Filer Mutual Telephone Co. v. Idaho State Tax Commission

281 P.2d 478, 76 Idaho 256, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 265
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1955
Docket8224
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 281 P.2d 478 (Filer Mutual Telephone Co. v. Idaho State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Filer Mutual Telephone Co. v. Idaho State Tax Commission, 281 P.2d 478, 76 Idaho 256, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 265 (Idaho 1955).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Justice.

This matter is before us on a writ of review to test legality of an assessment made on plaintiff’s property by defendant.

The facts have been stipulated by the parties and only questions of law are involved.

Plaintiff now is and has been for several years a mutual nonprofit corporation organized under the laws of the State of Idaho, with its principal place of business at Filer, Twin Falls County, Idaho. It has owned and operated, for many years, telephone lines and a complete and integrated telephone communication system in and around Filer, consisting of switchboards, subscribers’ lines, station equipment, pole lines, cables and other property and equipment used and useful in the operation and maintenance of said system. It *259 has approximately 800 subscribers, each of whom is a member of plaintiff corporation, paying an advance membership charge, or fee, of $50 either in a lump sum or at a rate of 250 per month, at the subscriber’s option. Each member pays to plaintiff a monthly charge for exchange telephone service furnished or rendered by plaintiff, which charge is determined by plaintiff’s board of directors at a rate sufficient to pay the cost of furnishing the service. Plaintiff has no facilities for long distance telephonic communication outside its exchange area, but has a connection with the facilities of the Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Company for this purpose and the charges made by plaintiff to its members for long distance tolls are the same charges made to plaintiff by said Company. All operating property of plaintiff, assessed by defendant, is owned by plaintiff and no part is directly owned by plaintiff’s subscribers or members.

August 11, 1954, plaintiff appeared and protested to defendant Commission its proposed action to assess plaintiff’s operating property, contending its property is exempt from taxation under the provisions of Section 63-105(15), I.C. The Commission denied the protest and plaintiff requests this Court to set aside and annul the assessment made by defendant, acting as a board of assessment, contending that said board has no authority or jurisdiction to assess plaintiff’s property.

The question involved in this case is whether plaintiff is a nonprofit cooperative telephone line under Idaho law, so as to be exempt from taxation.

The powers and duties formerly had by the State Board of Equalization were transferred to the Idaho State Tax Commission by Section 63-512, Idaho Code, in 1945.

Section 63-105(15), Idaho Code, provides :

“The following property is exempt from taxation: * * *

“(15) Cooperative telephone lines from which no profit is derived or upon or over which no fees or tolls are charged or collected.”

This law was • first added to our statutes as Chapter 58, 1913 S.L., p. 173.

Plaintiff contends that it is a “telephone line” under Section 61-120, Idaho Code, which provides:

“The term ‘telephone line’ when used in this act includes all conduits, ducts, poles, wires, cables, instruments and appliances, and all other real estate, fixtures, and personal property owned, controlled, operated or managed in connection with or to facilitate communication by telephone, whether such communication is had with or without the use of transmission wires.”

*260 Section 61-120, I.C., was enacted by Chapter 61, 1913 ■ Sessions Laws, page 248, § 2s, and has remained the same since then.

“The term ‘line’ has been defined as a wire connecting one telegraphic station with another, or the whole system • of telegraph wires under one management and name. As applied to telegraph and telephone lines, the term has, however, both a popular and a technical meaning, and in a statute will be construed according to what appears to have been the intention of the legislature.” Telegraph and Telephone Companies, by Jones, page 5, # 9.

Defendant contends that plaintiff is an operating public utility and its property taxable under Section 63-701, I.C., which provides:

“The operating property of all railroads, telegraph, telephone, electric current transmission lines and electric current transmission lines of rural electrification associations, and- the franchises of all persons owning, or operating as lessees, or constructing any telegraph, telephone or electric current transmission line, or railroads, wholly or partly within this state shall be assessed for taxation for state, county, city, town, village, school district and other purposes, exclusively by the state tax commission.”

Section' 63-701, I.C., was enacted by Chapter 58, 1913 S.L., p. 173, Section 86, and has remained the same as far as it is. applicable to this case.

Section 61-121, I.C., defines telephone corporation and does not, in terms, exclude a nonprofit cooperative association. This Section was enacted by Chapter 61, 1913 S.L., p. 248, Section 2t. The same legislature enacted Sections 30-1001 to 30-1005, I.C., providing for incorporation of nonprofit cooperative associations. Section 61-104, I.C., reads as follows:

“The term ‘corporation’ when used in this act includes a corporation, a company, an association and a joint stock association, but does not include a municipal corporation, or mutual nonprofit or cooperative gas, electrical,. water or telephone corporation or any other public utility organized and operated for service at cost and not for profit, whether inside or outside the limits of incorporated cities, towns or villages.
“A corporation is for profit when its purpose is to make a profit on the business it does which in reason belongs to it and which, if its affairs are administered in good faith, will be available for dividends, whether' dividends are intended to be declared or not. The profit must be something of a tangible or pecuniary nature,coming or belonging to the corpóration as such, as distinct from its members or stockholders.” Read v. Tide *261 water Coal Exchange, Inc., 13 Del. Ch. 195, 116 A. 898, at page 904.

While the fact, that plaintiff has operated a great many years under the exemption statute, Section 63-105(15), I.C., does not of itself prove that plaintiff is entitled to the exemption, nevertheless, it may be considered in arriving at the intent of the Legislature in showing it apparently was satisfied with the operation of the statute which it passed in 1913.

“Chapter 340, Code 1939, provides that the state tax commission shall determine the actual value, for the purposes of taxation, of all electric transmission lines of companies, defined by Section 7089 as those owning or operating' such lines within the state and wholly or partly outside cities and towns, 'except cooperative corporations or associations which are not organized or operated for profit.’ Plaintiffs are clearly within the language of the exception.” Greene County Rural Electric Cooperative v. Nelson, 234 Iowa 362, 12 N.W.2d 886, at page 888.

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Bluebook (online)
281 P.2d 478, 76 Idaho 256, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filer-mutual-telephone-co-v-idaho-state-tax-commission-idaho-1955.