First National Bank of Moscow v. Board of Commissioners

232 P. 905, 40 Idaho 391, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 15
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 232 P. 905 (First National Bank of Moscow v. Board of Commissioners) 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
First National Bank of Moscow v. Board of Commissioners, 232 P. 905, 40 Idaho 391, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 15 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

*394 MCCARTHY, C. J.

Appellant bank made its tax statement for 1921 to the assessor of Latah county, showing paid-up capital stock of $50,000, surplus and undivided profits $27,262.45, expenses and taxes paid $756.27, or a total of $76,506.18 as the full cash value of the capital stock. It also showed a total of $96,306.49 invested in real estate, furniture and fixtures which had been assessed, and in Federal Reserve Bank stock. The result was that the bank reported that its capital stock had no valuation for taxing purposes. The assessor did not assess the stock. Respondent board of commissioners sitting as a board of equalization gave notice to the bank to appear and show cause why its assessment should not be raised. The board accepted appellant's valuation of its capital stock and found that property in Latah county was valued by the assessor for assessment purposes at 66% per cent of its actual value, and that the capital stock and surplus of the bank should be valued at $51,004.12. It deducted from this the amount for which the real estate, furniture and fixtures of the bank was assessed, to wit, $33,005, and the $2,250 invested in Federal Reserve Bank stock, and concluded that the capital stock of the bank should be assessed at $15,749.12 or $31.50 per share. Appellants duly appealed from respondents’ order to the district court. The principal grounds of the appeal, as stated in the notice, are that the board assessed the capital stock, and that it refused to deduct from the value of the stock the amount actually invested in other property upon which appellant paid taxes. On the trial the district court found that the *395 actual cash value of appellant’s capital stock was $200 a share, or $100,000, that the actual amount of money invested by appellant bank in other property assessed to it was $86,556.49; that other real estate and personal property in Latah county was assessed on the basis of 66% per cent of its actual value; that the full cash value of appellant bank’s capital stock including surplus and undivided profits and after deducting the amount invested in other property assessed to it was $13,443.51, and that the capital stock should be assessed at 66% per cent of that amount, or $8,962.32, which would make $17.92 per share. By its judgment the court provided that the order of the board of equalization be modified; that each share of appellant bank’s stock be assessed at $17.92, and that this assessment be extended upon the tax-rolls of Latah county. It further adjudged that said county recover from each shareholder the amount of tax for the year 1921, based upon the assessment of each share at $17.92, with seven per cent interest from the fourth Monday in December, 1921, the date on which the tax became delinquent. It further provided that if such amount was not paid within thirty days the county should recover the statutory penalty of six per cent of the amount owing on the fourth Monday of December with one per cent per month interest thereafter. From this judgment this appeal is taken.

Of the many specifications of error, the principal ones, and the only ones which we find it necessary to expressly mention, are that the court erred, first in finding that the value of the stock was $200 per share and that its value for assessment purposes was $8,^62.32 or $17.92 per share; second, in assuming to fix the value of the property for assessment purposes; third, in permitting evidence as to the price for which the stock had sold in 1920; fourth, in admitting evidence as to the value of land in Latah county; fifth, in reopening the case some months after the trial and permit., ting the introduction of further testimony. Appellants contend in effect that the valuation of the stock for taxing purposes was as shown on the bank’s report. They also con *396 tend that the district court had no power to fix the amount of the assessment.

Respondents contend that neither the district court nor this court has any jurisdiction in such cases because no appeal lies from a decision of the county board of equalization, citing General Custer Mining Co. v. Van Camp, 2 Ida. 40, 3 Pac. 22; Feltham v. Board of Commissioners, 10 Ida. 182, 77 Pac. 332; Humbird Lumber Co. v. Morgan, 10 Ida. 327, 77 Pac. 433. These authorities do so hold, but that was before the enactment of the present statute, enacted in 1919. It provides:

C. S. “Sec. 3339. Any time within 20 days after the adjournment of any meeting of the board of county commissioners, sitting as a board of equalization, an appeal may be taken from any act, order or proceeding of the board, by any person aggrieved thereby, or by any taxpayer of the county when he deems any such act, order or proceeding illegal or prejudicial to the public interest, but nothing in this section shall be construed so as to suspend the payment of taxes pending said appeal.”
C. S. “Sec. 3340. The procedure upon such appeal and the power of thq courts in relation thereto shall be in all respects the same as are prescribed in section 3510, 3511 and 3512, providing for appeals from other orders of the board of county commissioners.”

Section 3512 provides that upon the appeal the matter must be heard anew and the act, order or proceeding so appealed from may be affirmed, reversed or modified. These statutes clearly give the courts jurisdiction. They were in force at the time of the proceedings reviewed in Washington County v. First National Bank, 35 Ida. 438, 206 Pac. 1054. No mention was made of the jurisdictional question for the reason that the point was not disputed. Respondents also advert to the fact that in some of the pleadings they are referred to simply as the board of commissioners and not as the board of equalization. At other places: in the record, however, they are referred to as the board of equalization. We conclude that the fact they are inadvertently referred to *397 in some places in the record as the board of commissioners is not sufficient ground for refusing to entertain jurisdiction.

As above stated, the principal purpose of appellants’ appeal to the district court from the order of the board of equalization was to reverse the action of the board in deducting the assessed valuation rather than the actual valuation of the other taxable property. Appellants did not wish the court to disturb the action of the board in accepting the book value of the stock as its valuation for taxation. It is apparently appellants’ contention that the district court should have contented itself with referring the matter back to the board of equalization with instruction to find and deduct the actual value of the other taxable property rather than its assessed valuation. In support of their position that the district court had no jurisdiction to order an increase in the assessment of the bank stock appellants rely on the principle that courts have no jurisdiction to grant relief from the acts of assessing officers unless there is proof of fraud, or that intentional, systematic discrimination which is the equivalent of fraud. (Los Angeles Gas & Electric Co. v. Los Angeles County, 162 Cal. 164, 9 A. L. R. 1277, 121 Pac. 384; Birch v. Orange County, 59 Cal. App. 133, 210 Pac. 57; Spring Valley Coal Co. v. People, 157 Ill. 543, 41 N. E.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Utah Oil Refining Co. v. Hendrix
242 P.2d 124 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1952)
Idaho Gold Dredging Co. v. Balderston
78 P.2d 105 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1938)
McGoldrick Lumber Co. v. Benewah County
35 P.2d 659 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1934)
Winton Lumber Co. v. Kootenai County
26 P.2d 124 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P. 905, 40 Idaho 391, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-moscow-v-board-of-commissioners-idaho-1925.