Frazee Lumber Co. v. Haden

197 S.E.2d 634, 156 W. Va. 844, 1973 W. Va. LEXIS 280
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1973
Docket12949
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 197 S.E.2d 634 (Frazee Lumber Co. v. Haden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazee Lumber Co. v. Haden, 197 S.E.2d 634, 156 W. Va. 844, 1973 W. Va. LEXIS 280 (W. Va. 1973).

Opinion

Neely, Judge:

This is an appeal by the State Tax Commissioner from a final order of the Circuit Court of Randolph County entered May 29, 1969 granting taxpayer relief from a business and occupation tax assessment.

On December 29, 1964, the State Tax Commissioner levied a business and occupation tax assessment pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 11, Article 13, Section 2a Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, against Frazee Lumber Company. Frazee did not report gross income and pay the consequent tax derived from its business activities conducted in West Virginia. Thereafter, the *846 taxpayer filed a petition for reassessment and was accorded a hearing as prescribed by the Code.

After consideration of the evidence, the Tax Commissioner affirmed the assessment of business and occupation tax in the amount of $25,018.93 and a penalty of $8,538.13, for a total liability of $33,557.06.

Pursuant to Chapter 11, Article 13, Section 8, Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, the taxpayer appealed the Tax Commissioner’s decision to the Circuit Court of Randolph County, West Virginia. The Circuit Court affirmed the action of the Tax Commissioner except with regard to the finding of the commissioner that Frazee Lumber Company was engaged in the business activity of producing timber and, therefore, was subject to the business and occupation tax imposed upon the privilege of producing timber. The Circuit Court also held that there be no penalties accruing during the pendency of the appeal before this Court.

The Frazee Lumber Company is a foreign corporation qualified to do business in West Virginia. Frazee, on May 20, 1960, entered into a contract with the Sun Lumber Company, a West Virginia corporation, in which Sun did:

“ * * * [G]rant, convey, sell, assign, transfer and forever set over to the Company, with covenants of special warranty [eighteen thousand acres] * s|: *.
“ * * * [0]f the timber and trees which at the time of cutting measure 14 inches and up wide diameter over the bark, breast high (D.B.H.) on the uphill side, standing and fallen * *

The agreement provides that Frazee shall pay for all the timber severed at the rate of $27.50 per thousand board feet, measured according to the Doyle Log Scale Rule. Further, Frazee at the time of the execution and delivery of the contract, was required to pay to the Sun Lumber Company the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) as advance payment for nine hundred nine thousand ninety-one (909,091) board feet of timber, and *847 the agreement provided that before the cutting of the next nine hundred nine thousand ninety-one (909,091) board feet, Frazee was to pay an additional twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) and a similar sum for each additional allotment of timber.

The instrument provides that Frazee will purchase the timber from Sun for a certain term of years, and will have the right to cut and remove such timber of certain specifications as long as Frazee’s operations meet certain other requirements imposed by Sun Lumber Company with regard to the cutting, hauling, grading, and manufacture of the timber. Sun agreed to discontinue its operations on the property which was subject to the agreement.

The appeal from the State Tax Commissioner’s ruling was initially brought in the court of the Honorable Stanley Bosworth, Judge of the Circuit Court of Randolph County. In January, 1969, the Honorable George R. Triplett succeeded to the bench. Thereupon, Judge Triplett reopened the case in order adequately to pass upon the questions of law and fact raised by the proceedings. It is argued by the State Tax Commissioner that the hearing held January 24, 1969 was an ex parte hearing in which the State Tax Commissioner was not represented, and that consequently, the order entered on February 14, 1969 pursuant to the hearing is violative of due process. We find no merit in this argument.

The record discloses that Judge Triplett wrote to both counsel informing them of the prospective hearing on January 24, 1969, and that the Attorney General’s office received the letter. It further discloses that Judge Triplett talked personally with Mr. Jack M. McCarty of the Attorney General’s office and discussed the date for the hearing. It is evident that the Attorney General’s office had notice and chose not to attend the hearing.

Judge Triplett held the hearing on January 24, 1969 and received oral testimony of Mr. ^Robert L. McClintock concerning the procedures employed for operating under *848 the contract between Sun Lumber and Frazee. It appears from the record that long before the January 24, 1969 hearing, in open court, on September 10, 1968 the attorneys for the Tax Commissioner and for Frazee stipulated that the case would be submitted on briefs to Judge Bosworth and that the briefs would be filed by a certain time. In the stipulation the parties agreed to narrow the issue to the question of whether the contract between Sun and Frazee dated May 20, 1960 made Frazee a purchaser of standing timber, and therefore subject to the business and occupation tax imposed by Chapter 11, Article 13, Section 2a Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, upon the activity of producing timber at the time such timber was cut, or alternatively whether Frazee was the purchaser of logs which had already been severed, and therefore only subject to the business and occupation tax for subsequent lumber manufacturing processes.

It does not appear in the record that counsel for Frazee ever requested in writing that the Circuit Court hold a hearing, and Judge Triplett’s comments demonstrate that the Judge requested further evidence on his own motion in order to assist him in the disposition of the case.

While stipulations made in open court between parties or their counsel are binding upon the parties, Spencer v. Steinbrecher, 152 W.Va. 490, 164 S.E.2d 710 (1968), those stipulations are not binding upon the court. The court is entitled to request the presentation of such evidence, and the briefing of such issues of law, as appear to the court necessary for the equitable resolution of a controversy before it. It is generally held that the inherent powers of a court are so broad as to encompass every action “reasonably necessary for the administration of justice within the scope of its jurisdiction.” Shields v. Romine, 122 W.Va. 639, 13 S.E.2d 16 (1940).

Although the proceedings in this case were regular, this Court finds that the Circuit Court was clearly wrong in both its findings of fact and conclusions of law. In the Court’s opinion dated January 24, 1969 the Court found the following facts:

*849 “No. 4. Frazee, again the court reiterates, was in the sawmill business sawing logs into rough lumber and it was certainly not in the timber cutting business and the business of hauling lumber when Sun maintained the control over the contract as it is indicated by the terms thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.E.2d 634, 156 W. Va. 844, 1973 W. Va. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazee-lumber-co-v-haden-wva-1973.