Letcher County v. Kentucky River Coal Corp.

61 S.W.2d 891, 250 Ky. 7, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 20, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 S.W.2d 891 (Letcher County v. Kentucky River Coal Corp.) 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
Letcher County v. Kentucky River Coal Corp., 61 S.W.2d 891, 250 Ky. 7, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 620 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

OpiNion op the Court by

Judge Richardson

Affirming on original and reversing on cross-appeal.

*8 The Kentucky River Coal Corporation is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Virginia. On July 1, 1930, it was the owner in fee of land, and ■coal leases on other land, situated in Letcher county, Ky. In August, 1930, it filed with the county clerk of Letcher •county, as required by section 4039, Ky. Statutes, a descriptive list of its land and leases, in which it endeavored to fix the fair cash value of the same as of July 1, 1930, and gave the nearest resident as directed by the same section, and also the taxing zones in which the same was located. It was placed in the possession of the county tax commissioner. He undertook to assess its land and leases and enter the assessment in a book provided for that purpose according to the form prescribed by the state tax commission. The county tax commissioner claims that he did not understand the descriptive list; that the books provided him did not contain space for the entering of the assessment as it was contained in the descriptive list. The descriptive list filed by the corporation set out in detail the land owned, separately from the land leased, the operated, separately from the monoperated property.

A recapitulation of the descriptive list is as follows:

“2,432 acres, surface .$ 16,HO

“1,052 acres, timber... 3,156

“1,052 acres coal under fee lands . 9,990

“13,232 acres coal & mineral rights . 269,079

“Improvements on Real estate . 7,500

“7,787 acres, barren ... 7,787

“Total $313,622”

The board of supervisors of. Letcher county reviewed the assessment of the property of the corporation as returned to it by the county tax commissioner. A reca: -pitulation of the assesment by the county tax commissioner and the board of supervisors is as follows:

“By County Tax Commissioner By Board of Supervisors

“11,130 acres surface .... . ...$ 55,650 $ 55,650

“11,130 acres coal . .... 209,090 209,090

“Permanent improvements 0 13,080

“Timber . .... 31,580 31,580

“11,325 acres, coal rights 0 121,157

“11,325 acres, coal leases .... 121,157 0

*9 “11,130 acres, oil and gas . 11,130 0 ■

“Mine Equipment . 0 37,500

“Totals .$428,607 $468,057”'

It will he noted that the county tax commissioner as-well as the hoard of supervisors assessed against the corporation 11,130 acres of surface; the same number of acres of coal, coal rights, oil and gas. The descriptive' list contained mine equipment and its valuation, which were omitted by the county tax commissioner, hut its valuation was raised by the hoard from $7,500, the valuation in the descriptive list, to $37,500. The acreage of the surface owned by the corporation was increased from 2,430 to 11,130, by both the tax commissioner and the board of supervisors. The acreage in timber and coal rights, oil and gas was increased to 11,235. From the action of the county board of supervisors, the corporation appealed to the quarterly court, then to the circuit court. The county prosecutes this appeal, and a. cross-appeal has been granted the corporation.

Section 4056, Ky. Statutes, requires persons listing' their property with the county tax commissioner to state separately the tracts of land, the number of acres in each tract, the improvements thereon; the name of the nearest resident, and the value of each tract and the value of the improvements thereon. This is substantially the requirement of section 4039 which imposes, like duty on the nonresident owners of any real estate, mineral rights, or standing timber, or persons who do-not reside in the county in which it is'subject to taxation. The corporation in the making of its descriptive list correctly complied with the provisions of this section. The tax commissioner and the board of supervisors made up an assessment of their own, wholly disregarding the descriptive list.

The wisdom of section 4039 and 4056, and the propriety of the assessing authorities substantially complying therewith are clearly shown by the facts in this-case. For when the requirement of either section is disregarded, and the assessment as listed by the taxpayer is ignored, as has been done in this case, confusion is inevitable and the taxpayer thereby deprived of knowing' the correctness or incorrectness of his assessment.

Section 4128, Ky. Statutes, provides for the hearing* *10 •of the evidence, on an appeal, by the quarterly court and also the circuit court.

The Kentucky River Coal Corporation introduced •evidence showing the acreage of its coal land and leases, and the fair cash value thereof. There is no evidence in behalf of the county bearing on either of these questions. The tax commissioner was unable to explain how he arrived at either the acreage or the valuation. The board of supervisors resorted to the tax lists for previous years, but the member whose testimony was heard respecting the acreage and valuation and how the board ■arrived thereat, is equally as indefinite as that of the tax commissioner.

The Kentucky River Coal Corporation complains because its property was assessed by the assessing au'thorities in the. aggregate and not as directed by either section 4039 or 4056. "We have observed that the descriptive list and the requirement of the statute providing for it should be followed by the assessing authorities. However, the method of assessment is not as essential as it is that the property of the taxpayer be assessed at the price it will bring at a fair, voluntary sale. One •of the duties of the board of supervisors is to determine the property owned by the listing taxpayer, and its fair cash value, estimated at the price it will bring at a fair, voluntary sale (Ray v. Armstrong, 140 Ky. 800, 131 S. W. 1039), and not merely so to assess the taxpayers ■property as will enable the taxing units to levy and collect a large amount of taxes. Not only to escape such action of the assessing authorities is the right of appeal ■allowed in such cases, but to enable the taxpayer to •escape erroneous or improper assessment of his property, whether it is the result of a mistake or otherwise, and to have errors in the assessment for whatever cause corrected, and prevent its valuation in excess of the fair, cash value, estimated at the price it will bring at a fair,' voluntary sale.' It is shown by the evidence that the right of the corporation to have its property assessed at its fair cash value, estimated at the price it would bring at a fair voluntary sale, was wholly disregarded. Several years ago a map was made of Letcher county, showing the coal lands and leases in the different sections of the county. By mutual consent of the owners of such coal lands and leases, and the county, the coal area was, by a map, subdivided and classed and the taxing valuation *11 shown on the map.

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Related

John P. Gorman Coal Co.'s Receiver v. Perry County
78 S.W.2d 921 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1935)

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61 S.W.2d 891, 250 Ky. 7, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/letcher-county-v-kentucky-river-coal-corp-kyctapphigh-1933.