Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Board of Public Works

21 S.E.2d 143, 124 W. Va. 562, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 113
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1942
Docket9345
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 21 S.E.2d 143 (Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Board of Public Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Board of Public Works, 21 S.E.2d 143, 124 W. Va. 562, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 113 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:

The Norfolk and Western Railway Company appealed to the Circuit Court of McDowell County from the finding of the Board of Public Works fixing for the purposes of *563 taxation the value of its property located within the State of West Virginia for the tax year 1941 at $75,619,600.00, and that court, functioning as an administrative body, as well as a court of ieview, under Code, 11-6-12, “confirmed” the Board’s finding. This appeal was granted upon the application of the railway company, the errors assigned relating to tangible property located within the boundaries of municipalities and that situate outside those boundaries (Classes III and IV), intangible property (Class I) not being directly affected.

The position of the railway company is that the Board in arriving at the value fixed by it used the figures submitted by the State Tax Commissioner as required by Code, 11-6-2, and that in doing so it adopted as the sole basis used in arriving at the taxable value of the railway’s property, the method followed by the State Tax Commissioner in preparing his written report to the Board of Public Works, commonly referred to as a “work sheet”, and that in the preparation of the so-called work sheet, certain demonstrable mathematical mistakes had been made, the combined result of which was an overvaluation of its property to the extent of $6,735,081.00.

In the proceeding before the Circuit Court of McDowell County, to the petition of the railway company the Board of Public Works filed a verified answer in which it admits that it used in arriving at the value of petitioner’s property and that of other comparable railroads with property within this state, the method set forth in the petition, but denies emphatically that that method was the sole method considered and utilized by it in reaching its conclusions, and alleged affirmatively that it took under advisement the following pertinent matters:

(a) The data shown in the return filed by ■ petitioner.
(b) The history of the Norfolk and Western Railway Company and its property.
(c) Geographical position.
(d) The nature and character of the country through which the railroad passes.
*564 (e) The amount of coal, minerals and other commodities for transportation.
(f) Populous cities and rich territories through which the road extends.
(g) Present and future prospects of traffic.
(h) The length of line and connections.
(i) The cost of construction, less discount for depreciation.
(j) Physical condition of the road-bed, bridges, tracks and rights of way.
(k) The amount and condition of its rolling stock and equipment.
(l) The physical value of its property.
(m) The presence or absence of parallel competing lines.
(n) The value of the use of such property in the operation of its railroad.
(o) Financial condition.
(p) The gross and net earnings over a period of years.
(q) The stock and bond value over a period of years.
(r) Bonded indebtedness.
(s) The dividend producing power of the company.
(t) Present and prospective earning power.
(u) Capitalization of net earnings at 6% over a period of years.
(v) What prudent' men would give for the property as a permanent investment, with a view to present and future income.
(w) All other things which would tend to make it a profitable investment as an operating railroad.
(x) The work sheets furnished to the board by the tax commissioner.
(y) And all other data, statistics and information which is legally related to value.”

The Board, the members of which could not be required to testify concerning the method followed (see Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Weeks, 297 U. S. 135, 145, 56 S. Ct. 426, 80 L. Ed. 532), in its brief and avowal of testimony, which, together with a similar avowal by the railway company, *565 was, by agreement, substituted for evidence in the circuit court, states that in considering the system of calculation used by the State Tax Commissioner in arriving at the figures shown by his work sheet and the foregoing factors listed from “A” to “Y”, inclusive, it reached its collective judgment and that the striking numerical similarity of its conclusions with those of the State Tax Commissioner, exemplified by a comparison of the figures on his work sheet with those of the Board, was “merely because such offered a convenient approximation of the value arrived at independently by the members of the Board after carefully weighing what they considered to be all the relevant factors involved.” To state the matter plainly, there is a clear-cut issue of fact between the railway company and the Board of Public Works, the railway company being able to show a rather outstanding similarity between the findings of the Board of Public Works and the State Tax Commissioner’s work sheet, and four quite palpable errors by which those figures were arrived at on the work sheet; and the Board of Public Works denying emphatically that the method used by the State Tax Commissioner in reaching his conclusions was the sole method considered by it in arriving at the taxable value of the railway company’s property.

In order to demonstrate to a mathematical certainty the mechanical mistakes that were committed in compiling the Tax Commissioner’s work sheet, the railway company followed the method admittedly applied and the figures admittedly used in arriving at the Tax Commissioner’s result. Since there is no dispute concerning the method or concerning the figures used by the Tax Commissioner, we do not regard it as necessary to make more than a very general statement concerning either. The figures were based upon the railways company’s annual return and the method under which those figures were used involves, first, arriving at the value of the tangible property held by the railway company under its entire system, and second, allotting to the State of West Virginia for the purposes of taxation its proper proportion of that system valuation.

*566

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E.2d 143, 124 W. Va. 562, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-western-railway-co-v-board-of-public-works-wva-1942.