Birmingham Building & Loan Ass'n v. State

120 Ala. 403
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 120 Ala. 403 (Birmingham Building & Loan Ass'n v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birmingham Building & Loan Ass'n v. State, 120 Ala. 403 (Ala. 1898).

Opinion

DOWDELL, J.

By section 5 of the “Act to amend the revenue laws of Alabama,” approved February 18, 1895, (Acts, 1894-95, p. 1192) a county board of equalization of taxes, in each county, is created in the manner therein specified.

Section 31 of said act provides that said board will convene at the court house of the county on the first Monday in May and shall rigidly examine each assessment [405]*405list, and compare all such lists carefully with the book of assessment and institute inquiry as to the correctness of any assessment of real or personal property, or subject of taxation ; and if upon such inquiry any assessment, whether made by the tax-payer, his agent, or by the assessor, is supposed not to be full and complete, or the property assessed at. less or more than its actual value, or that property has been omitted that should have been assessed, the said board of equalization shall enter the samé on a docket to be kept for that purpose by said board in the name of the State of Alabama as plaintiff and the tax-payer as defendant, and shall issue a notice and copy thereof, addressed to the tax-payer,, stating the substance of the supposed error, improper assessment, under-valuation or over-valuation, and citing such taxpayer to appear before §aid board of equalization on the first Monday in June, to show cause why such error, omission, under-valuation should not be corrected,, and in what respect. “A copy of said notice shall be personally served on the said taxpayer, or if he cannot be found, by leaving the same at his residence, by the tax assessor or any person whom he may deputize in writing for that purpose, and the date when and how same was so served shall be endorsed on the original, which original shall be returned to the secretary or any member of said board ; provided, that if the taxpayer is a non-resident of the county and his residence is known, then the secretary of said board shall mail a copy of said notice, postage paid, to said taxpayer, endorsing on the original when the copy was mailed and to what address ; provided, that in counties paying less than twelve thousand dollars property tax, the said board of equalization at this meeting of the board shall not sit for a longer term than four days in each year. In counties paying more than twelve thousand dollars and less than twenty thousand dollars property tax, said board shall not sit for a longer term than six days in each year; and in counties paying twenty thousand dollars property tax and over, shall not sit for a longer term than ten days.’.’

Section 32 provides as follows : “That the said-county board of equalization shall convene a second time at the court house on the first Monday in June, and may remain in session for such length of time as may be necps[406]*406sary to dispose.of the cases before it, and for the hearing of such cases as may have been docketed ; and the cases shall be called in such order for hearing and disposition as the said board or a majority thereof may see proper. For the purposes of such inquiry or hearing, the said board may subpcena such witnesses, and introduce such oral, documentary, or record evidence as may be necessary to a full understanding of the question, including the abstract duly certified, provided by section 28 of this act, made by the probate judge of any county in the State of Alabama, and the taxpayer may upon application, at any time before the day on which his case is set for hearing, have subpoenas issued for witnesses in his behalf, and may also introduce documentary or record evidence pertaining to the matter under investigation, and the said board of equalization shall have authority to set cases for hearing on such days as it may see proper, and give notice to the defendant and subpcena witnesses for certain days,' and may for good cause shown, continue a hearing over to a day to be fixed by said board, but neither the State- nor the county shall be required to pay the per diem of a defendant’s witness, and the county shall only pay the per diem of two witnesses in any one case, and the mileage shall not exceed four cents per mile each way and one dollar per diem for each witness to be paid by the county treasurer on the order of the chairman of the board. The tax collector shall be present in court at such hearing to represent the interest of the State.”

By section 33 it is provided, that if the taxpayer appears in person or by attorney, or has had five days notice, the said board shall proceed to hear the matter, and shall raise or reduce the valuation, or enter the omission, or correct the error, or add such items of taxation, and fix the value thereof, as may have escaped assessment, and to fix all values at what the evidence shows to have been the actual cash value of the property on the first day of October preceding. It prescribes certain evidences which the board may consider in hearing the case, and provides that if the matter be contested, the board shall upon the close of the hearing render its decision within twenty-four hours, unless the taxpayer [407]*407consents to a longer time, which decision must be entered upon the docket and signed by the chairman of the board. From the judgment and decision of the board, any member of the board or the defendant may appeal in ten days to the next term of the circuit or city court, when the same shall be tried anew.

In the present case, the board did not, at its May term, take action in the matter of equalizing the appellant’s taxes as returned by the assessor, but, so far as appellant’s motion to dismiss or pleas show to the contrary, it did, during its regular sitting beginning on the first Monday in June, to-wit, on the second day of July, take such action, and did enter upon the docket the supposed value of appellant’s taxable property, and issue and have served upon it a citation to appear and contest, on the 10th day of July. The appellant appeared before the board on that day (the citation having been served on the third) and moved the board to dismiss the proceeding on the ground that its said action in reference to the valuation of its property, and issuing the citation, was not had at the May term, and not until July 2d, aforesaid. The motion being overruled by the board, appellant interposed the same matter by -way of pleas. These pleas being disallowed, the board affirmed its previous action raising the taxable values, and appellant appealed to the circuit court. The same motions and pleas were filed in the circuit court and there also disallowed; the motion to dismiss being overruled, and demurrers to the pleas being sustained. Appellant declining to plead over, the court rendered judgment affirming the decision of the board, and that appellant pay State and county taxes for the year 1896, on sixty-nine thousand two hundred and fifty dollars, that being the sum to which the taxable values had been raised by the board, and rendered judgment for costs against apr pellant and its sureties. From this judgment the present appeal is taken, and the principal question presented for our decision is whether or not it was essential to the lawful exercise of the jurisdiction which the 'act confers upon the board, that the preliminary, ex parte action in reference to raising the assessment, and issuing the citation should have been had at the May term, in strict conformity to the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
120 Ala. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-building-loan-assn-v-state-ala-1898.