Josey Oil Co. v. Board of Commissioners

1924 OK 631, 231 P. 272, 107 Okla. 266, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 685
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 17, 1924
Docket15211
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1924 OK 631 (Josey Oil Co. v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Josey Oil Co. v. Board of Commissioners, 1924 OK 631, 231 P. 272, 107 Okla. 266, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 685 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

GORDON, J.

This appeal arises out of the action of the board of county commissioners of Payne comity, Okla.. in rejecting the petition of Josey Oil Company, which was a petition on account of an erroneous assessment, and in the petition it was claimed that taxes for -tike year 1920 had been erroneously assessed against certain materials, machinery, and equipment belonging to said company. The company set out in its petition that the materials, ! equipment, etc., erroneously assessed for taxation were used in the production of oil on its oil leases and that the gross production tax had been paid upon the oil from said leases. The claim was asserted under the gross production tax law that the property so mentioned was exempt from ad val-orem taxation. Upon the rejection of this petition by the board of county commissioners, petitioner gave notice of appeal to the district court for Payne county. Transcript of the proceeding was filed in the district court of that county, and the ease was tried upon said appeal. After hearing the evidence the trial court sustained the claim of the Josey Oil Company, and held that the tax was erroneously assessed as to all the property except certain houses upon the leases, constructed for the use of the employes of the company. The court held ¡'that such houses were not a part of the r scessary equipment of the oil well, and that as to such houses the ad valorem tax was valid. From this judgment of the trial court both parties gave notice of appeal. Thereafter Payne county through its county attorney filed a motion in the cause to set aside the judgment of the court upon the ground that the tax assessed against such property had not been paid, and the court allowed evidence to be introduced upon said motion showing such failure to pay the taxes, and upon proof that the tax had not been paid, the court set aside its former judgment and dismissed the appeal of the oil company. Motion for new trial was filed as to the original judgment and as to the judgment dismissing the appeal by the Josey Oil Company. Due exceptions were taken to the judgments and to the overruling of the motions for new trial, and the cause is now here for review on appeal.

Upon the trial no technical objections were raised as to the appeal, and the sole question before the trial court was whether tiie property involvéd was subject to the ad valorem tax. No motion has been made to dismiss the appeal here, and no cross-appeal has been prosecuted by defendant .in error. The tax in question was assessed by the assessor of Payne county for the year 1920.' The property was listed against an individual, R. A. Josey. This listing was done in the month of May, 1920. It is claimed that R. A. Josey knew nothing of such assessment until the month of May, 1921. A showing was then made that the property in question belonged to the Josey Oil Company. Tt was then listed by the assessor against ■Tosoy Oil Company.- This was after the board of equalization 'had met and adjourned. On September 6th, the Josey Oil Company filed its petition for correction of the assessment on the ground that the assessment was illegal and that the property was exempt. No reason appears to be given by the board of county commissioners for the rejection of this petition. The questions raised by this appeal are: First, .whether the trial court erred in holding taxable the employes’ houses on plaintiff’s oil lease;' and, second, whether the trial court erred in sustaining defendant's motion to set aside the judgment rendered on October 5, 1923.

Under the act of 1915. chap. 107, Session Laws of Oklahoma, 1915, subdivision A (which amended section 7464, Rev. Laws 1910), a gross production tax upon oil produced is provided, and this gross production tax is in lieu of any other taxes that might be levied and collected upon an ad valorem basis upon the equipment and machinery in and around any wells producing natural gas or petroleum or other mineral oil and used in actual operation of such, producing well from which a gross production tax is collected. It is clear that all of the property attempted to be. taxed as set out here, except the houses, consisted of equipment and machinery used, or to be used, in the production of oil upon the leases of the Josey Oil Company. As stated above, the sole question originating in the trial court was whether this property was subject to ad valorem taxation, and subsequently, upon motion, whether the payment of the tax during the pendency of the appeal was necessary to preserve the right of the complaining party. The parties, having fixed the issues, will not be allowed to change their theories now to interpose defenses to the methods of procedure which were not urged in the trial court. Thompson v. Hashbarger, 87 Okla., 267, 210 Pac. 922, and eases cited.

It is claimed by defendant jn error that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed because there was delay in filing (he transcript of the proceedings before the *268 county commissioners with the clerk of the district court; that the transcript fails to show 'that a supersedeas bond was filed; that the time for making and serving case-made as to the original judgment expired before such service, and therefore this appeal should be dismissed as to the original judgment. It appears that a supersedeas bond was filed with the county commissioners, but that this supersedeas bond was lost. A substituted bond was filed in the district court without the formal permission of the trial court, but no objection to the filing of such substituted bond was raised at the trial, and no objection was made as to the time of filing transcript. The record shows extensions of time to make and serve case-made so as to bring the case properly here. None of these questions have been raised except by the brief of defendant in error, and under the rule laid down in the cases above cited, they cannot now be considered by this court.

We therefore pass to the merits. The statute exempting this property from taxation is plain and unambiguous, and has been so frequently passed on by this court that further discussion of its terms is. we think, unnecessary. Suffice it to say that the tax upon the oil produced is in lieu of the ad valorem tax upon the equipment, materials, etc., used in its production, and unless plaintiff has in some manner waived the right of this exemption it should be sustained here.

It is claimed by defendant in error that plaintiff has lost its right to the benefit of this exemption from ad valorem taxation by reason of the fact that it has not paid the tax upon the property in question to the county treasurer in pursuance of section 9970. Comp. Stat. 1921. If this section applies and governs this proceeding, the plaintiff, by a failure to pay the tax, forfeited his right of appeal, and the fact that when the matter was on hearing before the trial court, plaintiff offered to pay this tax, is not sufficient to relieve it, because an ’ offer to pay came too late, and because an offer to pay is not a payment complying ■with the ¡Statute. Wie find two methods given in the statute for the correction of erroneous assessments and relief from ille-, gal assessment. One is by petition to the county commissioners, the other by petition to the county board of equalization. The first method is lai|;l down in sections 9673, 9674, Comp. Stat. 1921. By these sections, provision is made for the correction of erroneous assessments and for striking off the rolls property exempt from taxation prior to the time of payment of the tax.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 631, 231 P. 272, 107 Okla. 266, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/josey-oil-co-v-board-of-commissioners-okla-1924.