Garvey Grain, Inc. v. MacDonald

453 P.2d 59, 203 Kan. 1, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 8, 1969
Docket45,270
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 453 P.2d 59 (Garvey Grain, Inc. v. MacDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garvey Grain, Inc. v. MacDonald, 453 P.2d 59, 203 Kan. 1, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 369 (kan 1969).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fatzer, J.:

These three actions were filed pursuant to K. S. A. 79-2005 to recover taxes levied in 1964 upon grain elevators located in Sedgwick County and paid by the appellants under protest. The actions were ordered consolidated and trial was by the district court. Except for the names of the plaintiffs, the amounts of taxes involved, the date of payment, the bushel storage capacity, and various exhibits computing taxes based on the 1964 assessments sought to be recovered, the evidence was equally applicable to each plaintiff. The appeals are from the order of the district court rendering judgment against the taxpayers.

The parties stipulated that the decision of this court in one case will determine the decision in the other two cases, and since the points of law involved are identical, it is deemed unnecessary to summarize the evidence in each case, hence, the following pertains to the appellant, Sam P. Wallingford, Inc.

On December 21, 1964, the appellant paid 1964 taxes to the county treasurer of Sedgwick County, $28,351.10 of such taxes being paid under protest. The written protest contained citations of law, statutes and facts relied upon, and clearly stated it was made upon grounds that the 1964 taxes were the result of levies extended against valuations and assessments of the appellant’s property which were so unreasonable, excessive, arbitrary, oppressive, illegal and grossly discriminatory as to be void and constituted constructive fraud on the rights of the taxpayer in violation of Chapter 460, Laws of 1963, Section 1 of Article 11 of the Constitution of Kansas, and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The appellant timely commenced this action, and its amended petition incorporated the written protest and alleged that all conditions precedent to the bringing of the action had been performed; that the valuation of the taxpayer’s property had been fixed at more than the statutory mandate of 30 percent of its true value and at a greater percentage of its true value than the valuation of other comparable properties to which the same tax levies were applicable, and that the valuation and assessment of its property upon which [4]*4the 1964 taxes were levied was illegal and void for the reason that in determining the justifiable value in money of such property, as required by K. S. A. 79-501, the assessor ignored obvious facts and failed to give consideration to and apply the factors or combinations thereof prescribed by the Legislature in K. S. A. 79-503. The petition further alleged that the illegal and grossly discriminatory valuation placed upon the appellant’s property in 1964 was $843,000; that 30 percent of the justifiable value in money of such property was $500,000, and that the tax which would be due on the difference between such valuations was $28,351.10, for which recovery was sought.

As preliminary, it may be said this controversy revolves around the “Roberts Schedule” promulgated by the Director of Property Valuation for the assessment of bondable grain elevators located in the state. The schedule was prepared in 1960 by Francis R. Roberts, the field director of that department, but was not used in Sedgwick County until 1964. There was no change in the schedule from the time it was formulated until applied in 1964, and with minor exception not here material, it was used and strictly adhered to by the firm of Cole-Layer-Trumble, employed by the county assessor, to assess the appellant’s and other taxpayers’ property in 1964.

In formulating the schedule, Roberts wrote a number of suppliers of materials and builders of grain elevators and obtained costs of building elevators, and he devised the schedule on a cost less depreciation basis, and nothing else. Except for the cost of reproduction factor, the schedule did not provide for any adjustment with respect to the economic condition of the grain storage industry, such as obsolescence or functional depreciation, nor did it recognize or make provision for the consideration of any other pertinent factors set forth in 79-503, to determine justifiable value. It merely directed county assessors to determine justifiable value by bushel storage capacity times the scheduled cost, less one percent per annum depreciation according to the age of the elevator and did not permit depreciation below 40 percent of original cost. Moreover, as demonstrated by the provisions of the schedule, there was no way to determine the effect of average annual occupancy on fair market value although occupancy is a determining factor of revenue and is one of the more important factors that a prudent purchaser [5]*5would look at in determining whether he would buy an elevator. Likewise, there was no way to attribute valuation to location although location affects transit privileges and the Wichita elevators are at a disadvantage compared with those, for example, at Newton and Hutchinson. A prudent purchaser would take this location factor into consideration, since location affects freight rates and therefore affects profits.

A summary of the facts contained in the pleadings, the admissions of the parties, and pertinent evidence introduced by the appellants, which was uncontradicted except as hereafter noted, follows:

The Wallingford elevators are federally licensed and bonded elevators of a capacity of 12,585,000 bushels, located on 35 acres of land. There are approximately 8/1 million bushels of upright concrete storage and the balance is lean-to sheds. Battery F of the elevator was built in 1929, Battery H was constructed in 1949, and the last unit was built in 1958. Photographs showed cracking and breaking out of the concrete in the concrete tanks.

When Roberts devised the assessment schedule, the storage capacity of appellant’s elevators, as well as elevators of other operators similarly situated, was virtually 100 percent full. Those operators had experienced a number of good years during which capacity was quite full and taxing authorities in many counties had the assessment of their properties up “pretty high.” However, no one was paying attention to the Roberts schedule because it was not being used.

In 1962 or thereabouts, as a result of the change in the farm program from actually storing grain in elevators to the soil bank program, and considerations affecting the supply of world and domestic small grain needs, the United States Department of Agriculture began shipping grain stored in elevators to gulf and west coast ports, which resulted in a steady decline in grain storage occupancy. As a result of those governmental policies, the history of appellant’s average annual occupancy was as follows: 1962, 81.1 percent; 1963, 59.5 percent; 1964, 43 percent; 1965, 35.3 percent, and 1966, 20.38 percent. As indicated, occupancy has an important bearing on the fair market value of an elevator, and the appellant and other operators knew that income was not only on the decline, but they could see it would decline faster. In 1964, the grain storage industry realized it could no longer pay a luxury tax since the occu[6]*6pancy problem was common to all elevators, and the Roberts schedule made no provision for functional or economic obsolescence in that respect.

In November 1963, the Cole firm made a bushel capacity measurement of appellant’s elevators but no effort was made to determine values at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
453 P.2d 59, 203 Kan. 1, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garvey-grain-inc-v-macdonald-kan-1969.