Johnson, Sheriff Pike Co. v. Fordson Coal Co.

281 S.W. 472, 213 Ky. 445, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 535
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 281 S.W. 472 (Johnson, Sheriff Pike Co. v. Fordson Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson, Sheriff Pike Co. v. Fordson Coal Co., 281 S.W. 472, 213 Ky. 445, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 535 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Clarke

Reversing.

•Section 7 of chapter 109 of the 1924 Acts empowers the State Tax Commission, acting as a state board of equalization, and for the purpose of equalizing the assessments of property among the counties and among the different classes of property and among individuals, companies, corporations and associations, to increase or decrease the aggregate assessed valuation of the property of any eounty.or taxing district or any class of property or any item in any class; or to increase dr decrease the assessed valuation of property of .any. individual, company, association, .copartnership or corporation. That section further provides that before making any such increase or decrease it must first give notice of not *447 less than five days to the county judge of the county and the party to be affected, of its intentionto make such increase or decrease and afford such party and the county judge an opportunity to be heard.

Section 8 provides for the certification of the final assessment in any event to the proper officers to secure collection of the taxes thereon; and provides for an appeal by any party from the action of the State Tax Commission in increasing or decreasing assessments to the Franklin circuit court and thence to the Court of Appeals.

Acting under the authority conferred by section 7 of the act, the State Tax Commission on June 3, 1924, gave appellee, Fordson Coal Company, notice of its intention to increase the assessment of its properties in Pike county, Kentucky, and set the hearing for June 16,. 1924. Appellee appeared, was heard and on August 8 the commission entered an order increasing its' assessment $690,-743.00 and certified same to the proper officers for collection of taxes due thereon. Appellee did not appeal from that order to the Franklin circuit court as provided in section 8 of the act but treated same as void and instituted this action in the Pike circuit court to enjoin the sheriff of the county from collecting the taxes due upon the increase in its assessment. The judgment appealed from grants it that relief.

To sustain that judgment it is argued for the appellee that sections 7 and 8 supra violate several sections of the state Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution; and that even if the act be valid the increase in appellee’s assessment is invalid because made after June 1. We shall discuss these several propositions in their inverse order.

Section 4 of the act provides in part: “When the State Tax Commission has completed the equalization of the assessment of the property in any county, it shall not later than June 1 certify to the auditor of public accounts the total assessed value of the property in such county and the amount of taxes due from such county.” The insistence for appellee is that this provision is mandatory and that therefore any change in an assessment made after June T, as was this one, is void. Upon the other hand the Commonwealth argues that this provision is directory merely and this we are sure is- the correct view. As stated in section 1062, vol. 3, Cooley on Taxation, “Statutes fixing the time for an assessment are gen *448 erally held to. be merely directory so as not to invalidate an assessment made after the prescribed time.” While there are a few cases holding otherwise the great weight of authority sustains this text, including two cases from this court. Anderson v. Mayfield, 93 Ky. 230, 19 S. W. 598; Hager v. Citizens’ National Bank, 127 Ky. 192, 105 S. W. 403. The former of these is precisely in point. It was there held that a like provision in another statute was not mandatory but directory merely and that an assessment made after the time prescribed therefor was not for that reason invalid.

Such provisions are not made for the benefit of the taxpayer but for the orderly administration of the public affairs; and there is no reason why he should be heard to complain and the state deprived of the taxes he ought to pay simply because of a delay in assessment which did not deprive him of the right to be heard or prejudice him in any way. See Cyc. 989 and 26 R. C. L. 355 and cases from many courts cited in the notes thereto.

‘It is not shown or claimed that appellee was prejudiced in any way by the delay here, and the assessment is not for that reason invalid.

That the act does not violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment seems too clear for argument. Provision is not only made for a hearing after notice before the commission of any proposed change in the assessment as equalized upon notice and after a hearing by the local assessing authorities, but an appeal is allowed to the circuit court and thence to this court from any such change.

We can find nothing in the act to sustain the charge that it attempts to empower the commission to make individual assessments upon specific taxpayers without equalizing them with other properties in the state. Just the reverse is true, for the power to increase or decrease assessments by the county or class or individually is conferred as stated to procure equalization and for no other purpose. Nor is there anything in this record to warrant the charge that the act as administered discriminates against appellee or any other taxpayer, or that inquiries thereunder are limited to properties within a class.

There is therefore no merit in the contention that the act by its terms or as administered violates the due process clause of the federal Constitution.

*449 Coming now to a consideration of the act in relation to the state Constitution, it is insisted that sections 7 and '8 of the former violate sections 2 and 59 of the latter, and in addition invade the right of local self-government which that instrument guarantees.

■Section 2 is the provision in the Bill of Bights that “Absolute and arbitrary power over the lives, liberty and property of free men exists nowhere in a republic, not even in the largest majority.”

The argument that the act is repugnant to this section of the Bill of Bights is rested wholly upon the assumption that the power conferred upon the Tax Commission over individual assessments may be exercised arbitrarily. That there is no basis for this assumption is, we think, sufficiently demonstrated from what has already been said with reference to the claim that it violates the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The purpose as stated in the act of conferring these powers upon the State Tax Commission is to provide a means of avoiding any inequalities or discriminations between taxpayers, whether considered individually, as a class or by the counties of their residence. In other words the act instead of violating section 2 of the Constitution is indeed but the latest and may we say the best legislative endeavor more effectually to enforce its provisions throughout the entire state without reference to individual or class distinctions or local governmental subdivisions.

Section 59 of the Constitution provides that the general assembly shall not pass local or special acts concerning many subjects, among which is “to regulate the jurisdiction, or the practice, or the circuits of the courts of justice.

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Bluebook (online)
281 S.W. 472, 213 Ky. 445, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-sheriff-pike-co-v-fordson-coal-co-kyctapphigh-1926.