Corn Belt Theatre Corp. v. Board of Review of Oskaloosa

12 N.W.2d 820, 234 Iowa 355, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1944
DocketNo. 46336.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 820 (Corn Belt Theatre Corp. v. Board of Review of Oskaloosa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corn Belt Theatre Corp. v. Board of Review of Oskaloosa, 12 N.W.2d 820, 234 Iowa 355, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 535 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Mantz, J.

In this ease the plaintiff, Corn Belt Theatre Corporation, appealed to the district court from the action of the Board of Review of the City of Oskaloosa, Mahaska County, Iowa, in confirming an assessment made by the local assessor *356 upon a theater property owned by it in that city in 1941, and in disregarding the objections and the demand of the owner thereto that the Board of Review make a reduction from said assessed figure.

Plaintiff perfected its appeal by giving the statutory notice and filing in the district court a petition in equity setting up the grounds for its appeal. The defendant appeared but filed no pleadings or answer to the petition of plaintiff. The defendant did not then question the jurisdiction of the court or make objections to the trial on appeal. The court, following a hearing-in which evidence was taken, found against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant, taxing the costs to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff has appealed.

I. Both parties have argued to some extent the procedure to be followed by this court on appeal. Both cite section 7134 of the Code of 1939, which provides that trials on appeal shall be in equity and that this court shall determine anew all questions arising before the board. Appellant argues that under the statute quoted the cause is triable here de novo. In re Assessment of Sioux City Stock Yards Co., 223 Iowa 1066, 274 N. W. 17; Leach v. Sanborn State Bank, 201 Iowa 1323, 207 N. W. 326. The cases cited by appellee on the matter of the procedure here deal for the most part with appeals where the record below, especially as to the facts, was not before the court. Such could have little application here as the evidence received on appeal by the lower court has been presented in this court and there is no claim by appellee that the same does not set forth substantially the facts as there given. Following a consideration of the argument made by appellee in this respect, we find ourselves unable to agree with the contentions therein made.

II. The decisive questions growing out of this appeal which we find it necessary to pass upon are two in number. ’

The first is the question of the jurisdiction of the lower court to pass.upon the matters presented to it by the appeal of appellant from the action of the Board of Review. The court, on December 22, 1942, following trial of the cause, made the following judgment entry:

“The court finds for the defendant, and the assessment *357 is confirmed. Judgment against plaintiff for costs. Plaintiff excepts.”

Appeal was taken from this judgment.

Appellant in proposition No. °1 of its brief and argument argues that if the action of the lower court was based upon its lack of jurisdiction, then it was in error. Appellee argues that the appellant did not comply with the statute in taking an appeal from the action of the Board of Review and that the action of the lower court was right, thereby arguing that the lower court found against appellant on the failure of the appellant to take the proper steps on appeal. In considering this phase of the matter we will examine the record. The assessor of Oskaloosa, in January 1941, fixed the value of the building owned by appellant at $28,000. Appellant, orally and in writing, objected to the value fixed and requested the assessing officials to reduce the same. This was not done and appellant gave notice of appeal from the action of that Board, by serving notice and then filing its petition in equity wherein it set up its grounds for relief, elaborating upon the objections filed with the Board of Review. Appellee appeared in the lower court but filed no pleading. Neither did it attack the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the appeal. When the cause was reached for trial certain concessions were made of record by the parties in open court. Among these was the ownership of the property, describing it; that its owners had filed objections to the assessment and that the same were refused by said Board of Review; that said Board of Review adjourned on May 21, 1942, and that plaintiff (appellant herein) had appealed therefrom; also that the property described in the petition of appellant had been assessed for the year 1941 by the assessor at $28,000 in arriving at the sixty per cent value of the property: land, $4,800, building, $23,200. Following this the cause proceeded to trial. The appellant introduced witnesses to the, value of the assessed property and also that of other properties in the same vicinity, following which the appellee introduced evidence tending to contradict that of appellant and confirm the action of the assessor. The judgment entry, by its very language, indicates that the court ruled upon the contentions of appellant and not upon the matter of jurisdiction.

*358 We tMnk that under the record the appellee cannot here raise the question as to the right of the lower court to entertain the appeal. It seems to us that, if raised at all, it is raised here for the first time. Certainly there was no objection to the lower court’s proceeding to hear the appeal and no denial or question as to its jurisdiction.

Even should it be conceded that the question was properly raised in the lower court, still it is without merit. In the case of Yeoman Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. State Board of Assessment and Review, 229 Iowa 320, 323, 294 N. W. 330, 332, this court had before it a similar question, that is, the failure of the party appealing to file with the lower court a transcript of the proceedings before the assessing tribunal. That is the question which appellee has argued in this case, i. e., the appellant here failed to file the transcript of the proceedings before the Board of Review in the lower court before hearing. Speaking through Hale, J., in the case above cited, we quote the following:

“Neither is a transcript necessary to give jurisdiction, but only the notice of appeal. * * * that the jurisdiction of the court is obtained by filing of notice of appeal, and from the holdings of the court an appeal such as we have here will not be dismissed unless, from the absence of transcript, petition, or evidence the court has nothing upon which it may act. ’ ’

See, also, German American Sav. Bk. v. Council of City of Burlington, 118 Iowa 84, 91 N. W. 829; White v. City of Marion, 139 Iowa 479, 117 N. W. 254. Many other cases might be cited as authority for the holding but we think the above are sufficient.

The facts, as well as the law, are against the position taken by the appellee as to the right of the lower court, to entertain the appeal.

III. . The other question raised by the appellant which we are called upon to determine in this appeal relates to the value of the property when same was assessed. In general, it was the claim of appellant in its petition that the value of the property as fixed by the assessor and later confirmed by the Board of Review was excessive, that it disregarded its actual *359 or market value, was in excess of assessments made upon other property of the same value, character, and location, and that the value so fixed was discriminatory and inequitable.

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12 N.W.2d 820, 234 Iowa 355, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-belt-theatre-corp-v-board-of-review-of-oskaloosa-iowa-1944.