Miethke v. Pierce County

23 P.2d 405, 173 Wash. 381, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 643
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1933
DocketNo. 24457. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 23 P.2d 405 (Miethke v. Pierce County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miethke v. Pierce County, 23 P.2d 405, 173 Wash. 381, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 643 (Wash. 1933).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

Bespondents are nurserymen and are owners of a growing nursery stock in Pierce county. Pierce county assessed and levied a tax on their nursery stock as personal property, and this action was begun by respondents to recover money paid under *382 protest to the county for personal taxes which respondents claim were wrongfully assessed and levied hy the county upon certain shrubs, trees and plants cultivated and growing upon their land.

They allege in their complaint that they are the owners of a certain tract of land situated in Pierce county upon which, during the year 1931, they were growing a crop of deciduous and evergreen trees, which crop was being grown from seed, cuttings and grafts* and was not marketable in 1931, and will not become marketable for a period of from three to fifteen years; that, on March 15, 1932, they paid the personal property tax assessed by Pierce county under protest. They allege that the personal property on which the tax was levied had not been purchased either in or out of the state of Washington, but was being grown by them from seeds, cuttings and grafts, and that the statute does not authorize the county to assess and levy this tax on it because it is a growing crop. They also allege that Rem. Rev. Stat., § 11135, provides, in part, as follows:

“In assessing any tract or lot of real property, the value of the land, exclusive of improvements, shall be determined; also, the value of all improvements and structures thereon and the aggregate value of the property, including all structures and other improvements, excluding the value of crops growing on cultivated lands.”

That the crop of trees and shrubs so taxed was a crop growing on cultivated lands, and was not severed from but was attached to and a part of the real property, and that the tax was therefore assessed and levied in violation of the cited statute.

They further allege that the only growing crops which are assessed by Pierce county are the crops which are being grown by nurserymen; that, through *383 out Pierce comity and on lands adjoining that of respondents, there are grown by farmers similar deciduous and evergreen trees; annual and perennial plants, such as shrubs, vines, berries, bushes, bedding stock, flowers, vegetables and grapes; apple, pear, peach, prune, cherry and apricot trees, and grain such as wheat, oats, rye, barley and corn; that Pierce county has not assessed nor levied a tax on any of such growing crops excepting that owned by nurserymen, and until after such crops have been severed from the soil and harvested and in the possession of the owners on the 1st day of March following harvest.

That taxing as personal property the growing trees and shrubs in the possession of the nurserymen and not taxing the same or similar growing of trees and shrubs in the possession of others than nurserymen, is in violation of the constitution of Washington and the United States, and operates as fraud upon the rights of nurserymen; that the attempted classification is arbitrary and not uniform, and that the discrimination against growing crops of nurserymen is intentional, arbitrary and vicious in principle; that Pierce county has classified for purposes of taxation property owned by nurserymen, but has not included in such classification property of the same kind and in the same condition, used for the same purpose, that is owned by others than nurserymen; that the attempted classification was not based upon any inherent characteristics of the property taxed, but upon the incidents of its ownership; and that the county during the year 1931 did tax the property of respondents under a different rule because they were known as nurserymen, and that the county did levy a tax during 1931 on the property owned by nurserymen, but exempted the same kind of property owned by others who were not styled nurserymen.

*384 The property was assessed by the assessing officers of Pierce county under and by virtue of the provisions of Rem. Rev. Stat., § 11129, which reads:

“Whoever owns, or has in his possession or subject to his control, any goods, merchandise, grain or produce of any kind, or other personal property within this state, with authority to sell the same, which has been purchased either in or out of this state, with a view to being sold at an advanced price or profit, or which has been consigned to him from any place out of this state for the purpose of being sold at any place within the state, shall be held to be a merchant, and when he is by this act required to make out and to deliver to the assessor a statement of his other personal property, he shall state the value of such property pertaining to his business as a merchant. No consignee shall be required to list for taxation the value of any property the product of this state, nor the value of any property consigned to him from any other place for the sole purpose of being stored or forwarded, if he has no interest in such property nor any profit to be derived from its sale. The stock of nurserymen, growing or otherwise, shall be listed and assessed as merchandise.”

It will be observed that § 11135, referred to in the complaint of respondents, is a part of the same taxing statute.

The sole question submitted for our decision is whether or not the stocks of nurserymen, growing* or otherwise, shall be listed and assessed as merchandise under § 11129, supra; whether that section is constitutional,* and whether such property is assessable under § 11135, supra.

The trial judge, after hearing argument on the demurrer of appellant to the complaint, among other things said:

*385 “I am unable to distinguish between a ‘crop’ of seeds where two seasons are required to produce the seeds, and a ‘crop’ of holly trees or shrubs which may take several or many seasons; and the word ‘crop,’ it seems to me, must be taken in a general and not a restricted sense, and if as suggested above, it did take two years to get a crop of cabbage seed and seven years to grow a marketable holly tree, I am unable to determine why •one should come under the classification of ‘crop’ and not the other, although generally speaking, in a popular sense, the term is most frequently applied to products of the soil harvested annually. . . .

“Section 52 [§11135, supra] clearly exempts growing crops on cultivated lands. If nursery stock is a crop, then this statute exempts it, and if we hold it is not a crop but admit that it is a product of the soil suitable for trade or consumption, then we exempt one product of husbandry and tax the other, and there is no inherent difference in the products themselves as such. Each springs from the soil, each is the product of cultivation and human effort, looking toward maturity and harvest; the only difference being that grain commonly would be harvested within a season of a year, while nursery stock, depending upon its kind and character, might reach maturity or the time when it is severed from the soil, in one or many seasons. So that either section 25 [§ 11129, supra] is unconstitutional, or section 52 [§ 11135, supra] makes nursery stock exempt. In either event the tax levy is unlawful. Defendant’s demurrer, therefore, should be overruled. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
23 P.2d 405, 173 Wash. 381, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miethke-v-pierce-county-wash-1933.