Grubb v. Johnson Oil Refining Co.

1947 OK 124, 179 P.2d 688, 198 Okla. 433, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 484
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 15, 1947
DocketNo. 32394
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1947 OK 124 (Grubb v. Johnson Oil Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grubb v. Johnson Oil Refining Co., 1947 OK 124, 179 P.2d 688, 198 Okla. 433, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 484 (Okla. 1947).

Opinion

OSBORN, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff, Johnson Oil Refining Company, against Mildred Grubb, county treasurer of Pawnee county, to recover taxes paid under protest. Judgment was for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.

Essential facts are undisputed. Plaintiff failed to file its 1944 list or return of' its personal property for taxation until after May 1, 1944. The county assessor of Pawnee county accepted the valuation of plaintiff’s property as shown in said list, but added to such valuation 10 per cent of the amount thereof as a penalty under the provisions of 68 O.S. 1941 §15,12, and plaintiff’s, taxes were computed upon such increased valuation. Plaintiff páid the taxes under protest and brought this action, under the provisions of 68 O.S. 1941 §15.50, for the recovery of the amount by which its taxes had been in-' creased by the imposition of the penalty. The trial court held that the imposition of the penalty by the county assessor was erroneous; that the penalty only applied and could be imposed in case the failure by the taxpayer to file a return made it necessary for the assessor to ascertain and estimate the value of the taxpayer’s property and list the same independently of any assistance from the taxpayer, and that the penalty did not apply where, as in the instant case, the list was filed and the valuations thereon accepted by the assessor. The court further held that if [434]*434the penalty provision of 68 O.S. 1941 §15.12 applied in cases where the taxpayer filed a list after May 1st which was accepted as to valuations by the assessor, the penalty provision was arbitrary and unreasonable, and deprived plaintiff of its property without due process in violation of the State and Federal Constitutions.

Defendant contends that the penalty provided in section 15.12 applies in all cases where the taxpayer fails to list his property with assessor on or before May 1st of the tax year, whether the property is thereafter listed by the taxpayer and the valuation shown on such list is approved by the assessor, or whether no list is at any time furnished by the taxpayer and the property is listed and valued by the assessor without any assistance from the taxpayer; that in either case the requirement of the statute that the penalty be imposed is mandatory, and that the assessor has no discretion in connection with the imposition thereof. We think this contention is correct, and that the trial court erred in refusing' to so hold.

Section 15.12, after providing that the county assessor or his deputies shall meet the taxpayers at various places throughout the County for the purpose of taking lists of personal property, and receiving homestead exemption applications, and that those taxpayers who fail to meet the assessor and list their property at such time may list their property with the assessor at the county seat on or before March 1st, and that all who fail to list their property on or before March 1st shall be delinquent and a penalty of $1 added to their tax assessments, provides as follows:

“If any personal property is not listed on or before May 1st of any year, when such property is assessed there shall be added as an additional mandatory penalty ten per centum (10%) of the value of such property. If the county assessor fails, neglects or refuses to add the penalty of one dollar ($1.00) and the ten per centum (10%) valuation penalty, as hereinbefore provided, he shall be liable on his official bond for the amount of said penalty.”

The fact that the assessor accepted the valuation placed upon its personal property by plaintiff, and did not change or increase the amount thereof, or that he did not, after March 1st, proceed to make an investigation and list the value of the property of plaintiff, as he was authorized to do by section 15.18, does not relieve plaintiff of the penalty imposed. The penalty is not imposed to reimburse the county or the assessor for extra work done by the assessor, as was formerly the case under the statute providing for the imposition of the $1 penalty (see Staley v. Board of County Commissioners, 72 Okla. 147, 179 P. 465), but was imposed for the purpose of enforcing the listing of property by the taxpayer.

Plaintiff asserts that under the provisions of section 15.18, the assessor, if personal property is not listed with him on or before March 1st of any year, is required to ascertain and estimate from the best information obtainable the amount and value of such property and to list and assess the same in the name of the owner, if such owner be known, and that before said assessment becomes final he must mail a copy of it to the owner, who has ten days thereafter to be heard on the valuations. He says that in view of the provisions of this section it is absurd to contend that the assessor, by simply failing to take such action as is provided therein and waiting until May 1st, may then penalize a taxpayer, who lists his property after that date, 10 per cent without notice to him.

We think the two sections are not, when properly construed, inconsistent, and that compliance by the assessor with the provisions of section 15.18 does not preclude him from imposing the penalty provided by section 15.12 in event he pursues the course outlined in section 15.18 and lists and values the property without assistance from the owner. In such case, if the owner does not file his list within the time required by section [435]*43515.12, the penalty prescribed by section 15.12 would apply, and would be imposed by the assessor. We think the assessor could, in his discretion, rely upon the promise of the taxpayer to file a list of his property, and refrain from making an independent investigation and listing of the property as provided by section 15.18. This, from the evidence, appears to have been the course he pursued in the instant case, but plaintiff did not file the list of its property until the 8th day of June, 1944. We think the course to be pursued by the assessor is left to his best judgment, and that the requirement contained in section 15.18 is not mandatory but directory.

Plaintiff further asserts that under the facts in the instant case the assessor did not assess the property of plaintiff, as the term “assess” is used in section 15.12, but merely received and accepted the rendition made and filed by the taxpayer. We think that this argument fails to differentiate between the listing and assessment of property. The listing of property, while a step in the proceeding for assessment, was not in itself an assessment. The assessment, as the term is used in the statute, is the fixing of the valuation of the property by the county assessor, either by approval of the valuation listed by the taxpayer, or by the raising or lowering of the valuation by the assessor under the authority given by section 15:16 of the statutes. It is a quasi-judicial act by the assessor. In re Assessment of Western Union Telegraph Co., 35 Okla. 626, 130 P. 565; Public Service Co. of Oklahoma v. Parkinson, 192 Okla. 607, 143 P. 2d 125. The property was assessed, as the term is used in section 15.12, when the valuations were approved by the county assessor and placed upon his assessment roll prior to delivering the same to the county equalization board, as provided in section 15.52. Texas-Empire Pipe Line Co. v. Tulsa County Excise Board, 191 Okla. 586, 131 P. 2d 745. The listing by plaintiff was not an assessment.

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Bluebook (online)
1947 OK 124, 179 P.2d 688, 198 Okla. 433, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grubb-v-johnson-oil-refining-co-okla-1947.