Camp Phosphate Co. v. Allen

81 So. 503, 77 Fla. 341
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 2, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 81 So. 503 (Camp Phosphate Co. v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camp Phosphate Co. v. Allen, 81 So. 503, 77 Fla. 341 (Fla. 1919).

Opinion

Jones, Circuit Judge.

— Camp Phosphate Company is a Florida corporation owning about 18,'000 acres’ of land in Citrus county and carries on the busi'nes sof mining for phosphate on a portion of its lands. The appellant filed its bill in the Circuit Court of Citrus County against Charles E. Allen as Tax Collector for said county, praying for an injunction to restrain the said Tax Collector from selling its property to enforce the collection of taxes' due and unpaid on same for the year 1915.

The grounds set forth in the bill for relief are in substance as follows: That the assessment against appellant’s real property for the year 1915 amounted to the sum of $4187.79; that it had paid its personal tax and was willing and ready and offered to pay all taxes legally and justly assessed against its real property, but had made no actual tender of money in payment of said real property tax to the defendant because the defendant as tax collector and no other official had any legal right to accept any sum less than the actual amount shown on the assessment roll, and avers that appellant refused to pay the said sum so assessed against it because said assessment was unjutly, illegally and fraudulently made; that the full amount due by appellant for taxes on its [345]*345real property was the sum of $>1575.52, based upon the valuation made by appellant in its sworn return of its property for assessment.

That appellant prior to April, 1915, made a sworn return of all its property, both real and personal, with the valuation thereof to the assessor, but that the assessor ignored such return made by appellant, and arbitrarily and without inquiry and investigation, intentionally and deliberately, for the purpose of discriminating against appellant and requiring it to pay an unjust and disproportionate share of the public tax, assessed the lands of appellant at a valuation of nearly three times its true cash value; that said assessment is grossly excessive, arbitrary and unjust and deprives appellant of its legal and constitutional rights, in that while appellant’s property is assessed at a valuation exceeding its true cash value, practically all the real an dpersonal property of local resident tax payers in said county has been uniformly assessed at a valuation far below its true cash value, to-wit: at from fifteen to thirty per cent of its cash value,, and that said discrimination against appellant was not committed by the tax officials of the county through any honest mistake or error of judgment, but was done for the purpose of illegally relieving local resident tax payers from bearing their just burden and placing upon appellant and others similarly situated an unjust part of the taxes of said county; that it has been the systematic rule and practice of the assessor and county commissionerSv of said county to unjustly aqd excessively value for taxation all property owned by corporations and non-resident tax payers owning large bodies of land and to greatly undervalue for taxation real and personal property of local and resident tax pay[346]*346ers. That these officials have followed a fixed rule of valuing any and all lands owned by appellant at from three to six times as much as similar lands of local and resident tax payers. It is alleged that several other phosphate companies, whose names are given, owning lands in the county have been grossly discriminated against by over valuation of their lands.

Many tracts of land from forty to two hundred or more acres owned by appellant and situated in different portions of the county are described and the assessed valuation of each is stated and compared with lands of alleged similar character and situated in same section or contiguous thereto owned by local tax payers showing in each instance that the valuation placed on appellant’s land was greater than that of the resident owner’s land. That the settled course and policy of the assessor, approved by the county commissioners, is to value all improved farming lands at approximately three dollars per acre, regardless of improvements or other elements affecting value, and all lands of corporations, particularly phosphate mining companies, if situated in what is known as the “phosphate belt,” have been assessed at an arbitrary value without regard as to whether it contained phosphate- value for mining purposes. It is averred that representatives of the appellant and other landowning corporations appeared before the board of county commissioners sitting as a board of equalizers and protested against the alleged over valuation of their property without avail. That said commissioners had an understanding between themselves whereby it was agreed they would not consider any testimony offered by the corporations in their effort to secure a reduction of values, but that they would sustain the asseessor in all [347]*347his valuations upon the property of appellant and others similarly situated. That although the statute required all property to be assessed at a true cash valuation the assessor ignored the statute and pretended that he had assessed all property upon a basis of fifty per cent of its value and that, therefore, the entire assessment was illegal and void.

Answer was filed admitting that in compliance with instructions from the State Tax Commission all real and personal property in Citrus County was assessed on the approximate basis of fifty per cent of its true cash value. It is denied that property of farmers and other resident and individual tax payers was assessed at less than fifty per cent of its value and that of appellant and other corporations on a valuation exceeding its true cash value; all the material averments of the bill are denied and it is alleged that all assessments and valuations are uniform, fair, just and equal, and that there was no discrimination.

A demurrer to the bill is incorporated in the answer.

The Chancellor referred the case to a Special Master in Chancery to take the testimony and report to the court the testimony together with his findings as to whether the restraining order should be granted. The cause not having been disposed of and the appellant’s property having been advertised for sale by the Tax Collector, on application of appellant and recommendation by the Master a temporary restraining order was granted staiying the sale of the property pending the further order of the court. Afterwards the Master reported his findings' and recommended that the demurrer be overruled and that the restraining order be vacated. Exeep[348]*348tions to the Master’s report were filed by appellant and after hearing arguments for ten days the Chancellor overruled the exceptions, confirmed the Master’s report, vacated the order granting the restraining order, denied temporary injunction and upon motion of appellant showing that injunction was only relief sought, the bill was dismissed. Complainant appealed.

It is alleged in the bill and admitted in the answer that there was a total failure to comply with the statute requiring lands to be assessed at their full cash value and for this reaosn alone appellant contends that the entire assessment is void. In considering this1 question it will be necessary to consider the statute referred to in connection wtih the constitutional provision in pursuance of which it was enacted. Sec. 1,- Art.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 503, 77 Fla. 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camp-phosphate-co-v-allen-fla-1919.