Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Co. v. Conemaugh Township

83 Pa. Super. 585, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 197
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1924
DocketAppeals, 157 and 158
StatusPublished

This text of 83 Pa. Super. 585 (Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Co. v. Conemaugh Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Co. v. Conemaugh Township, 83 Pa. Super. 585, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 197 (Pa. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

Gawthrop, J.,

This bill in equity was filed by the plaintiffs to restrain the defendants from collecting certain school taxes for the year 1922. The court below dismissed the bill.

*587 The Conemaugh School District is a district of the third class. The Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company is the owner of coal land, together with a mining plant, etc., situate in Conemaugh Township, Somerset County. The Hillman Coal & Coke Company owns all the capital stock of the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company and, at the time of the filing of the bill, was mining and removing the coal and was the owner of the personal property on the premises. The dispute arose over the assessment of the property of the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company for the triennial year 1922. The bill averred that the tax sought to be collected was not based on the last adjusted valuation and that all taxes lawfully due had been paid. The answer admitted the payment of the amount of tax stated in the bill, but averred that it was insufficient to pay the amount properly due. The commissioners of Somerset County sent their precept to the assessor of Conemaugh Township for the triennial assessment for the years 1922, 1923 and 1924, directing a return of the assessment to their office on the first day of December, 1921. The assessor did not make his return until January 20, 1922. In the return, the value of the property of the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company was fixed at $313,947. On January 17, 1922, the county commissioners adopted a resolution fixing the tax levy for county purposes for the year 1922. On January 20, 1922, they organized and sat as a board of revision and fixed the date for the hearing of appeals, giving notice to the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company that its property in Conemaugh Township for the year 1922 was valued at $313,947, and that an appeal would be held at the office of the county commissioners on February 25, 1922, and that appeals from valuations of minerals would be held at the same place on March 6, 7 and 8, 1922. On March '4,1922, the board of revision adopted a resolution reducing the valuation of the property as returned by the assessor in Conemaugh Township (except coal acreage) by fifteen per cent, in order to *588 equalize the same with the values put upon similar property in other townships. Pursuant to this resolution, the value of the property of the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company was reduced from $313,947 to $277,792. When that company appeared before the board of revision on the day fixed for appeals, it found that its assessment had been reduced to the latter figure. It insisted on a further reduction and the board of revision advised the representative of the company that upon the receipt of certain data and information supported by affidavits, said valuation would be further reduced. On March 22, 1922, the county commissioners wrote the school board of Conemaugh Township a letter advising them that the total for the adjusted value for Conemaugh Township for the year 1922 was $3,972,606, but that this figure was subject to some reduction on account of exhausted acreage, etc., and that the adjusted valuation was being prepared and should reach them by the end of the week. Between March 22d and April 1st, the school board received from the county commissioners a schedule of taxables and valuations, designated “Last Adjusted Valuation, Conemaugh Township, 1922,’’ wherein the total valuation was reduced to the sum of $3,939,200, and the valuation of the property of the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company was $277,792. This schedule purported to be a duplicate of the last adjusted valuation of all real estate, personal property and residents or inhabitants made taxable for county purposes in said school district, stating the name of each taxable and the valuation, description and kind of property. On April 13, 1922, the defendant school district levied its school tax for the school year, beginning the first Monday of July, 1922, upon the last adjusted valuation referred to and thereafter prepared its duplicate and delivered the same, together with a warrant for the collection of said school taxes unto P. P. Williamson, the tax collector of the township. The county commissioners prepared the duplicate for the collection of county *589 taxes and delivered it, together with their warrant, to the same collector on April 22, 1922, the valuations therein being the same as in the last adjusted valuation furnished to the school board. Between April 22,1922, and May 10,1922, clerks in the office of the county commissioners made changes in the valuations of the JennerQuemahoning Coal Company’s property as they . appeared upon the assessment book for Conemaugh Township. These changes were made pursuant to a resolution adopted by the board of revision on January 25, 1922, providing, inter alia: “All mineral valuations to be adjusted to conform to the schedules agreed upon by the board of revision, acting upon data collected by the county engineer’s office, credits to be allowed for exhausted acreage, out crop, fault, etc., upon sworn statements to be furnished by owners, the chief clerk to cause such adjustments to be made and reported to the various districts from time to time as the reports required are submitted.” Under this change in figures the total assessment of the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company was reduced from $277,792 to $252,110. The company appealed from this assessment to the court of common pleas. The appeal was heard on January 25, 1923. As stated by the court in that proceeding, it appears by the evidence produced by the County of Somerset, that the final adjustment of the taxes of the appellants was made prior to the 10th day of May, 1922, by the board of revision, and that the appeal was taken from that adjusted valuation, the same being indicated in the assessment books by figures in red ink inserted in place of the original assessments which were written in black ink. After the court concluded as a fact that the figures in red ink were the final adjustment of the county commissioners, sitting as a board of revision and appeal, the appellant offered no testimony in support of its appeal. Whereupon, on motion of counsel for the county, the appeal was'dismissed. On May 10,1922, the chief clerk for the county commissioners sent letters to the tax collector *590 and to the secretary of the defendant school district, notifying them that a change had been made in valuation of certain taxables in Conemaugh Township, including the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company. This letter stated the valuation of the property of the latter company to be $252,110. On July 26, 1922, the township tax collector gave notice to the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company that its school taxes for 1922 amounted to $3,333.50, based on the valuation of $277,792. The company paid the tax on a valuation of $252,110, the payment being made and received without prejudice. On May 8, 1923, the tax collector levied on the personal property of the Hillman Coal & Coke Company, one of defendants, situated on the premises of the Jenner-Quemahoning Coal Company and advertised the same for sale to satisfy the balance of the school taxes claimed to be due and unpaid by the latter company. Thereupon, this bill was filed to restrain the school district and its collector from collecting the additional sum alleged to be due.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

H. C. Frick Coke Co. v. Mount Pleasant Township
71 A. 930 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)
Hansell v. Downing
17 Pa. Super. 235 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Pa. Super. 585, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenner-quemahoning-coal-co-v-conemaugh-township-pasuperct-1924.