Humbird Lumber Co. v. Thompson

83 P. 941, 11 Idaho 614, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 93
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 83 P. 941 (Humbird Lumber Co. v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humbird Lumber Co. v. Thompson, 83 P. 941, 11 Idaho 614, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 93 (Idaho 1905).

Opinion

STOCKSLAGER, C. J.

— This is an action to enjoin the respondent, Robert C. Thompson, as assessor and tax collector of Kootenai county, from selling the lands of appellant to pay the taxes of appellant for the year 1903. Plaintiff alleges that it is a corporation created under the laws of the state of Washington, and authorized to do business in the state of Idaho; that plaintiff is the owner of large tracts of land in Kootenai county; that in the year 1903, Robert C. Thompson, as assessor of Kootenai county, assessed 'to the plaintiff the lands described in exhibit “A” and fixed the assessment and valuation thereon as follows: The lands described in that part of exhibit'“A,” entitled “Pack River District,” were assessed at $7 per acre, in “Priest River District” at $3 per acre, and in the “Hoodoo Yellow Pine District” at $2 per acre, and that they were extended on the assessment-roll of Kootenai county by said Thompson as such assessor. That said defendant Thompson, as such assessor, in assessing said lands, assessed said lands at much more than their cash value, and that said assessments as so made were and are far greater and higher [617]*617than the assessment by said Thompson of other lands in the same county of the same class, character and value, and are in excess of the fair value of said lands and are unequal as compared with the assessment of lands in the same locality and in other localities in the county of Kootenai of the same class, character and value, and are unequal and unjust, and that said assessments are not uniform as compared with the assessments of other lands; that the true value of the lands described in that part of exhibit “A” entitled “Pack River District,” and which were assessed at $7 per acre, is and was $3.50 per acre; that the true value of the lands in the “Priest River District” is and was $3 per acre; that the true value of the lands in the “Hoodoo Yellow Pine District” is and was $2 per acre, except the lands described as “cut and burnt lands,” the true value of which was and is $1 per acre.

It is then alleged that on or about the thirteenth day of July, 1903, said Humbird Lumber Company filed with the board of county commissioners for the county of Kootenai, sitting as a board of equalization, its application for a reduction of valuation of property, which application is annexed to this second amended complaint, marked exhibit “A”; that said application came on for hearing before said board of county commissioners on the thirteenth day of July, 1903, and witnesses were sworn and testified in support of said petition, and the hearing thereof was continued until the twentieth day of July, 1903, and on said day additional evidence, documentary and oral, was introduced in support of said petition, and the matter was taken under advisement by said board sitting as a board of equalization, until the twenty-seventh day of July, 1903; that on the twenty-seventh day of July, 1903, the said board sitting as a board of equalization made an order, entered upon the minutes of the court, granting a limited part of the relief sought by said Humbird Lumber Company in said proceedings. Copies of the minute entries and of the order made by said board are annexed to this amended complaint, marked exhibit “B.”

[618]*618The next allegation, being 8, sets ont that being dissatisfied with the action of the board in refusing to grant the reduction sought, it did on the second day of September, and within twenty days after the first publication of the proceedings of the board, file, and cause to be served its notice of appeal from said order of the board made on the twenty-seventh day of July, 1903, and on the second day of September, filed its undertaking on appeal in the sum of $300. That on the fifth day of October, 1903, Thomas H. Wilson, county attorney in behalf of defendant, Kootenai county, caused to be filed and served a notice to dismiss the appeal, and thereafter, on same date, he filed a notice of motion to dismiss the appeal; that thereafter and on the seventh day of October, 1903, said motion to dismiss the appeal was heard and taken under advisement. That on the twentieth day of October, 1903, the motion was denied; that on the third day of November, 1903, said appeal come on to be heard upon its merits, at which hearing witnesses were sworn and examined .and documentary evidence introduced in behalf of said Hum-bird Lumber Company, and after said Humbird Lumber Company had introduced its evidence in support of its claim, the county of Kootenai and said members of the board of county commissioners requested and obtained an extension of time in which to introduce evidence in opposition to the claim of said Humbird Lumber Company for a reduction of the assessed valuation of its said lands; that the proceedings came on, for hearing before the honorable judge of said district court on the twenty-ninth day of December, 1903, and defendants introduced evidence, both documentary and oral, and the matter was taken under advisement by said judge, and on the second day of January, 1904, the said district judge notified the attorney for the Humbird Lumber Company that the application of said Humbird Lumber Company for a reduction of the assessed valuation of the said lands would be granted to the extent that the lands which had been assessed at $7 per acre would be reduced to $3.15 per acre, and that the lands which had been assessed at $3 per acre would be reduced to $2 per acre, and that said judge, at the time he noti[619]*619fled said attorney of his decision, requested said attorney to prepare the necessary judgment or order to be signed, which instructions were complied with. That said judge thereafter delayed signing any order or judgment or findings in the premises to carry out his said decision, although requested so to do by the attorney for said Humbird Lumber Company, as appears by a letter written by said judge to the attorney for plaintiff, a copy of which is marked exhibit “C,” and attached to this, complaint.

The ninth allegation is that on the fourth day of February the judge of said court, upon application of the attorneys for Kootenai county, allowed said defendant to file and serve another motion to dismiss said appeal, which motion was argued, taken under advisement, and on the eighteenth day of March, 1904, sustained and the appeal dismissed. That subsequent to the dismissal of said appeal, the supreme court of Idaho had decided in a similar case that the right of appeal does not lie from an order made by the board of county commissioners sitting as a board of equalization. Plaintiff further avers that the said appeal of the plaintiff herein is still pending and undetermined in the supreme court of Idaho.

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Bluebook (online)
83 P. 941, 11 Idaho 614, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humbird-lumber-co-v-thompson-idaho-1905.