Container Corporation of America v. Long
This text of 274 So. 2d 571 (Container Corporation of America v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
CONTAINER CORPORATION OF AMERICA, a Delaware Corporation, Appellant,
v.
Gene LONG, As Tax Assessor of Bradford County, Florida, et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*572 Edward McCarthy, Jr., of Freeman, Richardson, Watson, Slade & McCarthy, Jacksonville, for appellant.
Theron A. Yawn, Starke, for appellees.
WIGGINTON, Judge.
Plaintiff has appealed a summary final judgment rendered in favor of defendant taxing authorities. It contends that the trial court erred in finding from the pleadings, affidavits, exhibits, and other evidence in the file that there exists no genuine issue of any material fact and that appellees are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Appellant is engaged in an admittedly bona fide forestry operation on approximately 37,500 acres of timberlands owned by it and situate in Bradford County. Appellant's utilization of the lands for the foregoing purpose has been recognized by appellees, and the land has been classified as agricultural for tax assessment purposes. The complaint filed herein by appellant challenges the legality of the tax assessment made against these lands for the year 1968 on the ground that the value fixed by appellee-assessor is grossly in excess of its fair market value, is grossly arbitrary and discriminatory, and represents a much greater percentage of its just value than other agricultural lands in the county. The complaint further alleges that appellees failed to fix the value of appellant's lands by the capitalization-of-income method in accordance with the standard measure of value and procedures set forth in the woodlands section of the tax assessors' guide promulgated by the Comptroller of this state and approved by the State Planning and Budget Commission.
In response to the complaint, appellees filed their motion for summary judgment. In the affidavits and accompanying exhibits filed by appellees in support of their motion, they do not take issue with any of the allegations of fact or contentions of law urged by appellant as grounds for relief. They rest their position on the fact that appellant has previously brought a suit against appellees challenging the legality of the tax assessments made against its lands for the years 1965, 1966, and 1967. The assault made upon the legality of the taxes involved in that proceeding was on essentially the same grounds as are now urged by appellant for relief in the case sub judice. By their affidavits appellees aver without dispute that the lands involved in the prior litigation challenging the legality of the 1965, 1966, and 1967 tax assessments are the same lands involved in the case sub judice; that there has been no substantial change in the ownership, market value, or true cash value of the lands since the years of the disputed taxes involved in the prior litigation and the tax year of 1968 involved in the case sub judice; that the value placed upon appellant's lands for the year 1968, on which the assessment involved in this proceeding is based, is exactly the same as the value placed on the lands during the disputed years 1965 to 1967, inclusive, which values were judicially held to have been legally fixed by appellee-tax assessor.[1] Appellees therefore rest their position on the proposition that since the value of appellant's lands and the tax assessment based thereon are the same now as they were during the years when the disputed assessments were litigated and found to be legal and proper, appellant is now estopped to again relitigate the same questions as were involved in the prior litigation and that the valuations placed upon its lands for the prior years may properly be adopted as the just value to be placed upon the same lands for the tax year 1968 involved herein.
In rendering summary judgment favorable to appellees, the trial court found that the tax assessments made against appellant's lands for the years 1965, 1966, and 1967, which were held to be valid in the litigation heretofore instituted by appellant, compare in all material respects with the *573 present assessment for the year 1968 made against appellant's lands; that any significant differences which may exist could be accounted for by normal corrections of errors or omissions on the part of appellee-tax assessor in accordance with accepted procedures. Upon such finding the trial court held that appellees were entitled to summary judgment on the authority of this court's original decision in Powell v. Kelly, supra, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court in its certiorari review of that decision.[2]
From the final judgment reviewed herein it is apparent that without any proof supporting the validity of the 1968 tax assessment made against appellant's lands, the trial court held such assessment to be valid solely and only because it conforms in all material respects to the tax assessment made against the same lands during preceding years, which assessments were the subject of litigation and had been held to be valid. The rule of law adopted by the trial court has been repeatedly rejected by the appellate courts of this state and, therefore, cannot be permitted to stand.
Ad valorem taxes assessed against property in this state for any given tax year must stand or fall on its own validity, unconnected with the assessment made against that land during any prior or subsequent year.[3]
In Merrill v. Simpson appellant sought to establish that the 1966 taxes assessed against his land were invalid because the value fixed by the tax assessor was grossly in excess of the value placed upon his land for the previous year of 1965 and no material change in the value of the land had taken place since the preceding year. The trial court's ruling which excluded proof of the 1965 valuation was affirmed by this court on appeal[4] and approved by the Supreme Court in its certiorari review of our decision.[5]
In Hecht v. Dade County[6] it was held that proof of the value placed upon plaintiffs' land for the year 1968 could not properly be shown for the purpose of establishing that the 1967 assessment against the same land was grossly excessive and therefore illegal and void.
In Homer v. Hialeah Race Course, Inc.,[7] the Third District Court of Appeal held that the mere fact there may have been no showing of a change in circumstances relating to the property involved in that case since the last tax assessment is not a sufficient predicate for utilizing proof for the prior year's assessment for the purpose of establishing the just value of the land for the current tax year. To a similar effect is the decision of that court in Metropolitan Dade County v. Tropical Park, Inc.,[8] in which the court held that each year's assessment must be based on its own validity and not upon the assessment of any prior or subsequent year.
There is another equally cogent reason why appellant may not be precluded from litigating the validity of the 1968 tax assessment made against its lands merely because that assessment is no greater in amount than that made against the same lands for prior tax years, the validity of which was sustained in prior litigation. In the prior suit brought by appellant, the primary thrust of its position was that in evaluating its property appellee-tax assessor *574
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
274 So. 2d 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/container-corporation-of-america-v-long-fladistctapp-1973.