Board of County Commissioners v. Rocky Mountain News Printing Co.

15 Colo. App. 189
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1900
DocketNo. 1798
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Colo. App. 189 (Board of County Commissioners v. Rocky Mountain News Printing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of County Commissioners v. Rocky Mountain News Printing Co., 15 Colo. App. 189 (Colo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

This suit involves the question, whether, under existing laws, a newspaper membership in, or contract with, the Associated Press is subject to taxation. In 1896, within the proper time required by law, the Rocky Mountain News Printing Company, proprietor and publisher of the Rocky Mountain News, a daily newspaper, defendant in error, made out and returned to the assessor of Arapahoe county a schedule showing the taxable property of which it was possessed in said county on May 1 of that year. Thereafter, the assessor, without the consent of said company, added to the schedule another item, as follows: “ The Western Associated Press, $25,000.” Upon the subsequent sitting of the county commissioners as a board of equalization, the matter was brought before them by the company, and resulted in a resolution by said board by which the item (there, however, designated as “ Contract Associated Press ”) was valued and assessed at $20,000, making a reduction of $5,000. From this action of the commissioners, the news company appealed, as provided by law, to the district court. There, the finding and judgment was in favor of the news company, and from this the county appeals to this court. In the petition of the news company to the board of equalization, the nature and character of the association known as “ The West[191]*191ern Associated Press,” and of the petitioner’s relation thereto, are thus set forth:

“ Sixth. Your petitioner claims that the amount of such assessment is unjustly, erroneously, improperly and unlawfully assessed; that the same is not property, but that the true description of the matter attempted to be assessed by the words ‘The Western Associated Press,’ and the words ‘ Contract Associated Press,’ is as follows: Prior to the incorporation of the company now known as ‘ The Associated Press,’ the owners of certain leading newspapers scattered all over the United States maintained a relation of comity with each other whereby the news gathered by any one, where the same was of a general and public nature, was wired to each of the other members of said newspaper fraternity. Such action arose out of the desire on the part of the newspapers in different localities to secure the news from foreign localities at the lowest possible expense, and the furnishing of such news so gathered by any paper local to a certain community was furnished to each of the other papers in accordance with a general understanding that such other newspaper would reciprocate as to the news in their localities. It was found that it would he more convenient to organize a central bureau for the receipt and dissemination of such news from and to the various newspapers which had theretofore been furnishing the news in the manner herein indicated, and so a corporation was organized known as the Associated Press, in the state of Illinois, having its headquarters in the city of Chicago, and the members of the newspaper fraternity hereinbefore alluded to, of whom your petitioner was one, took certain shares of stock in said company, which in the case of your petitioner was the sum of eight shares at fifty dollars a share, amounting to the sum of four hundred dollars.
“ The said company was not formed for pecuniary profit and is a nondividend paying organization and only issued sufficient of its stock for the purpose of securing sufficient capi-/ [192]*192tal to maintain a central and such branch bureaus for the receipt and dissemination of news as was thought advisable;
“ That of the stock so issued to your petitioner, the said corporation holds each and every share thereof in the city of Chicago, state of Illinois, and that said stock is not and never can be, worth an amount in excess of its par value, and is taxable, if at all, in the county of Cook in the state of Illinois, and not elsewhere;
< “ That said stock does not entitle the owner thereof to the 'receipt of news from said bureau, but the receipt of news is regulated by virtue of the same arrangement which was in existence before the said company was formed, the only difference being that now the newspapers gather such news and instead of furnishing it directly to their contemporaries, forward it first to said central bureau, from which bureau it is disseminated to all of the owners of newspapers who are members of said association of newspapers;
“ That the only value which said membership has arises from the fact that the said various newspapers so scattered throughout the United States, are willing to contribute the news of their respective localities through such central bureau to the newspapers of the city of Denver in consideration of the fact that the newspapers of the city of Denver will contribute the news of that locality to the said former newspapers.”

The allegation of fact there stated was sustained by the evidence. It further appeared from the evidence that the stock .subscribed for by the members of the association is retained by the officers at Chicago, and is nontransferable, except by the consent of the board of directors; that it can never be assigned except to some newspaper which the board of directors will consent shall go on the roll of membership; that it is also held by the association to effectively enforce the clauses in the by-laws providing for the forfeiture, under certain conditions, of membership rights; that the organization has agents all over the United States who telegraph items of news to the central office at Chicago, and thence it is wired [193]*193to the different cities where there are members of the association. Each newspaper on the roll of membership is also required to furnish to the agents of the association the news it has gathered during the day, thus insuring a complete interchange of news among the members of the association; that the expenses are equitably apportioned so as to make each member bear his just share of the cost of obtaining the news, a weekly assessment being levied for this purpose, such assessment upon the petitioner at the time of this attempted assessment being $175 per week; that this assessment, however, is not a fixed one, being changed from time to time as the necessities of the case may demand, and that each member has a voice in the management and control of the association.

■The petitioner contends that the assessment of this item was erroneous, and presents two legal questions for determination :

1. Is the membership in, or contract with, the “ Associated Press,” held by the defendant in error, property within the meaning of the revenue laws of the state of Colorado ?

2. Assuming that it is “property,” has- the legislature provided any way by which a correct valuation may be arrived at, or is there any practicable way by which a just valuation of it may be reached, and if so, then what is its valuation ?

Before entering upon a discussion of these questions, it may be well to state as a fundamental and universally recognized principle that the power of taxation is an incident to sovereignty, and that, as such, it belongs to the legislative department to determine the persons and objects to be taxed, subject to constitutional limitations, and to provide the necessary mode and provisions for making the law effective. Yunker v. Nichols, 1 Colo. 567; Stanley v. Little Pittsburg Mining Co., 6 Colo. 419.

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Adams Express Co. v. Ohio State Auditor
165 U.S. 194 (Supreme Court, 1897)
Adams Express Co. v. Ohio State Auditor
166 U.S. 185 (Supreme Court, 1897)
People v. Eddy
43 Cal. 331 (California Supreme Court, 1872)
People v. Hibernia Savings & Loan Society
51 Cal. 243 (California Supreme Court, 1876)
Yunker v. Nichols
1 Colo. 551 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1872)
Stanley v. Little Pittsburg Mining Co.
6 Colo. 415 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Colo. App. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-county-commissioners-v-rocky-mountain-news-printing-co-coloctapp-1900.