J. K. Lumber Co. v. Ash

176 P. 550, 104 Wash. 388, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 1262
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1918
DocketNo. 14713
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 176 P. 550 (J. K. Lumber Co. v. Ash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. K. Lumber Co. v. Ash, 176 P. 550, 104 Wash. 388, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 1262 (Wash. 1918).

Opinion

Mackintosh, J.

The respondent seeks to have set aside a sale of its personal property for delinquent taxes for the year 1916.

The company has been for some years the owner of logging lands on Hamilton creek, Skamania county, this state, together with a logging railroad and equipment of various kinds used in its logging operations. These operations were carried on by the respondent under various names, used more or less interchangeably, viz; Hamilton Creek Timber Company; Kribs Timber Company (Kribs being president of respondent) ; J. K. Kribs and J. K. Lumber Company. The principal office of the company was located in Portland, Oregon. The use of the name Hamilton Creek Timber Company resulted from a transaction whereby the Hamilton Creek Timber Company, by one Dodge, its virtual owner, some years before passed into the control of respondent. This transaction was never, evidenced by any public record; that is, no real or chattel mortgage, or bill of sale, or conditional sale contract, or any other instrument evidencing the transaction, was ever filed with any officer of Skamania county. The property of the respondent for the years 1915 and 1916 was carried on the tax rolls in the name of the Hamilton Creek Timber Company, the personal property being described as follows:

“Donkey and logging engines, pile drivers, hoisting engines, and all railroad equipment, etc., belonging to and under the control of Hamilton Creek Timber Company.”

On March 1, 1917, the personal property taxes for the years 1915 and 1916 had not been paid, and a suit was pending wherein the respondent was endeavoring to have the 1915 taxes reduced. The assessor of Ska-mania county, before making up the tax list for 1916, had visited Mr. Kribs in Portland and talked with him [390]*390in regard to respondent’s personal property. The respondent’s real property taxes for the year 1916 had been paid by a Mr. Franks, who was a representative of the bondholders of respondent. On March 1, 1917, the treasurer of Skamania county handed to the sheriff of that county a notice to distrain for the taxes of 1915 and 1916. After receiving the notice, the sheriff sent to Mr. Kribs in Portland a delinquent personal tax notice in the form of the usual post card, and a deputy sheriff also called up Mr. Franks on the long distance telephone at Portland and informed him that personal property taxes for the years 1915 and 1916 were due and that the property would be sold for these taxes. Shortly after these notices had been given, attorneys representing the respondent came to Ska-mania county and settled the suit involving the 1915 personal property taxes. There is a dispute in the testimony as to whether at that time these attorneys entered into any discussion in regard to the personal property taxes for 1916. These latter taxes remaining unpaid, the sheriff issued a notice of distraint, a copy of which was mailed to the Hamilton Creek Timber Company at Hamilton creek, and a deputy sheriff visited Hamilton creek and examined the property. The sheriff then issued a notice of sale in accordance with law, which notice described the property as it was described on the tax rolls. This notice was posted in three public places, one at the courthouse, one at the post office, and one at the town hall, and a notice of distraint was posted along with this notice, and the two kinds of notice were posted at Hamilton creek, where some of the respondent’s personal property was located. The sheriff testified that a copy of both these "notices was mailed to Mr. Franks. The notice of sale provided that, at 10 o’clock on the forenoon of April 28,1917, the sheriff would sell, at the courthouse [391]*391of Skamania county, personal property of the Hamilton Creek Timber Company for delinquent personal property taxes. It was between the time of the posting of these notices and the sale that the taxes of 1915 were paid, as we have already noticed. The property was offered for sale in conformity with the notice, and was purchased for the delinquent taxes for the year 1916 by the appellant, he being the sole bidder.

The validity of this sale is attacked on several grounds: First, that the assessment was void for the reason that the property was not, at the time of the assessment, owned by the Hamilton Creek Timber Company, but was owned by the respondent. The answer to this is that the respondent had paid real and personal property taxes for the year 1915 and real property taxes for the year 1916 on its property so assessed, and had received notice of the delinquency of the personal property taxes for 1916, and therefore knew that it was assessed in the name of the Hamilton Creek Timber Company.

“If the property is intended to be assessed in the name of the right owner, the assessment will not be vitiated by mistake if he is not misled.” 37 Cyc. 1005.

Second: It is objected that the assessment and sale were void because they embraced real property. The sheriff’s sale did not describe, nor attempt to describe, any real property, and the assessor testified that he did not assess any real property, but that the railroad referred to in the assessment and sale was the railroad situated upon leased land, which was personal property, and this was what appellant bought at the sale, and is all that he claims to have received.

Third: The respondent claims that no lawful distraint of the property was made as provided in ch. 137, Laws of 1915, p. 370 (Rem. Code, § 9223a) , its claim being that the sheriff, in order to distrain, must [392]*392seize the property and take it into his actual, physical possession. In view of the fact that the property consisted of a railroad some miles in length, locomotives situated in different places, cars, cable and equipment at different places, we do not think the sheriff would necessarily have to do more than was done in this case in order to distrain. The argument advanced by the respondent, that the sheriff, in order to distrain, must take the personal property into his actual, physical possession, is stated as follows:

“When tangible property is actually seized, the owner has notice of it, for he is bound in law to keep in touch with his property; and he is therefore advised of the distraint when actual seizure is made. In no other way is he advised of such distraint under this statute with respect to tangible property; for, so far as that kind of property is concerned, the law provides no kind of notice of the distraint, but only a notice of the sale so as to insure the property bringing a fair price.”

The answer to this is that, in the first place, it was physically impossible to take actual, physical possession of the personal property assessed, and if the purpose of such taking is merely to give the owner notice, in this case it had actual notice, which should have been a great deal more effective than the notice which would have been imputed to it from the mere fact that the sheriff had gone up into the woods and taken possession of its property. The respondent also argues that, if the property was of such a character or so situated that an actual, manual seizure of it could not be made, there could not be any distraint. We cannot subscribe to this argument, for the reason that it is a conclusion which leads to the absurd result that taxes could not be collected on personal property which is so situated or of such character that the [393]*393sheriff cannot take it into his actual, physical possession. The statute does not provide that he must take the personal property into his physical possession, and.

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Bluebook (online)
176 P. 550, 104 Wash. 388, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 1262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-k-lumber-co-v-ash-wash-1918.