Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Co. v. Hynicka

4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedSeptember 13, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345 (Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Co. v. Hynicka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Co. v. Hynicka, 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

This was an action to enjoin the treasurer of Hamilton county from collecting taxes on certain additions made by the auditor to the tax duplicate on property of plaintiff for the years 1891 to 1899, inclusive.

[346]*346The cause was reserved to the general term for decision. The plaintiff is the lessee of the Cincinnati Southern Railway, a line built and owned by the city of Cincinnati. The road, as is well known, extends from the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, to the city of Chattanooga, Tenn. Under the lease of said road the lessees pay all the taxes. The agreement includes the years for which the additional taxes herein are sought. During these years, namely, 1891 to 1899, both inclusive, plaintiff made to the auditor of Hamilton county, on printed forms furnished for that purpose by the auditor of state, returns of its taxable property. The statements for the respective years consist of several schedules. According to Schedule E (for the years 1892 to 1899) the company returned: “Tracks, including road-bed, right of way. ele., oivned or held by said company in the slate of Ohio as exist on said date.” The return for 1891, although different in form, is to the same effect, substantially. Under the schedule the plaintiff stated it had 56-100 of a mile of main track in Ohio, and it placed a value thereon of $12,000 per mile, and that it had side-tracks to the extent of 10.19 miles (in 1891), increasing gradually, however, throughout said years to 11.180 miles (in 1899), upon which it placed a valuation of $2,000 per mile. The evidence shows that the auditor, acting as the board of appraisers and assessors for said railway company, fixed the valuation of the main track at $12,000 per mile, and the side-track at $2,000 per mile for the years in question (Bill of Evidence, page 201, defendant's exhibit 3), and accordingly such valuations were placed upon the duplicate, and taxes were duly paid by plaintiff. The stem or main track of the railroad begins, as shown by the evidence, at Gest street, in the city of Cincinnati, and approaches and crosses over the Ohio river by means of a trestle and bridge structure, built by the Trustees of the Southern Railway expressly for that purpose. The trestle structure is about 1,299 feet in length, and the bridge structure on the Ohio side about 1,233 feet in length, and both are described as numbers 1 and 10 in the petition. The bridge and trestle occupy the lots numbered in the petition 2 to 9 (pages 2 and 3), also 11 to 16 (pages 4 and 5) inclusive. The evidence shows that all these lots are necessary for the maintenance of said bridge and trestle. The “side-tracks” jri question are built on lots number 5 to 9, also [347]*3474 to 35, described in the petition number 1 to 35, inclusive (pages 5 to 9). The parts of said lots not covered by rails are used as “slopes” to support the tracks, and also for the loading and unloading of freight, in the daily operation of the business. The eight parcels of ground described in the petition as lots 1 to 8 (pages 10 and 11), all the evidence shows, were acquired by the trustees to establish a connection with the C., II & D. Railroad. The ground lies very low, and a considerable fill will be required to make said lots available-for said purpose. At the time in question the fill had not been made, nor was the connection made, nor were said lots used for purposes other than those of the railroad. In 1899 the auditor claimed that the bridge and trestle, and several lots thus briefly referred to, were “lands, town lots or improvements, structures or fixtures thereon, subject to taxation within this county”that same had not bee:q returned by the assessor or had escaped taKation through error of the auditor. He therefore proceeded to ascertain the value of the bridge, trestle and lots as separate items and placed the entire sum on the duplicate, claiming that the true value of said property was $265,580 more for each year in question than the value returned, assessed and taxed. Upon this valuation he added taxes as far back as the last decennial appraisement, inclusive of 1891, in all in the sum of $64,567.79, and also penalties. Thereupon plaintiff brought this action'to enjoin the collection of said taxes, and a temporary order was allowed by the court below.

In 1900, the auditor, without removing from the duplicate of real estate the additions thus made by him, put the foregoing described property on the duplicate as personal property also, and added simple taxes for the five years, including and preceding the year 1899 in the sum of $42,514.03, and also penalties. The plaintiff by supplemental petition thereupon asked that the collection of the additional taxes be enjoined, and again a temporary restraining order was allowed.

Under the issues the question is, Was the auditor’s action in thus attempting to separately tax the property involved valid or invalid? The plaintiff claims it was invalid, because, it is urged, the bridge and trestle and side-tracks and lots, more specifically described in the petition were “road-bed” and “property necessary to the dailhj operation of the road,” and was [348]*348therefore taxable as a unit; that is to say, averaged over the entire road. In accordance with this theory its returns for taxation were made. On the other hand, defendant contends that the statutes (particularly Section 2774) with reference to the taxation of railroad property, contemplate two distinct classes: (a) a class to which belongs main track, rolling stock, road-bed, supplies, money and credits; (b) the class to which belongs real estate, structures and stationary personal property. And defendant claims that the property of Class A is property that may be “spread out,” or apportioned over the entire road for taxation, while that of Class B is property that is to be localised for taxation. Defendant contends that the property involved in this action all falls in the latter class, and was therefore to be locally taxed, either as personalty or as real estate, whichever it may be found to be. A determination of the questions presented involves Sections 2770 to 2776 of the Revised Statutes, which are the sections relative to the taxation of railroad property. The Cincinnati Southern Railway, which is the property operated by plaintiff, the lessees of the trustees of the city of Cincinnati, is not wholly within the state of Ohio, but is partly within that state (only in the-county of Hamilton) and partly without the state. In taxing the property of such a railroad, we are of opinion that Sections 2772 and 2776 in particular gov-' ern, and not Section 2774. Section 2772 is as follows:

“It shall be the duty of each board to meet in the month of May in the present and each succeeding year, at such time as the president thereof may appoint; and if no meeting be appointed by him before the second Tuesday in May, the several county auditors shall meet on that day in the place where the proper railroad for which said auditors constitute the board as aforesaid, has its principal office, or in the principal city or village upon the line of such road, as the case may be, and proceed to ascertain all the personal property, which shall be held to include road-bed, water and wood stations, and such other realty as is necessary to the daily running operations of the road, moneys and credits of such company, and the undivided profits, reserve or contingent fund of such company, whether the same may be in money, credits, or in any manner invested, and the actual value thereof in money.”

By this section the board is required to ascertain all the

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-new-orleans-texas-pacific-railway-co-v-hynicka-ohsuperctcinci-1906.