City of Pocatello v. Ross

6 P.2d 481, 51 Idaho 395, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 149
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1931
DocketNo. 5795.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 481 (City of Pocatello v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Pocatello v. Ross, 6 P.2d 481, 51 Idaho 395, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 149 (Idaho 1931).

Opinion

LEE, C. J.

—In 1931, the State Board of Equalization, after determining the full cash value of the intrastate lines of the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company to be 156,882,646 proceeded to apportion that value to the several taxing units through which the said lines ran. To the City of Pocatello, was apportioned a value of #189,886. In arriving at this *398 figure, the board had divided the assessed value of each main line, second track and branch line by the number of miles of each and multiplied the line mileage of each main line, second track and branch line within the limits of Pocatello by the quotients. The length of line determined in each instance excluded all side-tracks and spurs amounting in the aggregate to 546.9 miles. Within the City of Pocatello were 59.29 miles of yard track, sidings and spurs. The City of Pocatello and T. C. Coffin, as mayor of Pocatello, individually and in behalf of other taxpayers similarly situated, sued out a writ of review against the board, complaining mainly that the board, in computing the “length of line” and making Pocatello’s apportionment, had in both instances, by ignoring sidings, yard tracks and spurs, violated the provisions of C. S., sec. 3187, and that it had failed and refused “to assess, for taxation purposes, any other operating property of said railroad company located in the City of Pocatello, except the mileage of ‘main line east and west,’ ‘main line north and south’ and ‘second track,’ ” notwithstanding that situate within the city limits was company operating property of the reasonable value of $5,203,538. Indicting this method of procedure, petitioners arraigned it as follows:

“That in valuing or assessing for taxation purposes the said operating property of the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company within the City of Pocatello, according to the method aforesaid, said Board has wholly exceeded its jurisdiction; and the power and jurisdiction attempted to be exercised by said Board in determining the value of the operating property of said railroad within the City of Pocatello, according to the method above set forth and complained of, has not been, by Constitution or statute, granted to said Board; but is wholly without warrant or authority in law.
“In spite of the fact that there is located within the territorial limits of the City of Pocatello operating properties of the Oregon Short Line Railroad. Company of enormous value, all as hereinbefore set out, the assessed value for taxation purposes of said property, as assessed *399 and determined by the said State Board of Equalization, is far less than the value at which other property within the territorial limits of the City of Pocatello is assessed for the reason that other taxing sub-divisions through which the lines of the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company pass likewise receive from the State Board of Equalization an assessed valuation for taxation purposes of the property of the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company within their territorial limits in proportion to the number of miles of main line, branch line and second track within each such taxing unit, respectively, and inasmuch as these other taxing units in many instances do not have within their territorial limits any operating property of said Oregon Short Line Railroad Company other than one or more of the classes of railroad trackage last mentioned, they receive, as part of the assessed valuation of said railroad company within their territorial limits, a large part of the value of the operating property of said railroad company's property which is located within the City of Pocatello. That as a result thereof the property of the plaintiff T. C. Coffin, and all other tax payers within the City of Pocatello, are taxed on an entirely different basis and valuation than is the operating property of said railroad company; that is to say that the operating property of said railroad company within said city is taxed therein on the basis of less than 5 per cent of its cash value, while the property of plaintiff T. C. Coffin, and all other tax payers within the city of Pocatello, is taxed therein on a basis of not less than sixty percent of its full cash value.
“That wholly by reason of the wrongful and unlawful method used by said State Board of Equalization in assessing for taxation purposes the operating property of said Oregon Short Line Railroad Company situated within the City of Pocatello all taxes have not been, and are not, uniform on the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the City of Pocatello, as required by Section 5, Article 7, of the Constitution of Idaho; nor has the property of the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company, a corporation, been subject to taxation within the territorial limits of the City *400 of Pocatello, as required by Section 8, Article 7, of the Constitution of Idaho.”

The defendant board filed its return, relying upon the method pursued, and moved to quash the writ, for the reason that the application did not show sufficient facts to warrant relief, upon its face showed that the board had regularly pursued the constitutional and statutory authority vested in it, and had not exceeded its lawful jurisdiction.

C. S., sec. 3187, provides that the list of railroad properties required to be furnished the board shall show “the entire length of the system, the length of the system in this state, the length of the line owned and the length of the line operated for the whole system and in this state being separately shown; the total number of miles of each line within the state, the number of miles of main line, branch line, second track, siding and spurs being separately shown and the number of miles within any county, and within any incorporated city, town or village, and within any school or other taxing district into or through which said line extends.”

C. S., sec. 3189, provides that the board shall determine “the total value, the number of miles and value per mile of each railroad .... line in the state, the value, number of miles, and value per mile of such line in any county into or through which the said line extends, and the value, number of miles and value per mile, of such line in any incorporated city, town, village, school district or other taxing district into or through which the said line extends. The value per mile of any line except electric current transmission lines, is to be determined by dividing the total value of such line within the state by the number of miles of such line within the state. ’ ’

Petitioners insist that the correct method of apportionment should be based upon the value of the line consisting of all trackage, right of way, the superstructures thereon, including freight and passenger depots and the proportionate value of the franchise but excluding rolling stock, repair-shops, power generating plants and all other operating property, leaving to the separate taxing units the benefit arising from *401 taxation of the excluded property within their respective limits. In other words, no operating property other than that enumerated should be considered and assessed as part of the line.

To us, this contention is clearly untenable. C. S., sec. 3183, provides that the operating property of all raiLroads shall be assessed for taxation exclusively by the board. C. S., sec.

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 481, 51 Idaho 395, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pocatello-v-ross-idaho-1931.