Mooring v. State Ex Rel. Braswell

91 So. 869, 207 Ala. 34, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 22, 1921
Docket3 Div. 548.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 91 So. 869 (Mooring v. State Ex Rel. Braswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mooring v. State Ex Rel. Braswell, 91 So. 869, 207 Ala. 34, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 319 (Ala. 1921).

Opinions

By direction of the court,

MeCLELLAN, .7.,

delivers the opinion:

This is a proceeding by petition for mandamus, instituted by the state of Alabama on the relation of W. C. Braswell, a real estate owner and taxpayer in this state, against the State Tax Commission and the individual officers constituting its personnel. The prayer of the petition for the writ of mandamus, consistent with the theory of the amended petition’s averments and design, is, in substance, that the State Tax Commission be required to exert its plenary supervisory power and authority over all subordinate (thereto) tax officers and tax agencies in this state to cause or to effect, through Such officers or agencies or otherwise, this action;

“To inquire into, judicially ascertain, and fix the true and just value of the real property in their respective counties in this state (whether heretofore inspected and valued by them for some other tax year or not) for taxation for the tax year commencing October 1, 1920, and as of October 1, 1920. * * * ”

It appears from the amended petition’s averments that since the valuation as of October 1, 1919, for that tax year (1920), commencing on that date, relator’s real property, as well as that of many thousands of other realty owners in this state, has greatly decreased in value; that such decreases in value had registered their effects on October 1, 1920, the date as of which the present tax year commences; that such decreases have resulted from causes other than those enumerated in section 84 (to be quoted) of the Revenue Act of 1919 (Gen. Acts, p. 311); and that, notwithstanding relator’s seasonable demand upon the State Tax Commission to exert its stated plenary supervisory power to cause all subjects of taxation to be assessed, as of October 1, 1920, “in exact proportion to the true and just value thereof” (Rev. Law 1919, § 138), the State Tax Commission has “failed or refused to make such' valuation or to require the same to be done.” It further-appears from the averments of the relator's petition, and Exhibit' A thereto, that on June 6, 1920, the State Tax Commission issued to the tax adjusters and boards of tax adjusters this “circular No. 102,” presently immaterial parts of it being omitted: 4

“To Tax Adjusters and Boards of Revenue or Courts of County Commissioners:
“Section 84 of the Revenue Act of 1919 provides that the value of property when assessed after inspection by the tax adjuster shall remain the same for two years. Under this provision generally valuations for 1921 will be the same as for 1920, and on account of this the question has arisen whether a taxpayer has the right to appeal in such cases to the commissioners’ court or board of revenue. This question was referred by the commission a few days ago to the Attorney General, and we are in receipt of an opinion from the Attorney General to the effect that the taxpayer has this right of appeal.
“However, when a case comes for trial before the commissioners’ court or board of revenue no question of valuation can be inquired into except such question as may have arisen by reason of those changes in the property itself which are specified in section 84. For instance, if a house has burned down or one has been added the court can inquire into and decide as to the value of the improvements destroyed or added, and make the proper adjustment on account of this change in the property. In no case can the court raise the general question of the value of the property. That value must, in all cases remain the same for 1921 as in 1920, excepting as explained above.
“In the trial of these cases before the commissioners’ court or board of revenue the adjuster should simply show that the 1921 valuation is the same as for 1920, and insist that the court has no legal authority to do anything more than carry out the law. If, in any case, the court undertakes to alter the value in the least, except as to changes in the property as explained, such case should be appealed to the circuit court, and no attempt should be made to offer evidence as to values other than values in the improvements destroyed or added.”

Section 84 of the Revenue Law of 1919, to which reference was made in the above-quoted circular No. 102, reads:

“Whenever any assessment of real property shall have been made by the county tax adjuster or board of tax adjusters, after personal inspection thereof, the value thus fixed shall be and remain the taxable value of such property for a period of two years dating from the first day of October preceding, and the county tax adjuster or board of tax adjusters shall not be required to again view, inspect, value and equalize the same during such two-year period, unless a revaluation and equalization shall be made by order and direction of the State Tax Oommission, in which event the valuation thus fixed shall be and remain the taxable value of such property until the next biennial period of assessment, or unless there *36 •shall be a change in the value of such real property, or the building', structures, or improvements thereon caused either by the destruction of or damage to said buildings, or by the erection or construction of new buildings, structures or improvements, or by the .removal of minerals from said lands or by the removal of turpentine from the timber on said lands, or by cutting the timber therefrom, in which event the assessment shall be increased or reduced to the extent only of the increase or reduction in the value of such real property by reason of the changes above named.”

As appears from the averments of the petition, the matter of valuation or assessment in question is that of the second year of the biennial period described in section 84, supra. The relator’s-theory — in many respects like that sanctioned by the State Tax Commission’s “circular No>. 102” (quoted before)— is that the provisions of section 84 contemplated but one assessment or valuation, upon inspection by adjusters, in two tax years, ex-cepit in the particular, limited circumstances therein stipulated; that valuations fixed for the first tax year of the biennial period were made, by the pure legislative mandate of section 84, to persist as and for the valuations of the second tax year of the biennial period, unless this effect of the mandate was obviated by the exceptional action or circumstances stipulated in section 84; and that, section 84 being so designed, having that operation, and being administered by the supervisory, controlling authority of the State Tax Commission, as illustrated by circular No. 102, consistent with this intent, section 84 is offensive to section 214 of the Constitution of 1901, and also to section 211 of the Constitution — either or both of which, it is contended for relator, preclude a valid enactment to effect or to enforce a legislative mandate projecting a valuation, ascertained and fixed for a preceding year, as and for the valuation for the succeeding tax year, without affording the taxpayer an opportunity to have an annually recurring judicial hearing and ascertainment of the value of his property for the purposes of taxation. These sections of the Constitution are as follows:

“214. The Legislature shall not have the power to levy in any one year a greater rate of taxation than sixty-five one hundredths of one per centum on the value of taxable property within this state.”
“211.

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Bluebook (online)
91 So. 869, 207 Ala. 34, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mooring-v-state-ex-rel-braswell-ala-1921.