Doerfler v. State Tax Commission

21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 361, 29 Ohio Dec. 298, 1918 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 45
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1918
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 361 (Doerfler v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doerfler v. State Tax Commission, 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 361, 29 Ohio Dec. 298, 1918 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 45 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Foran, J.

This case comes into this court under favor of an act of the General Assembly, passed March 21, 1917, and strange as it may seem, approved by the governor as passed-, 107 O. L., 551. The title of the act, which the Constitution (Article II, Section 16) provides shall be clearly expressed in its title, is as follows:

“To supplement Section 5611 of the General Code, by the enactment of Sections 5611-1 and 5611-2 providing for the revision by the Supreme Court of the orders of the Tax Commission of Ohio relating to the valuation of property for taxation.” '

By the word “revision” is undoubtedly meant that the Supreme Court was to be empowered to review the order of the State Tax Commission. Review, as a legal term, means to examine again and revise, as an appellate court reviews a decision [362]*362or judgment of an inferior court, or as a superior court reviews the decision or judgment of an inferior court; and the conclusion of the superior court on review is the revision of the thing reviewed. Or, to state it differently, the revision is jfche completed act of the reviewing court. Looking into the act itself and the language employed or used to express the legislative intent, we obtain a vague hint for this confusing and inept misuse of words. By Section 2 of the act (Section 5611-2, G. C.) it is provided that the proceedings to obtain a revisto or modification of the order of the tax commission “shall be by petition in error filed in the court of common pleas,” but it is further provided in the same section that, in addition to the certified transcript of its final order, which the tax commission is reqifired to deliver to the person filing the petition in error, the court in which it is filed “may call witnesses and consider other evidence in addition to such transcript in the hearing on such petition in error.”

Very naturally, the question is presented whether the proceeding now before the court is on appeal or in error. Manifestly it can not be both, as the two proceedings are clearly inconsistent. A petition in error is a new action to reverse the judgment below, but an appeal is in the circuit (Ohio) court the same action, as in the lower court or court of common pleas. Foster v. Barnes, 63 Ohio St., 369, 172. An appeal is a proceeding in the originaLcase, which continues the case by suspending the decree of the lower court until final hearing in the appellate court. Teaff v. Hewitt, 1 Ohio St., 511.

However, this anomalous incongruity occasions no surprise, as consistency is rarely, if ever, found in the intellectual jewel casket of the modern state legislator; and yet there may be some excuse for the bewildering chaos of the legislative mind.

As the law existed in 1916, when this cause of action, if it may be so called, arose, the tax commission had power to increase or decrease the value of banks’ shares in order-to establish equality and uniformity, as returned and fixed by the county auditor under favor of Section 5412, G. C. As the conclusion or determination of the tax commission was final, it [363]*363was deemed advisable to provide for a review of some kind if the order of the commission resulted in inequality or injustice to the state or to the banks. How was this to be done? If the courts were given appellate jurisdiction, they would be required to perform duties in no respect judicial. As has been pointed out, by appeal in law we -mean that the decision of a lower court is referred or taken to a higher court for re-examination or hearing upon the merits de novo. To require a court to determine the valuation of property for purposes of taxation would be conferring upon the court mere ministerial functions to perform acts prescribed by law without dependence in any way upon judicial discretion as to the propriety of the conclusions reached; thus, in effect, conferring upon judges the duties of assessors or other tax officers.

To avoid a situation so obviously incongruous, the proceeding to review or modify the orders of the tax commission is called a proceeding in error, or a proceeding instituted by filing a petition in error, that is, in the instant case, a proceeding to review mistakes or errors of law by the tax commission, in wrongfully applying or interpreting or construing the statutes relating to taxation. But here a seemingly insuperable difficulty arose. As the law stood in 1916 (Section 5619, G-. C.), the tax commission could increase or decrease the value of shares as fixed by the auditor, and under favor of Section 5623, G. C., its orders are final or binding, and while it could consult the Attorney-General and prescribe uniform rules respecting the mode or manner of exercising the powers conferred upon it, still, as' these powers are far-reaching, a suspicion prevailed in 1916, and still prevails, that the tax commission may, in large mea7 sure, become a star chamber tribunal and receive information it need not necessarily make part of its public records.

This is quite evident from the certified transcript now before the court. This transcript does not contain a particle of evidence or give a single reason why it reduced the value fixed by the county auditor on the shares of one of the defendants in error; that is, “the value of the shares and property representing capital employed by The Union National Bank,” For these [364]*364reasons it was deemed necessary, and, in the opinion of the General Assembly, essential, to go behind the mere finding and order of the tax commission, and to this end the common pleas court “may call witnesses and consider other evidence in addition to the transcript in the hearing of such petition in error.”

It may be said, in passing, that without such additional evidence in the ease now before the court, the plain duty of the court, if it had to pass upon the issue presented by the transcript alone, would be to dismiss the petition in error. Hence -the case is squarely before the court on appeal under a statute (providing for a proceeding in error in the Supreme Court, as indicated in the title to the act. Inasmuch, however, as the constitutional provision requiring that the title of a bill shall be clearly expressed in its title has been held to be directory in Pim v. Nicholson, 6 Ohio St., 176, this paradoxical faux pas will be treated not as a faux jour, but as a true light thrown upon a cubic picture or painting of the legislative mind.

The facts, as conceded and admitted by counsel in argument and in their briefs, are that in May, 1916, The Union National Lank, one of the defendants in error, furnished the auditor of Cuyahoga county the information regarding its resources and liabilities and stockholders, as required and provided by Section 5411, G. C. Proceeding under Section 5412, G. C., the auditor thereupon fixed the value of the shares and property of the bank and reported the valuation so fixed and determined by him, to the State Tax Commission, as provided by Section 5417, G. C. (since repealed by act 106 O. L., 269). The bank reported that 20,000 shares of stock were outstanding and that the market value of these shares on the day the report was made, June 1, 1916, was $187 a share. The auditor found from a consideration of the report of the bank and other sources, an.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 361, 29 Ohio Dec. 298, 1918 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doerfler-v-state-tax-commission-ohctcomplcuyaho-1918.