final reading contrary to the requirements of T.C.A. sec. 6-2026, (b) the ordinance seeks to impose a tax predicated upon business records of the taxpayer for the year 1963 although the ordinance was not passed until October 1963 and retroactively required the keeping of records by the complainants for the months of January through September 1963, (c) the ordinance seeks to impose a tax retroactively, which the City of Berry Hill has no power to do, (d) under T.C.A. sec. 6-208 the City of Berry Hill, a municipality having fewer than 5,000 inhabitants, has authority to levy a maximum tax of 7% mills on the dollar, and the ordinance seeks to set a tax rate of 15 mills on the dollar. The bill further states:

“Complainants have sought and will continue to seek such administrative relief as is provided by law, but they aver that such relief would be inadequate to secure their rights under the law. ’ ’

It is further alleged that the assessments made by the City of Berry Hill under the ordinance of October 2,1963 are void for the following reasons:

*66 (a) The assessments were made on a completely arbitrary and capricious basis without knowledge of the value of the property assessed, without inspection of it by the Tax Assessor, without reference to the assessment made by the County Assessor upon the same property, and without information from complainants as to the value of the property or as to the amount of insurance carried on such property, all in violation of complainants ’ rights.
(b) The City of Berry Hill through its agents has reduced the assessments on real property of home owners in that municipality for the express purpose of insuring that home owners would not be required to pay any substantial increase in property tax under an increased rate of taxation sought to be imposed by 1963 ordinances on real property, that complainants are entitled to have their personal property assessed upon the same basis of value as real property is assessed in Berry Hill. The bill further states that the City of Berry Hill and its agents have concocted and sought to carry out an intentional, deliberate, wilful scheme to impose upon complainants a disproportionate burden of taxation in violation of the rights of complainants under the United States Constitution and the Constitution of Tennessee.
(c) On behalf of the complainant Third National Bank in Nashville, it is averred “that the Tax Assessor of the City of Berry Hill has no authority whatever to assess its personal property, the method for so doing being set out in Sec. 67-719, Tenn. Code Ann.”

*67 The complainants ’ bill then states that subsequent to the due date of the tax complained of, and within thirty days prior to the filing of the bill, each complainant paid the tax complained of under protest. The bill prays for an injunction restraining the City of Berry Hill and its servants:

# * from the use of the void assessments complained of in an attempt to collect or enforce the personalty tax for 1963 and from the use of void assessments at any future time as a measure of complainants’ tax liability; from engaging in any further attempt to tax the merchants and business men of the City of Berry Hill, who are complainants, at a rate of assessment higher than that imposed upon real property in the City of Berry Hill; from taking any further steps to collect any tax under Ordinance No. 100.”

The bill further prays for a declaratory judgment declaring the ordinance of October 2, 1963 void and that complainants have and recover from the City of Berry Hill the taxes paid under protest together with interest and costs.

The demurrer of the defendant first questions the right of complainants to maintain the action and next states that T.C.A. sec. 6-208 has no application to the City of Berry Hill and then states that the bill fails to state a cause of action “whether under the Declaratory Judgments Law, or the right of a'taxpayer to recover taxes illegally paid” and sets forth the reasons defendant contends the' bill fails to state a cause of action.

We shall first consider the grounds upon which complainants assert the ordinance levying the personalty tax for the year 1963 is void. The first of these is that the *68 ordinance was amended on third and final reading contrary to the requirements of T.C.A. sec. 6-2026.- The bill does not state in what particular the ordinance was amended. The record contains a photographic copy of the ordinance which levies the personalty tax complained of, together with a stipulation entered into between the parties that it is a true and accurate copy of this ordinance. This photographic copy shows that the ordinance passed first reading on September 11,1963, passed second reading September 16, 1963, and passed third reading October 2, 1963 and does not indicate that it was at any time amended. T.C.A. sec. 6-2026 provides in part:

“Every ordinance shall be read three (3) different days in open session before the adoption,’ and not less than one (1) week shall elapse between first and third readings, and any ordinance not so read shall be null and void. ’ ’
**###***#*
“No ordinance making a grant, renewal, or extension of a franchise or other special privilege, or regulating the rate to be charged for the service by any public utility shall ever be passed as an emergency ordinance. No ordinance shall be amended except by a new ordinance.”

The briefs of counsel refer to no cases construing T.C.A. sec. 6-2026, and our investigation has revealed none. We find similar statutes prescribing the manner in which ordinances shall be passed in a number of states. The Kentucky Court had occasion to construe such a statute in Farnsley v. Henderson, (Ky.) 240 S.W.2d 82, 84, in which the Court stated:

*69

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Bluebook (online)
390 S.W.2d 223, 216 Tenn. 62, 20 McCanless 62, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biltmore-hotel-court-inc-v-city-of-berry-hill-tenn-1965.