Friedlander Bros. v. City of Moultrie

116 S.E. 845, 155 Ga. 184, 1923 Ga. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 27, 1923
DocketNo. 3206
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 S.E. 845 (Friedlander Bros. v. City of Moultrie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Friedlander Bros. v. City of Moultrie, 116 S.E. 845, 155 Ga. 184, 1923 Ga. LEXIS 34 (Ga. 1923).

Opinion

Beck, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) The assessment was made in pursuance of section 32 of the act approved Nov. 20, 1901 (Act 1901, p. 591), entitled “An act to create a new charter for the City of Moultrie,” etc. That section reads in part as follows: “Be it further enacted, that said mayor and aldermen shall, at the first meeting after the close of the tax books in the year 1902, elect three (3) intelligent, upright, discreet citizens of said city, as city tax-assessors, one of which shall be elected for a term of one year, one for a term of two years, and one for a term of three years. . . It shall be the duty of said tax-assessors to assess the value of the real estate and personal property in said city for the purpose of taxation by said city; and it shall be'their duty to examine the tax returns placed before them by the officer receiving the same, and increase the value of the real estate or personal property when, in their judgment) the value placed thereon by the taxpayer is too small. The mayor and aldermen shall have authority to prescribe rules for the government of said city tax-assessors. Said assessors shall make a return of their work within thirty days after the tax returns are turned over to them; provided, that the mayor and aldermen may, if they see fit, extend the time in which said tax-assessors shall have to’ make their returns. When said returns are made, said assessors shall appoint a time, and place for hearing objections to their assessments; and the clerk of said city shall give notice to each party whose tax returns have been raised, ten days before the said hearing, stating the time of hearing and the increase so made by said assessors. This notice may be served personally on said taxpayer by the marshal or policeman of said city, or mailed to said person to his last known address, with postage prepaid.”

[186]*186The constitutionality of this section of the charter of the City of Moultrie is attacked upon the ground that it is void and violative of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, for the reason that it deprives taxpayers of their property without due process of law, that it is void for the reason that it “prescribes that the tax-assessors shall make their assessment of the property of the taxpayers before any hearing is given to the taxpayer; and under the due-process clause of the 14th amendment to the constitution of the United States, petitioners are entitled to a hearing as to the value of their property assessed for taxes before said assessment is made.” Petitioners contend further that the section of the charter referred to is unconstitutional for the reason that it fails to provide for any judicial determination of the rights of petitioners in cases like the present one. They contend that there is no provision for submission to arbitrators or other judicial investigation of the value of the property of the taxpayers, and no right of- appeal from the decision of the assessors is prescribed, but the decision of the assessors is final so far as the value of the property of taxpayers is concerned.

We do not think that the section of the charter of the City of Moultrie under consideration should be declared unconstitutional and void on the grounds urged against it, in view of that part of the section challenged as unconstitutional, which provides that the assessors “shall appoint a time and place for hearing objections to their assessments; and the clerk of said city shall give notice to each part]' whose returns have been raised, ten days before the said hearing, stating the time of the hearing and the increase so made by the assessors.”. This provision for a hearing, properly construed, gives to the taxpayer who desires to contest the assessment made by the tax-assessors of the city an opportunity to submit evidence to support his objections to any assessment which he desires to contest, and to show that the same is excessive; and these petitioners, as taxpayers, were given this opportunity after due notice, as appears from their petition. The fact that no appeal is provided for does not deny due process, nor is the taxpayer deprived of due process because no other judicial investigation is provided for.

In the case of City Council of Augusta v. Pearce, 79 Ga. 98 [187]*187(4 S. E. 104), it was said: “Whilst municipal taxes upon property must be ad valorem, yet value is to be ascertained and determined, not by judicial proceedings, but by the legally constituted authorities established for that purpose in the given municipality; and an assessment made by such authorities in the prescribed mode, and without fraud or collusion, is final and conclusive upon the question of value as a basis of taxation for the time being.” In the ease from which this excerpt is quoted the property of a certain taxpayer was assessed for taxation at a figure which she charged was excessive, and she filed her petition for injunction to restrain the city from enforcing an execution for the taxes, based upon the alleged excessive assessment of the value of' the property. A restraining order was granted, and upon the hearing an interlocutory injunction was granted. The city excepted. The judgment of the court below was reversed. In the course of the opinion rendered in that case the court said: “ The system in Augusta, established by ordinance, is, to have all the real estate examined and listed by the city sheriff, and he is required to estimate its value in the first instance; and that estimate is entered in his book. This book is presented to the board of assessors, consisting, as I have stated, of one member of council and four citizens (one from each ward); and they revise it and determine whether the value suggested is correct or not, and they finally settle upon the valuation of each piece of property. Then a notice is published for ten days, warning citizens that assessments have been made; and the ordinance provides that during these ten days any one who has complaint to make can file a written protest upon oath; and that is presented to the city council. It is filed with the city sheriff, but it is his duty to ‘lay it before the city council, and the council entertain it and make the proper reduction, if they think any ought to be made; and if not, they refer it to the board of assessors. There is no provision for going any further with it.

“It seems to be the scheme to hear the citizen on his protest, and to act upon it in the city council, if the council think proper to act themselves; and if not, they refer it back to the board of assessors for a reconsideration or revaluation; and there it stops. We assume that as there was a protest in this Case, the officials acted upon it as it was their duty to do, the presumption being [188]*188that public officers perform their duty. 1 Ga. 1; Id. 3; Id. 88; 2 Ga. 108; 4 Ga. 155; 5 Ga. 11; 6 Ga. 188; 19 Ga. 99; 20 Ga. 220; Id. 333.

“ There is no fraud charged; there is nothing charged but overvaluation. It is not charged that these officers acted in bad faith, or fixed a valuation that they did not believe was a true and correct one. The scheme of the bill is to get away from the opinion of the assessing officers, and substitute for it proof by witnesses as to what the real value was. Of course this is simply to make a jury, in the last resort, or perhaps the masters in chancery, the assessors of the city taxes of Augusta. That is entirely impracticable. No city could be conducted upon that principle of raising revenue.

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174 S.E. 703 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1934)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.E. 845, 155 Ga. 184, 1923 Ga. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friedlander-bros-v-city-of-moultrie-ga-1923.