Midwest Hotel Co. v. State Board of Equalization

273 P. 696, 39 Wyo. 461, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 68
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1929
Docket1510
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 273 P. 696 (Midwest Hotel Co. v. State Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midwest Hotel Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 273 P. 696, 39 Wyo. 461, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 68 (Wyo. 1929).

Opinion

*464 RineR, Justice.

This ease is before the court on direct appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Natrona County, dismissing an appeal undertaken to be prosecuted by the Midwest Hotel Company, appellant, from a ruling made by the State Board of Equalization, relative to the valuation of appellant’s property for purposes of taxation.

It appears from the record that about June 22, 1927, the Board of County Commissioners of Natrona County, sitting as a Board of Equalization in tax matters, after hearing, had increased the valuation of certain property owned by appellant and listed for taxation in the city of Cas-per. Prom this action of the county board, Midwest Hotel Company appealed to the State Board of Equalization, and that body, after hearing held on July 26, 1927, at which evidence seems to have been taken and both the local board and appellant were represented by their counsel, entered its “judgment and order” of date August 9, 1927, materially reducing the valuation of appellant’s property, but not entirely to its satisfaction. Accordingly the Midwest Hotel Company sought to have this decision of the State Board of Equalization reviewed by the District Court on appeal. That court, as already indi- *465 eated, dismissed the appeal under the view that it was without jurisdiction to entertain such a proceeding.

The law which appellant invokes to sustain its position that the District Court was in error in making the order of dismissal complained of, is found in Section 1 of Chapter 56, Laws of 1923, which was an act relating to .the duties of the State Board of Equalization and to amend and re-enact Section 2810 of Chapter 173, W. C. S. 1920. That part of the section pertinent here reads as follows:

“Provided that any person, persons, firm or corporation may have the right of appeal from the decision of the Board to the District Court of the County wherein the property is situated.”

This clause follows language in the statute authorizing the State Board of Equalization, on proper notice to the parties interested, and upon due hearing had, to increase or decrease assessments of the taxpayers when their assessed property appears to have been overvalued or undervalued by the County Board- of Equalization. It will be observed that there is no method whatsoever provided by the law whereby such an appeal is to be taken from the action of the State Board of Equalization to the District Court. Neither the time within which the appellate proceeding is to be commenced, nor the manner of its consideration by the reviewing court, are prescribed. Shall the District Court correct only errors of law alleged to be committed by the State Board of Equalization, or shall it retry the matter in its entirety, taking evidence anew, framing new issues and considering matters not submitted to the tribunal whose action is attacked? Shall the District Court undertake to substitute its judgment on questions thus brought before it for review for that of the State Board of Equalization, or shall the court be limited to keeping the board’s action within the latter’s proper sphere, as defined by the constitution and laws *466 enacted pursuant thereto? Faced with these inquiries, the statute before us is wholly silent. In this connection it may be noted that we are not here considering a right of appeal given by the Wyoming constitution.

Problems of the sort suggested may not lightly be cast aside in so important a matter as taxation, the source of government revenue. An extended examination of the laws of many of the states of the Union, framed to deal with the subject now under consideration, establishes that even where the right of appeal to the courts from the action of a State Board of Equalization is granted a taxpayer — after the latter has had the benefit of the conclusions of a local assessor and a local equalization board— the remedy as so given is often highly circumscribed: The time allowed for appeal is short; the entire amount of the tax involved is required to be deposited in court; a review is permitted of only those matters which were presented to the board; frequently only errors of law may be examined; and the trial court’s decision on such an appeal is made final. In brief, the proceedings are quite summary in character. The governing principle back of such statutes undoubtedly is that there should be as little interference as possible with the due and prompt collection of taxes, consistent with a proper regard for the rights of the taxpayer under existing law.

In an endeavor to meet the uncertain and indefinite character of the statute now relied upon by appellant, it is suggested that where an appeal is expressly granted, the courts may look to other general statutes regulating appeals in analogous cases and give them such application as the particular case and language of the statutes may warrant, keeping in view always the intention of the legislature. A number of cases have been called to our attention and they have been examined with care. We do not find them in point here.

*467 The decision in Blair v. Coakley, 136 N. C. 405, 48 S. E. 804, perhaps approaches most closely the matter in hand, bnt the law there drawn in question was far more complete than the one at bar. In that case it appeared that an appeal had been given in all proceedings to lay out or alter public roads, but the statute, while granting the right of appeal, did not provide any machinery for perfecting and prosecuting the appeal, except the requirement that a bond should be given by the appellant to the appellee “as provided in other cases of appeal,” and that the Superior Court at term should hear the whole matter anew. Declaring that the court should proceed by analogy to the practice in other like cases, it was held that the rules regulating appeals from justices’ courts should be adopted as being more nearly analogous to those which should govern in the case before it. But the appellant having failed to obey those rules, the action of the court below, in dismissing the appeal, was affirmed.

To. supply omitted mat'erial in a statute is often one of the most delicate and difficult tasks which can fall to the lot of a court of last resort. It is quite true that courts should endeavor by every rule of construction to ascertain the meaning of, and give effect to each enactment of the legislature. It is equally axiomatic under our system of government that courts may not legislate. We think, therefore, that it is deducible both logically and from the current of authority that when a statute has been left by the lawmaking power unfinished and so indefinite and uncertain as to be incapable of enforcement, there remains nothing for the courts to do but to declare it void.

In Lewis’ Sutherland Statutory Construction (2nd Ed.), See. 86, the author remarks on the point we are now considering :

“But if, after exhausting every rule of construction, no sensible meaning can be given to the statute, or if it is *468 so incomplete that it cannot be carried into effect, it must be pronounced inoperative and void. ’ ’

The same principle has been declared in the case of State v. State Board of Canvassers, 159 Wis. 249, 150 N.

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

Related

Town of Pine Bluffs v. Eisele
2017 WY 117 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2017)
Parker v. State
119 So. 3d 987 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2013)
Wyatt L. Bear Cloud v. The State of Wyoming
2013 WY 18 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2013)
Union Pacific Resources Co. v. State
839 P.2d 356 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1992)
Snake River Venture v. Board of County Commissioners
616 P.2d 744 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1980)
Yeik v. Department of Revenue & Taxation
595 P.2d 965 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1979)
State ex rel. Miller v. Brown
167 Ohio St. (N.S.) 452 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1958)
In Re Shear
139 F. Supp. 217 (N.D. California, 1956)
Vinton v. Hoskins
147 P.2d 892 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1944)
Baker v. Department of Registration
3 P.2d 1082 (Utah Supreme Court, 1931)
Davidson Building Co. v. Mulock
235 N.W. 45 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)
Marsh v. Aljoe
282 P. 1055 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P. 696, 39 Wyo. 461, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midwest-hotel-co-v-state-board-of-equalization-wyo-1929.