General Electric Credit Corp. v. Andreen

326 P.2d 731, 74 Nev. 199, 1958 Nev. LEXIS 114
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1958
DocketNo. 4032
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 326 P.2d 731 (General Electric Credit Corp. v. Andreen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Credit Corp. v. Andreen, 326 P.2d 731, 74 Nev. 199, 1958 Nev. LEXIS 114 (Neb. 1958).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, C. J.:

. The main question presented on this appeal is whether, under our statute requiring personal property to be assessed to the owner, an assessment of sundry articles of kitchen equipment were properly assessed to a purchaser in possession under a conditional sales contract retaining title in the vendor. The district court answered this question in the affirmative and our conclusion is that it was correct in so doing. The question is one of first impression in this state. Other questions raised are also disposed of.

The case went to the district court on an agreed statement of facts, from which the following appears. On [201]*201August 7, 1954, Harry Elster Co. entered into a conditional sale contract with Fred Trevillian and Sol Ger-shenhorn, doing business as Desert Spa, for the purchase of certain kitchen equipment, having an unpaid balance of $53,760, payable in monthly installments. On October 27, 1954, a similar contract for further equipment was entered into with an unpaid balance of $26,017.60, likewise payable in monthly installments. The contracts were assigned to General Electric Credit Corporation. The assessor of Clark County assessed the described equipment, together with other personal property, including gambling tables, chairs and cocktail stools to “Desert Spa: Tenants — Jack Rosen, Fred Trevillian, D. H. Caplow, Abe Toberoff, Fred Weichman, Sol Ger-shenhorn, Charles Marcus and Dr. Lenne.” The contracts provided that title was to remain in the vendor until all installments were paid, that the vendees were to pay all taxes, and that in the event of default the vendor might repossess the property, sue for the entire balance due, etc. Taxes for 1955 and 1956 being unpaid, the assessor seized the property at the Desert Spa, and offered the same for sale, piece by piece, until a sufficient sum had been bid by the defendant to pay the delinquent taxes, to wit, $6,125. The bidding was engaged in by one other bidder and the defendant, who paid the amount to the county assessor and received a certificate of sale. This occurred May 25, 1956. On the preceding day appellant learned that the property was to be sold at tax sale. Immediately following the sale and on the same date plaintiff commenced its action in claim and delivery, and the sheriff, pursuant thereto, seized that part of the property located on the Desert Spa premises, and held the same pending outcome of the action. At all times following the execution of the contracts the Desert Spa, a partnership, was in possession of the personal property covered thereby and, though the partnership was in default under the contracts, the plaintiff had never exercised its option to repossess the same.

Under such statement of facts, which contained sundry additional matters, both parties moved for summary [202]*202judgment. Plaintiff’s motion was denied and defendant’s motion granted.

Article X, section 1 of the state constitution, provides in part: “The legislature shall provide by law for a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation, and shall prescribe such regulations as shall secure a just valuation for taxation of all property, real, personal and possessory Certain exemptions are provided and no taxable property may be exempted except for the purposes stated. State v. Carson City Savings Bank, 17 Nev. 146, 30 P. 703.

The revenue act of 1953, Chapter 361 of NRS, provides, among other things that all property of every kind and nature whatsoever within this state shall be subject to taxation, with certain exceptions; and that “personal property” means .and includes all property of whatever kind or nature not included in the term “real estate” as that term is defined in the act.

The act requires the county assessor between July 1 and December 31 in each year to ascertain by diligent inquiry and examination all real and personal property in the county subject to taxation, and the names of the owners and to determine the cash value of such property and to “list and assess the same to the person, firm, corporation, association or company owning it.” NRS 361.260. If the name of an absent owner is known to the assessor, the property must be assessed in his or her name; if unknown to the assessor, “the property shall be assessed to ‘unknown owner,’ but no mistake heretofore or hereafter made in the name of the owner or the supposed owner of real property shall render the assessment or any sale of such property for taxes invalid.” NRS 361.265. He is also required to demand of each owner a statement of all the real estate “and personal property within the county owned or claimed by such persons.”

Section 12 provides: “When personal property is mortgaged or pledged it shall, for the purposes of taxation, be deemed the property of the person who has possession thereof.” NRS 361.245.

Appellant contends that not only does the statute clearly require the property to be assessed to the owner, [203]*203which normally means the person having the legal title, but that it emphasizes this requirement by requiring an assessment “to unknown owner” where the owner is unknown, thus precluding an assessment to the person in possession. He urges that this construction of the word “owner” is further strengthened by section 12 by permitting assessment to the “person in possession thereof” where the property is subject to a mortgage or pledge; that if the word “owner” was intended to include “the person in possession” in all cases there would have been no reason for the adoption of section 12; that under the rule of construction “expressio unius est exclusio alter-ius,” the property which could be assessed to the person in possession was limited to personal property subject to a mortgage or pledge.

In response to these general contentions, the respondent refers to numerous cases from California, Arizona, Missouri, Minnesota, Georgia, Nebraska, Iowa, Alabama, Oklahoma, Kansas, Virginia, Washington, New York, Texas, Arkansas, Illinois, Wisconsin, Vermont, Kentucky, Michigan and other states, Annotation 116 A.L.R. 325 under title “Who is liable for tax in case of conditional sale or option for purchase of personal property,” also statement in 27 A. & E. Ene. L., 2d Ed., 678.

Virtually all of these authorities hold that when a statute requires that property be assessed to the owner, it means the general and beneficial owner — the person whose interest is primarily one of possession and enjoyment in contemplation of an ultimate absolute ownership — and not the person who retains the legal title and does not contemplate the use or enjoyment of the property as such but holds his title primarily as the means of enforcement of the payment of the balance of the contract price.

In reply to this array of authorities, appellant has painstakingly analyzed them one by one and has arrived at the conclusion that in each case the statute definitely authorized an assessment to the person in charge or possession of the property, or that the decision fails to quote the statute in question, thus removing it as authority in the instant case, or that the statute lacked the [204]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
326 P.2d 731, 74 Nev. 199, 1958 Nev. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-credit-corp-v-andreen-nev-1958.