Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees v. Stewart

46 F.2d 910, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2522
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNo. 5842
StatusPublished

This text of 46 F.2d 910 (Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees v. Stewart, 46 F.2d 910, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2522 (5th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

By this suit the appellants sought to have enjoined the collection of additional taxes for the years 1923 and 1924 on timberlands of appellants in Pearl River county, Mss., which were based on a judgment of the circuit court of that county increasing the assessment of the timber on that land from $6 per thous- and feet to $7.50 per thousand feet, the assessment of that timber at $6 per thousand feet having been approved by the board of supervisors of that county, and that action of that board having been approved by the state tax commission. Such additional taxes and 10 per cent, damages thereon also sought to be collected amounted in the aggregate to $108,-746.23. A ground on which injunctive relief was sought is indicated by averments of the amended bill to the effect that if the collection of the additional taxes consequent upon the alleged assessment increase is permitted, appellants will be obliged to pay taxes at a much higher and greater value, and a much greater per cent, of the value of their property than the value and percentage of value of property of other taxpayers in Pearl River county; and by the following allegations of that pleading:

“Plaintiffs would further show that by the adjudication of the State Tax Commission [911]*911and the adjudication by the Board of Supervisors of Pearl Elver County, plaintiffs’ property involved in this cause was assessed at as high a value as other property in Pearl River County, Mississippi, and at as high value as other property in all other counties of the State of Mississippi, and at an equal proportionate value with all property in Pearl River County and other classes of property, in the other counties of the State of Mississippi, to-wit, at a valuation of sixty per cent, of the true value thereof, so that there was a complete equalization of the value of the property and plaintiffs’ property was assessed equal in value to the other property in the State so as to bear its just proportion of the burden of taxation.
“Plaintiffs further show that any raise or increase thereafter in the value of plaintiffs’ property on the assessment roll of Pearl River County for the years 1923 and 1924 would be a discrimination against plaintiffs, and would require plaintiffs’ property to bear a greater portion of the burden of taxation than the property of other taxpayers in Pearl River County and of taxpayers in other counties of the State, and would be a denial to plaintiffs of the equal protection of the laws guaranteed to plaintiffs under the Constitution of the State of Mississippi and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.”

The amended bill contained the following:

“The plaintiffs rendered their property as aforesaid to the assessor for taxation purposes truly valued in proportion to the value placed on all other property in Pearl River and in proportion to all other property in all the other counties of the State of Mississippi. That by deliberate and intentional action on the part of the various tax assessors in the State of Mississippi, the Board of Supervisors of the various counties in the State of Mississippi, and the State Tax Commission of the State of Mississippi, all property in the State of Mississippi is consistently valued for tax purposes at sixty per cent. (60%) of its true or market value and such sixty per eent. (60%) basis of valuation was intentionally adopted by the various tax officials throughout the State of Mississippi and applied to all assessments on property, real and personal, made applicable on the biennial assessment applying to the years 1923 and 1924 and had been so consistently applied for many years prior thereto'. That in conformity with the said practice and agreement in rendering their property as aforesaid to the assessor for taxation purposes, the plaintiffs valued the same at sixty per cent. (60%) of its market value.”

That pleading also alleged that by the assessment of property of appellants which was approved by the board of supervisors of Pearl River county and by the state tax commission that property was assessed at 60- per cent, of its true market value, and that after the assessment rolls had been completed and approved by the board of supervisors and the state tax commission and had been delivered to the tax collector, appellants, prior to the bringing of this suit, paid to said tax collector all taxes that were due and owing for the years 1923 and 1924, being the taxes based on such assessment before it was increased. After the filing of an answer to the amended bill, the court appointed a master to take the evidence and to report his findings of law and fact as to questions stated in that order, including the following:

“As to whether or not there is or was a knowingly wilful and intentional discrimination against the plaintiffs in the valuation fixed on the plaintiffs’ property by the additional value placed thereon on the land and timber by the appeal of the Attorney General by virtue of the judgment of the Circuit Court of Pearl River County, Mississippi, and the judgment of the Supreme Court of Mississippi in affirming said judgment, in the ease of Knox vs. Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees, Case No. 1601 on the General Docket of Pearl River County Circuit Court: (a) comparing the valuation of the plaintiff’s property with the property of the same character and with other property in Pearl River County and other. Counties of the State of Mississippi. * * *

“As to all the law and facts relating to the trial in the Circuit Court on the appeal of the Attorney General from the plaintiffs’ assessment and what law and facts and questions were presented, or might or should have been presented on the trial thereof and on appeal of the said cause to the Supreme Court of the State of Mississippi; and whieh issues, facts, questions and matters presented by the pleadings are res adjudieata.”

The master took the evidence and made a report, stating findings which are mentioned below. The court overruled exceptions filed to that report, and rendered a final decree dismissing the amended bill.

The master in his report gave a negative answer to the first above set out question, finding that the evidence did not prove the discrimination therein described. The re[912]*912port shows how the master reached that conclusion. It shows that he found that, the evidence did not show that property of taxpayers, either owners of yellow pine or other classes of property, was systematically, intentionally, and generally assessed uniformly at 60 per cent, of its true value, either in Pearl River county or in other counties in Mississippi; and'that its value fixed for purposes of taxation varied in the widest degree from far above that percentage to far below it; and that the property of the appellants, after the assessment of it was increased by the above-mentioned judgment, was assessed for taxation at substantially less than 60 per cent, of its true value. It appears from the report that the conclusion that the charge of discrimination was not sustained was a deduction from the premises that the evidence showed that the property of the appellants, after the assessment of it was increased by the above-mentioned judgment, was assessed for taxation at a valuation substantially less than 60 per cent, of -its true value, and that allegations of the amended bill amounted to an admission or concession that there was no discrimination against appellants unless their property was assessed for taxation at mo^e than 60 per cent, of its true valhe.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 F.2d 910, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-hines-yellow-pine-trustees-v-stewart-ca5-1931.