Harbond, Inc. v. Anderson

134 So. 2d 816
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 22, 1961
Docket2160
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 134 So. 2d 816 (Harbond, Inc. v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harbond, Inc. v. Anderson, 134 So. 2d 816 (Fla. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

134 So.2d 816 (1961)

HARBOND, INC., Appellant,
v.
E. Van ANDERSON, as Tax Collector of Citrus County, Florida, and Ray E. Green, as Comptroller of the State of Florida, Appellees.

No. 2160.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

November 22, 1961.

Fisher, Sauls, Fisher, Anderson & Adcock, St. Petersburg, for appellant.

Scofield, Bradshaw & Roberts, Inverness, for appellees.

KANNER, Acting Chief Judge.

Harbond, Inc., a corporation owning approximately 17,000 acres of land in Citrus *817 County, Florida, filed suit under Chapter 196, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., against the tax collector of that county and the comptroller of the State of Florida, seeking to enjoin collection of 1959 taxes assessed against a large portion of those lands. Grounds advanced were that these lands had been assessed at more than their actual cash value, that for tax purposes their valuation had been set at a greater figure than had been placed on similar lands in Citrus County, and that the assessments were unreasonably excessive and unequal. The prayer was that the trial court determine the portion of the assessment which was unequal and the portion which was legal and the amount plaintiff legally should be required to pay and that, upon payment of the required sum, the court cancel those portions found by it to be illegal. The trial judge entered final decree, finding that plaintiff had failed to establish the allegations and dismissing the cause.

Plaintiff owns and operates a ranch and ranching properties upon the area in which are located the lands in question. The controversy began to crystallize when in 1959 plaintiff returned its property for taxation, listing values from $5 to $15 per acre upon respective parcels of land, whereupon the tax assessor refused to accept those valuations and instead assessed them on the 1959 tax roll at values ranging from $20 to $30 per acre. Plaintiff then appeared before the board of county commissioners sitting as an equalization board and protested. The board, refusing to reduce the assessments, approved them.

Plaintiff's Citrus County lands lie, in the main, along and between Crystal River on the south and the Withlacoochee River on the north, with U.S. Highway 19 bordering on the east and the Gulf of Mexico on the west. Not all those lands are involved in this controversy. For purposes of the trial, plaintiff in its complaint divided the property which is the subject of the dispute into five classifications.

Under the first category, designated as marsh lands, there are approximately 5,240 acres located along the Gulf of Mexico. Plaintiff's witness testified that these lands were assessed at $20 to $30 per acre in 1958 and 1959, that other similar lands were assessed at $10 to $15 per acre, and that they have an actual cash value of $5 per acre.

Classification number two includes approximately 3,635 acres of low "wet hammock lands," characterized as being usable for cattle grazing only in the winter months. Assessed at $20 per acre in 1958 and 1959, the lands were stated to have an actual cash value of not more than $10 per acre.

Under class three are placed "very rocky lands with scattering pines," consisting of some 3,920 acres. These were assessed at $20 per acre in 1958 and 1959, although plaintiff claims their actual cash value to be not more than $15 per acre.

Under class four were listed some 3180 acres of "pine and palmetto on rocky lands." They were assessed at $20 per acre in 1958 and 1959, although plaintiff claims their actual cash value is not more than $15 per acre.

Classified in the fifth category are around 40 acres upon which is located a 3-acre borrow pit and a road right of way. The 40-acre tract was assessed at $4,000 with plaintiff asserting the true cash value to be $37 per acre, not counting the borrow pit nor road right of way and citing similar parcels of like value as being assessed much lower.

As to the lands thus described, plaintiff, during trial, offered no testimony except that of its president. Introduced into evidence were aerial photographs of the United States Department of Agriculture and others taken by a commercial photographer at the behest of plaintiff's president, snapshots of portions of the lands which that witness himself had taken, United States Geological Survey Maps covering plaintiff's property, and portions of the 1959 tax rolls. *818 Plaintiff's witness, as president of the corporation, had for many years been connected with its management. His opinion as to the value of any lands in Citrus County was based mainly upon ownership by plaintiff corporation of the lands involved and his familiarity with them as its president, together with his experience as a cattleman and his experience in developing some 240 acres of land in Pinellas County, where he resides. Certain evidence was offered by plaintiff, purporting to show that other Citrus County lands said by that witness to be of greater value than those of plaintiff were assessed at a lower figure. Upon objection of defendant, that evidence was rejected by the court, and proffer of it was also declined.

Testimony of defendant, in the main, was that given by the tax assessor of Citrus County for the past 16 years, together with supporting testimony of two other witnesses, one a registered real estate broker and one a registered land surveyor. The tax assessor's testimony was based upon his familiarity for several decades with the lands involved through several hundred trips upon them for hunting, fishing, gathering oysters, and for purposes of tax assessment. He stated that he examines the public records regularly and often in order to ascertain purchase prices paid upon sales of land throughout the county and that, in placing the assessed 1959 valuation for plaintiff's lands, he had done so upon the basis of what in his judgment and opinion was the actual cash value of the property. Evidence was offered to demonstrate that all lands immediately adjacent to those of plaintiff were assessed at either the same or at an even higher value and that certain sales of lands in the vicinity of those of plaintiff were made for figures several times the assessed value of plaintiff's property.

In his final decree, the chancellor found that plaintiff corporation had failed to carry the requisite burden of proof by evidence sufficient to establish that the assessed value is in fact any greater than the actual cash value of the lands and found, further, that plaintiff failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that its lands are assessed at a higher value than similar lands. Stating that the only testimony with reference to the value of the subject lands was given by plaintiff's president, the court said that none was offered by plaintiff to show recent sales of land in the immediate vicinity of those of plaintiff and that its president stated he had made no effort to check these. The court then made reference to evidence of the tax assessor on behalf of defendant, showing that witness's long-standing familiarity with the property involved, assessment of all lands immediately adjoining those of plaintiff at the same or higher value, sales of parcels adjacent to or in the vicinity of plaintiff's lands for several times the assessed valuation of those lands, and his testimony that the actual value of plaintiff's property was at the figure assessed.

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Bluebook (online)
134 So. 2d 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbond-inc-v-anderson-fladistctapp-1961.