In Re Western Union Telegraph Co.

1911 OK 306, 118 P. 376, 29 Okla. 483, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 331
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 26, 1911
Docket2010
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1911 OK 306 (In Re Western Union Telegraph 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
In Re Western Union Telegraph Co., 1911 OK 306, 118 P. 376, 29 Okla. 483, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 331 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The plaintiff in error has moved for the appointment of a referee to take evidence on a. trial de novo in this court in this proceeding. The Attorney General, in his oral argument, has conceded that a referee should be appointed, if all things have been done necessary to perfect this appeal. The motion to dismiss the appeal recites as follows;

“As shown by the record filed herein, no objection was presented to or decided by said board, and the only matters sought *484 to be reviewed here are said objections which were not presented or decided below.”

Plaintiff in error insists that this appeal presents for the consideration of this court the question as to whether the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company, subject to taxation in the state of Oklahoma for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1911, was of the value of $411,910.05, and no more, and that this question was presented to the Board of Equalization in the form of a return in detail, consisting of 334 pages, containing a detailed statement of the items of property in each of the counties, townships, cities, school districts, etc., and a summary or recapitulation of the same, which return was properly verified. That this return contains a history of the organization of the Western Union Telegraph Company, a statement of the amount of its capital stock, the amount paid up, the amount of its property upon which it should pay taxes in Oklahoma, the par value of its stock, the highest, lowest, and average selling prices thereof, the gross receipts of all sources for the year ending June 30, 1909, expense for repairs for the year ending June 30, 1909, the amount expended for improvements for the year ending June 30, 1909, and the interest on bonds for said year. That said return was made upon a form printed and sent out by the Auditor for and on behalf of the State Board of Equalization. That on the back of each of the pages are printed instructions, over the printed signature of the Auditor, and extracts from the laws under which the return is required to be made on the form provided by the Auditor. That said return presented to the board a complete statement of every material matter going to show the value of the property of the telegraph company in the state of Oklahoma, subject to taxation, and presented the contention of the plaintiff in error that its property, subject to taxation, was worth the sum of $411,910.05, and no more.

The notice of the intention of the plaintiff in error to appeal, filed with the Secretary of State, is as follows:

“You are further notified that the Western Union Telegraph Company insists that in the assessment of its property for the purpose of taxation by the State Board of Equalization for the *485 -fiscal year ending June 30, 1911, many errors were committed, to its prejudice and detriment, and to the increasing unlawfully of the burdens of taxation upon its property, among others, in the following particulars, to wit:
“First. That the State Board erroneously, without evidence, without justification or excuse, increased the value of the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company as returned by it to 200 per cent, of the amount of said return. The value so returned, and which is the fair and reasonable cash value of said property, being $411,410. The value at which same was fixed by said State Board being $1,235,730. That the State Board therefore assessed the property of the Western Union 'Telegraph Company for taxation in the state of Oklahoma for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1911, at the sum' of $823,820 above the actual fair cash value of said property subject to taxation in the state of Oklahoma for said fiscal year.
“Second. That the Western Union Telegraph Company returned said property to the Auditor of the state of Oklahoma, as required by the statutes and Constitution of this state, at its fair cash value; that said return gave in detail each item of property owned by’the Western Union Telegraph Company in the state of Oklahoma, and subject to taxation therein, and the fair cash value thereof, and the fair cash value of the aggregate thereof; that in increasing the value so returned by the Western Union Telegraph Company the said board did so arbitrarily, without evidence and without regard to the value of said property, and that the valuation so fixed is in excess of the true actual cash value thereof, as above stated, in the sum of $823,820.
“Third. The Western Union Telegraph Company says that the State Board of Equalization, in arriving at the value of its property subject to taxation in the state of Oklahoma for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1911, erroneously and unlawfully considered and used as a basis the value of the stocks and bonds •and securities of the Western Union Telegraph Company upon a mileage basis; that the same was neither a lawful nor a just basis, for the reason- that the stocks and bonds represent every element of value of the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company, including its federal franchise and its right to an interstate business; that the apportionment of the same, on ■mileage basis, places the miles of lines in the state of Oklahoma upon an equal footing with the lines in the older states with a better and larger established business, and in that way subjects *486 to taxation by the state of Oklahoma property located outsida-said state, and not subject to taxation therein.
“Fourth. That the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company, in other states than the state of Oklahoma, is much more valuable than it is in the state of Oklahoma, ,as to both wire mileage and pole mileage, basis; that the earnings per mile are much larger in other states than the state of Oklahoma, both gross and net, and the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company in other states is therefore of much greater value in proportion to the mileage thereof, both wire and pole, than it is in the state of Oklahoma, and that the State Board of Equalization, in apportioning the value of said property upon a mileage basis, fixed the.value of the property in the state of Oklahoma far in excess of its actual value.
“Fifth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 306, 118 P. 376, 29 Okla. 483, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-western-union-telegraph-co-okla-1911.