Bowen v. Commonwealth

101 S.E. 232, 126 Va. 182, 1919 Va. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 20, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 101 S.E. 232 (Bowen v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowen v. Commonwealth, 101 S.E. 232, 126 Va. 182, 1919 Va. LEXIS 87 (Va. 1919).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Honorable George Latham Fletcher, who decided the case in the trial court has fairly and fully stated the controlling facts shown by the record. As we agree with his conclusion and his reasons therefor, we hereby adopt his opinion, which follows:—

[184]*184“George A. Bowen, as resident of Clark county, Virginia, was assessed for the year 1915 with $42,825.00 of intangible property on which the State taxes amounted to $275.36 and the county taxes to $85.65, and with a net taxable income of $3,907.00 on which the State levy amounted to $39.07, and with a poll tax of $1'.50.
“On the 5th day of November, 1915, Mr. Bowen filed his petition in the Circuit Court of Clarke county, alleging that he was not a resident of Virginia, nor domiciled in Clarke county, and praying for that reason that he be exonerated from the payment of the State and county taxe§ on his intangible property, income and poll tax so assessed against him. On the 23rd day of May, 1916, the Circuit Court of Clarke county by its orders duly entered, having found that Bowen was not a resident of Virginia, nor domiciled in Clarke county, exonerated him from the payment of the taxes aforesaid.
“Thereafter, on the 26th day of March, 1917, the Commonwealth of Virginia, by C. Lee Moore, Auditor of Public Accounts, filed its petition for rehearing of Bowen’s application, and on July 16, 1917, came on to be heard before me.
“The question presented is whether George A. Bowen was in 1915, a resident of Clarke county, Virginia, within the meaning of our tax laws and as such. assessable with taxes on intangible property, the situs of which for taxation is the domicile of the taxpayer.
“The facts relied on by the Commonwealth to justify this assessment are as follows:—
“George A. Bowen, who was a native of Virginia, and in his early boyhood had lived in the neighborhood of Winchester, Va., went to live in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he made his home and engaged in business for a number of years, and became fairly prosperous. ’ In the year 1900, [185]*185having retired from business, he left Cincinnati, placing his household furniture and effects in storage there, and travelled abroad for some time. On his return to this country, he went to Washington, D. C., where during a portion of 1902-3 he rented and occupied a furnished house. Again for a portion of the year 1908-9 he rented a furnished house in Washington, D. G., and has spent a portion of several winters there in various hotels or apartments.
“In 1905, five years after leaving Cincinnati, he purchased of the heirs of E. P. C. Lewis, a valuable farm in Clarke county, Virginia, known as ‘Brentwood,’ containing about 208 acres, situated about two miles from the town of Berryville, and proceeded to expend considerable suins in' making extensive improvements thereon in the way of a dwelling and other buildings. Some sixteen months or more were occupied in making these improvements, and not until the' spring of 1907 did Mr. Bowen move to ‘Brentwood.’ He then brought his furniture from Cincinnati where it had been in storage ever since he left that place, and some other household effects from Baltimore, to his Clarke county home, where he has continued to live and carry on his farm operations for the greater portion of each year ever since. He has never had a tenant on his farm, except that once in the year 1910, when he was away in Europe for some time, a Mrs. Kelly occupied his dwelling house at ‘Brentwood.’ Mr. Bowen was in feeble health and spent his winters at various places in the south and west, oftimes on the advice of physicians, in search of health. In 1910, the year after ■he surrendered his last rented house in Washington, D. C., he spent his time travelling in Europe. He himself States that after 1911 he was unable to spend his winters in Washington city. In the winter of 1912, he spent some [186]*186time at the Shoreham Hotel in Washington, and in the-Adirondacks. The following winter of 1918, he spent in Arizona. And again in the winter of 1914, with the exception of several days which he spent at the Willard Hotel in Washington, he was in Arizona. In fact after the year 1910, when Mr. Bowen was not travelling in the winters for his health, he lived at his place in Clarke county. After the year (1910), whenever he was in Washington, Mr. Bowen had lodgings at various hotels and apartment lodgings, and when he left he gave up his lodgings. He had no business interest and owned no property in the city of Washington.
“While out in Arizona he made his federal income tax returns for the years 1913 and 1914 to the internal revenue collector for the western district of Virginia at Roanoke, Va.
“For the years 1912 and 1913, he reported for taxation an income to the commissioner of the revenue for Clarke county. For the year 1914, he reported no income, but in 1915, he again voluntarily reported to the commissioner of revenue of Clarke county, a gross income of $8,788.00 and a deposit in bank of $500 for taxation. He paid a capitation or poll tax in Clarke county for several years prior to the year 1915. When summoned before and interrogated by the examiner of records as to the sources of the income of $8,788.00 which he had returned for 1915 from his intangible assets, he went to the office of the examiner prepared to furnish, did furnish and list in his own handwriting on the tax interrogatory blank some $48,825.00 of intangible property. His interview with the examiner lasted for an hour or more and at no time did he suggest to this officer that he was a resident of Washington, D. G., or elsewhere. Not until later, when having been summoned before the [187]*187local board of review of Clarke county and having appeared in company with his attorney, and the question of his omitted taxes for prior years was raised, did he claim for the first time to'any tax official of Clarke county that he was a non-resident of Virginia, and domiciled in the city of Washington. He admitted on the witness stand that in buying the farm in Clarke county he had come to Virginia with the sentimental desire to return to the place of his early associations. When he first visited Clarke county he stated to a Mr. Smallwood that he wanted to buy a home near Berryville or Winchester ‘to end his days on/ These are the facts in the main urged by the Commonwealth in support of its right to make this assessment.
“On the other hand, Mr. Bowen, in support of his claim that in 1915 he was a resident of and domiciled in the city of Washington, D. C., relies on the following facts and considerations:—
“That after leaving Cincinnati,, he made his first physical residence in Washington; that at that time he expressed a liking for that city and a desire to live there; that he took furnished houses and had various places of abode there with the intention of making it his permanent home; that he made at various times declarations to various people in Washington, some of whom testify that he said his Clarke county place was only a summer home, but Washington was his permanent home, others testify to their opinion that he was generally regarded by acquaintances in Washington as a resident of that place; that he also made declarations to various persons in Clarke county, the substance of.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.E. 232, 126 Va. 182, 1919 Va. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-commonwealth-va-1919.