City of Newport v. South Covington & Cincinnati Street Railway Co.

161 S.W. 222, 156 Ky. 403, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 449
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 222 (City of Newport v. South Covington & Cincinnati Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Newport v. South Covington & Cincinnati Street Railway Co., 161 S.W. 222, 156 Ky. 403, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 449 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The State Board of Valuation and Assessment, looking to its taxation for the year 1911, fixed the value of the appellee, South Covington & Cincinnati Street Railway Company’s franchise in the appellant, City of Newport, at $122,344. This valuation was certified hy the Auditor of the State to the clerk of the Campbell County Court, and by the clerk to the appellant, city; whereupon, the latter made out the city’s bill for the franchise tax, upon a levy of $1.40 per hundred dollars, amounting to $1,712.82, the payment of which was demanded of appellee.

It appears that in the same year the assessor of Campbell county had assessed, or fixed, the value of appellee’s tangible property in the city of Newport at $330,060, and, by the city’s assessor, the value of the same property was for the same year fixed at $366,900, which exceeded the county assessor’s valuation $36,840; but the State Board, in arriving at the value of appellee’s franchise in the city of Newport, deducted the valuation of appellee’s tangible property, as fixed by the county assessor, from its total capitalization. In the meantime, and before the State Board fixed or certified the value of its franchise, appellee paid to the city the tax on its tangible property therein on the city assessor’s valuation'of $366,900; so, when the city demanded the tax of $1,712.82 on its franchise, it declined to pay same, but tendered to the city $1,197.08, this amount being the tax on its franchise in the city for 1911, as certified by the State Auditor, less $36,840, the excess of the city’s valuation of its tangible property, above that made of it by the county assessor. The appellant refused to accept, in payment of appellee’s franchise tax, [405]*405the $1,197.08 thus tendered hy the latter, and brought against it this action to recover the $1,712.82 contained in the tax bill.

Appellee’s answer set up the excess of the city’s valuation of its tangible property over the amount deducted by the State Board; alleged the payment by it of the tax on its tangible property at the city’s valuation, and the tender of $1,197.08 in satisfaction of the tax it claimed to owe the city on its franchise, which amount, upon the filing of the answer, it paid into court. A demurrer to the answer was filed, which the court overruled, and the city refusing to plead further, judgment, requiring it to accept the $1,197.08 tendered by appellee, was entered. The city, being dissatisfied with the judgment, has appealed.

The ruling of the circuit court was based upon the theory that to have compelled appellee to pay the tax bill of $1,712.82 demanded by the city, would have taxed it twice to the extent of $36,840, the excess of the city’s valuation -of its tangible property in the city over the State and county’s valuation of the same property.

A railway company is one of the corporations that is required by section 4077, Kentucky Statutes, to annually pay a tax on its franchise to the State, and also a local tax thereon to the county, incorporated city, town or taxing district, where its franchise may be exercised; the State Board of Valuation and Assessment, composed of the Auditor, Treasurer and Secretary of State, being required to fix the value of such franchise, as provided in that and succeeding sections down to 4080, inclusive. Briefly stated, the corporation must, among other things, report to the State Auditor the facts upon which the valuation of its franchise is based. From these reports, the State Board capitalizes the total earning power of the corporation, say on a six per cent basis, and this capitalization, called the “capital stock” of the corporation, being arrived at, there must he deducted from it the assessed value of all tangible property of the corporation, and the remainder thus ascertained constitutes the value of its franchise subject to taxation. The entire capitalization must, and does, include all the property of the corporation, be it bonds, stock, real estate, notes, accounts, rails, power-house, cars, or any other property, tangible and intangible, and if the tangible property upon which the corporation pays taxes were not deducted from the total capitaliza[406]*406tion, there would he double taxation, because this capitalization includes the very property (tangible) upon which the taxes are already paid; therefore, the assessed value of the tangible property is deducted from the gross or total capitalization and the remainder constitutes the value of the franchise. So, where the capitalization is fixed at $1,500,000, which includes tangible property assessed at $500,000, this would leave the value of the franchise $1,000,000. If the board deducted only. $300,000, although the assessment is $500,000, the company would pay taxes on $1,700,000, or on $200,000 more than its total property is valued at.

As the statute does not provide for any report by the corporation of the assessed value of its tangible property, either as assessed by the county assessor or any municipal authority, but only of the amount, kind, where situated, assessed or liable for taxation, all it can do is to report where it is assessed or liable for taxation and give its fair cash value. So, the deduction of the assessed value of the tangible property from the total capitalization made by the State Board is based on the report of the county clerk to the State Auditor of the local assessment made of the tangible property; and the county clerk of Campbell county, in reporting the assessed value of appellee’s tangible property, seems to have taken the assessment of its value as made by the assessor of the county, instead of that made by the assessor of the city of Newport. It is, therefore, apparent, that if the municipality assesses, as was done in this case, the tangible property, subject to taxation, higher than does the county assessor, and the assessment of the latter is used by the State Board in fixing the value of the franchise, it follows that the city’s assessment increases the total or aggregate value of the company’s capitalization or capital stock to that extent; and, had the State Board in this case deducted the higher assessment made by the city from the total capitalization, the value of the franchise would have been fixed at a lower amount than it was.

As appellee had already paid to the appellant city the tax on its tangible property as valued by the city assessor, if it had paid the tax of $1,712.82 demanded by the city upon its franchise, it would have been double taxation to the extent of $36,840, the excess of the city’s assessment of its tangible property over the valuation given it by the State Board in fixing the value of its franchise. In this view of the matter, the $1,197.06 ten[407]*407clered appellant by appellee was all tbe former was entitled to as a tax on the latter’s franchise for the year 1911. A franchise tax is not a license or occupation tax, but simply an ad valorem or property tax; and to impose a tax on the capital stock of the corporation, and) also upon the property in which its capital stock is invested would be double taxation and illegal. Our condemnation of double taxation is stated in Commonwealth v. Walsh's Trustee, 133 Ky., 103, as follows: “Throughout the whole scheme of taxation adopted by this State there is an evident purpose to avoid double taxation, not only in not taxing the same property twice in the same year for the same purpose, but, as well, in not taxing the same thing, in whatever form, twice in the same year for the same purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 222, 156 Ky. 403, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-newport-v-south-covington-cincinnati-street-railway-co-kyctapp-1913.