County Board of Equalization of Kane County v. State Tax Commission of Utah

50 P.2d 418, 88 Utah 219
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1935
DocketNo. 5485.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 50 P.2d 418 (County Board of Equalization of Kane County v. State Tax Commission of Utah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County Board of Equalization of Kane County v. State Tax Commission of Utah, 50 P.2d 418, 88 Utah 219 (Utah 1935).

Opinion

EPHRAIM HANSON, Justice.

The petitioner, the county board of equalization of Kane county, Utah, has petitioned this court for a writ of certi-orari to have reviewed a decision of the state tax commission setting aside and canceling an assessment made by the county assessor of Kane county under the direction of the county board of equalization of that county, assessing certain electrical equipment to the defendant Fairbanks, Morse & Co. The following facts were agreed upon before the state tax commission:

“That Fairbanks, Morse & Company is a corporation of the State of Illinois, duly authorized to do business in the state of Utah. The *221 town of Kanab is a Municipal Corporation in Kane County, Utah. That the Municipal Acceptance Corporation is an Illinois corporation, and is not authorized to do business and has never done business in the State of Utah. That on or about the 7th of January, 1929, the Town of Kanab duly entered into an agreement with Fairbanks, Morse & Company whereby the town agreed to purchase from said company certain electrical machinery and material for an electrical generating plant, at an agreed price of $32,544.00, represented by warrants maturing at intervals to be paid in installments extending over a number of years, title to said property to pass to the said Town only when the purchase price was fully paid as provided in said agreement. That during the year 1929 and pursuant to said agreement Fairbanks, Morse & Company constructed said generating plant and turned the same over to the Town on or about the 1st of June, 1929; and that from that time until 14th of March, 1933, the said Town of Kanab operated said plant as a municipal power plant. That under and by virtue of said contract said Town of Kanab agreed to pay the purchase price and interest out of the revenues obtained from the operation of said power plant, and covenanted and agreed to maintain such rates for the service as produced to pay for said charge specified in said contract. That seventy-two pledge warrants, evidencing the purchase price as provided in said contract, were duly executed by the said Town of Kanab and delivered by it to Fairbanks, Morse & Company on or prior to the 1st of June, 1929, when said property was accepted. That all of said warrants were in the same form except as to the date of maturity, and were each for the principal sum of $452.00, and said warrants became due at monthly intervals over said period from August 15th, 1929, to July 15, 1935. That under date of June 12, 1929 said title retaining contract and warrants were assigned and transferred by Fairbanks, Morse & Company to Municipal Acceptance Corporation; evidence of which transfer being offered by the endorsement appearing on the reverse side of page 4 of said contract, Exhibit 3, and telegrams passing between Fairbanks, Morse & Company and its attorneys; and that said contract and warrants were in the possession of said Municipal Acceptance Corporation in the State of Illinois at all times after June 12, 1929, until surrendered to the town of Kanab on March 14, 1933.
“That thereafter at irregular intervals certain of said warrants aggregating $12,214.00 were paid by the Town of Kanab, but no payments were made after the month of September, 1932. That the Town remained in possession of said property and continued to operate the same until the 14th of March, 1933, at which time the Town sold the plant and its distribution system to the Southern Utah Power Company, and that as a part of the same transaction Fairbanks, Morse & *222 Company and the Municipal Acceptance Corporation executed a bill of sale to said Town of Kanab, and all of the unpaid warrants of the said Town then outstanding, amounting to $20,340.00 in principal, were surrendered to said Town and part of the purchase price paid by the said Southern Utah Power Company for said property was paid to the said Town of Kanab, a portion of the remainder to the Municipal Acceptance Corporation, and the balance still due and unpaid was secured by a mortgage or deed of trust, executed by the said Southern Utah Power Company to a trustee for said Municipal Acceptance Corporation. That the electrical equipment so sold and furnished by said Fairbanks, Morse & Company was not assessed during the years 1930-1931-1932, nor during the regular assessment period of 1933; that by order of the County Board of Equalization of Kane County, said property was assessed to Fairbanks, Morse & Company during the month of June, 1933, for the years 1930, 1931, 1932-1933, at a valuation of $30,000.00 for each of said years. That Fairbanks, Morse, & Company duly protested against this assessment by filing its written protest with the Board of County Commissioners, sitting as a Board of Equalization, and requested that all of said assessments be cancelled, and duly appeared before the Board of Equalization at the time and place designated by it to hear said protest, but the said protest of Fairbanks, Morse & Company was denied.”

In addition to the agreed facts, the record shows that after the denial of the protest of Fairbanks, Morse & Co. by the board of equalization of Kane county that company duly appealed to the state tax commission and on a hearing duly had the commission made its order and decision that the property was not subject to assessment during the years in question to either Fairbanks, Morse & Co. or the Municipal Acceptance Corporation, and ordered that the assessment be vacated and canceled.

The record also discloses that the contract entered into by and between the town of Kanab and Fairbanks, Morse & Co. contained the following provision:

«* * * ijijjg ^je an(j ownership 0f the machinery or material herein specified shall remain in the Company until final payment therefor has been made in full, as above provided. * * * The Company shall have the right to discount or transfer any of said pledge notes, and the title and right of possession in and to said machinery or materials shall pass thereby to the legal holder of such pledge orders.”

*223 The petitioner contends that the decision of the state tax commission was beyond the powers of the commission and that it has exceeded its authority. The defendants, the state tax commission and Fairbanks, Morse & Co., assert that the decision of the commission is not reviewable by this court, or that, if it is reviewable, the decision is correct and should not be disturbed.

The defendants cite 80-7-10, R. S. Utah 1933, which -provides for an appeal to the state tax commission by any person aggrieved and dissatisfied with the decision of the county board of equalization in relation to the assessment of any property in which he has any interest, and assert that the phrase in said section, that “every decision, order or assessment made by the tax commission upon such appeal shall be final,” prohibits a review by the courts of the decision, orders, and rulings made by the commission on such appeal. We cannot agree with this contention.

Article 8, § 4, of the Constitution of Utah provides:

“The Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction to issue writs of mandamus, certiorari, prohibition, quo warranto and habeas corpus.”

R. S. 1933, 104-67-2, provides:

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50 P.2d 418, 88 Utah 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-board-of-equalization-of-kane-county-v-state-tax-commission-of-utah-utah-1935.