G. R. McKinney Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission

150 So. 452
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 1933
DocketNo. 4704.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 So. 452 (G. R. McKinney Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. R. McKinney Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission, 150 So. 452 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff owned and operated a retail shoe store in the city of Shreveport during the year 1932, and for several years before. This suit was brought by it against the Louisiana tax commission, the tax collector, and tax assessor of Caddo parish, and the city marshal of the city of Shreveport, to reduce the amount of the 1932 assessment against its stock of merchandise and business fixtures, and to enjoin the collection of taxes against its property resulting from the alleged illegal increase in its assessment.

Plaintiff alleges that prior to April 1, 1932, it made a rendition of its taxable property for the year 1932 to the tax assessor of Cad-do parish, as follows:

(a) Stock of merchandise owned and located at its said store in Shreveport, Caddo Parish, Louisiana . $5,041.00
(b) ¡Store fixtures owned and located at its said store in Shreveport, Caddo Parish, Louisiana .... 757.00

And that in due course, and pursuant, to instructions from the Louisiana tax commission, the tax assessor increased the valuations on said property over that fixed by petitioner in its rendition in the following respects: The valuation of its stock of merchandise was raised to $12,000, and the valuation of its fixtures was raised to $2,700; that these values are in excess of the actual cash value of the property on January 1, 1932, to the extent of the increase in excess of the values fixed in petitioner’s rendition aforesaid ; that^ said property, as valued by the Louisiana tax commission, has been entered on the tax rolis of Caddo parish and of the city of Shreveport, for assessment and taxation purposes at the values fixed by the Louisiana tax commission, and, unless restrained, said tax collectors will .undertake to collect taxes on said property in accordance with said wrongful and erroneous assessment; that tender of the taxes due on said property on the basis of the valuation fixed by petitioner in its rendition has been made.

The relief prayed for is that the assessed value of said property be reduced to the amount at which it was valued in said rendition to the tax assessor.

Defendants denied that plaintiff, prior to April 1, 1932, made any rendition of its property for purposes of taxation, and that it did not make oath to such rendition, if any was made, as required by law; and therefore *453 plaintiff is estopped from contesting the correctness of the assessment made against it by the tax commission; said estoppel being specially pleaded. It is admitted that plaintiff’s property was assessed at $14,700, as alleged by it, and avers that said amount was the original amount at which, said property was assessed, but denies that that valuation is in' excess of the actual cash value of the property for the year 1932. Validity and correctness of the assessment is averred, and the tender asserted by plaintiff is admitted.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff pursuant to the prayer of its petition. Defendants appealed.

We are not convinced that plaintiff made a rendition of its property to the tax assessor, as claimed by it, prior to April 1, 1932, but we are convinced that, if it did so, the rendition was not sworn to as required by law. Briefs of both sides in the case state that the lower court was of this opinion, but declined to sustain defendant’s plea of es-toppel holding that evidence introduced by plaintiff without objection had the effect of enlarging the pleadings so as to convert the suit into one to cancel and annul an illegal increase in assessment of plaintiff’s property, and that the plea of estoppel was not applicable.

It appears that the tax assessor, finding no rendition by plaintiff in his office, on March 13, 1932, listed its property on a regular blank for assessing purposes, and fixed the valuation of the stock of shoes at $5,000, and the store fixtures at $750. It was his duty to do this under section 19 of Act No. 170' of 1898. This duty and power was not abridged by Act No. 78 of 1906. Thi% act constituted an assessment, so far as the tax assessor was concerned.

Plaintiff’s New York office made a mercantile report to the Louisiana tax commission in March, 1932, wherein the average value of its merchandise, according to three inventories taken in 1931, was $5,041, and the value of its fixtures was $757. This report was sworn to. It was sent by the commission to the assessor, and used by him as a guide for the valuations made by him. During the summer of 1932 a representative of the tax commission, as was his custom, came to Shreveport for the purpose of inspecting some or all of the mercantile establishments therein with the view of gaining information needful in determining proper valuations to be placed on their stock of merchandise, etc., for assessment and taxation purposes. Plaintiff’s manager is positive this representativa did not visit, its place of business nor inspect its records at all, but this agent did instruct the assessor to raise the value of plaintiff’s merchandise to $12,000 and the value of the store fixtures to $2,700. It was by this procedure that* the increase in plaintiff’s assessment was made. Why this was done, or from what source information was secured to base the increase upon, the record does not disclose. Plaintiff was given no notice of the big increase in its assessment, and was ignorant thereof until the roll was filed near the end of the year. The increase in its assessment was effected in a most arbitrary manner. There is no evidence in the record which to the least extent justifies the valuation of plaintiff’s property as fixed by the order of the agent of the Louisiana tax commission. This valuation is clear-ly and grossly in excess of the property’s actual cash value, according to the evidence in the case.

We agree with the lower court that this suit now partakes of the character of one to annul an increase in an assessment, illegally made, and that the estoppel provided by section 3 of Act No., 182 of 1906, pleaded by defendants, does not apply. This law states that, should the taxpayer not fill out, make oath tó and file with the assessor, a list of his property before April 1st, “he shall be estopped from contesting the correctness of the assessment list filed by the assessor.” Plaintiff is not complaining of the valuations of its property as fixed by the assessor, but stands squarely thereon. It has the right to do this. It does complain of the large increase in such values, arbitrarily arrived at, adopted as the basis for the fixing of its tax liability for the year 1932.

On this point defendants invoke, as, decisive of the question of estoppel, the holding in Millsaps v. Traylor, Sheriff, 128 La. 1069. 55 So. 677. The facts of that case differ somewhat from those in the present case. In that case the taypayer timely made his rendition with the assessor, but failed to observe the requirement that it be sworn to. The asses-' sor increased the values fixed by the plaintiff, taxpayer, over 100 per cent., without notice to him. It was of this increase in value that complaint was made. In the present case, the values contended for by plaintiff and those fixed by the assessor are practically the same; odd figures only being dropped by the former.

In Bertron, Griscom & Jenks v. City of New Orleans et al., 131 La. 73, 59 So. 19, it was held that the tax debtor, who made no rendition before April 1, was estopped to contest the assessment made by the local tax; assessor.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 So. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-r-mckinney-co-v-louisiana-tax-commission-lactapp-1933.