Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Morton County

156 N.W. 226, 32 N.D. 627, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 88
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 156 N.W. 226 (Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Morton County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Morton County, 156 N.W. 226, 32 N.D. 627, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 88 (N.D. 1915).

Opinion

Goss, J.

This is in form an action to quiet title to three tracts of land included within the limits of the right of way of plaintiff company through said county. The object sought is to have declared void a tax levied in 1914 as for- property then and prior years omitted from taxation. Three different classes of sites have thus been taxed, via., an elevator site, a lumber-yard site, and an oil-tank station site. The lumber and oil companies interested have also filed briefs and appear by separate counsel. The case was tried upon stipulated facts. The judgment canceled the lien and the tax as to the elevator site, but upheld the tax and the lien thereof upon the lumber-yard and oil-station sites. Both plaintiff and defendant have appealed. As the tax was levied under direction of the State Tax Commission upon these and all similar-sites throughout the state, it champions by brief the cause of the cormty.

[635]*635Accepting the statements in the briefs and on argument as true, assessments aggregating $30,0,00,000 upon a vast amount of taxable property and the validity of the alleged tax thereon is decided by this precedent. This is a case testing the right to tax the sites for 1914 and five prior years of no less than 2,038 licensed elevators, over 1,000 lumber yards and their warehouse sites, and 260 oil-tank station sites upon the right of way of the railroad companies within this state. Decision as to past taxes upon these sites also decides their future taxability. The elevator site involved is the Occident elevator site at New Salem, occupied for the years 1911 to 1914, inclusive, by it as licensee from said railroad company. Against this site as taxable property of the Occident Elevator Company there has been extended as a real estate assessment as property omitted from taxation for said years and upon which assessment as a basis a tax has been levied of $190.73. The lumber yard in question is in New Salem. It is held under a similar license by A. E. Dietz, and has been occupied for the years 1908 to 1914, inclusive, and against which site likewise there has been extended a tax of $53.07, as for property omitted in prior years from taxation. The third is an oil-tank station site upon the company’s right of way at Hebron, held under license by the Standard Oil Company, and which it has occupied during 1913 and 1914, and against which for such occupancy there has been extended a tax of $46.31 as for property omitted from taxation. All of said written licenses or leases are in evidence. Eor the elevator site the lessee pays plaintiff company a stipulated annual rental of .$20, “together with all taxes and assessments levied against the premises during the term.” The lumber-yard rental is for “the sum of $15, payable annually in advance, together with all taxes and assessments that may be levied against said premises during the continuance of this lease.” The oil-tank “lease or license” stipulates for “an annual rental” of “10, annually in advance,” and the lessee is to pay all taxes, assessments, license fees or other charges that may be levied or assessed upon said improvements or against the lessor by reason .of the use of said premises by the lessee.” All said leases or licenses are terminable at will of the railroad company. Certain powers of superintendeney of all sites are retained in the plaintiff company, allowing it a certain control to obviate danger of injury and destruction by fire, with indemnity and other provisions, such as that the elevator shall be of at least a [636]*63640,000 bushel capacity and a public warehouse business “for public use without discrimination,” and “shall have sufficient and proper room to receive and store all grain when it is offered,” with the maximum charges stipulated. A right of election to purchase the elevator and appliances at a fair cash value is reserved in the company upon its electing to revoke the lease or license granted the elevator company. Under the stipulated, facts, during the years in question, the elevator was used “solely for the purpose of receiving and storing and shipping grain according to the custom and the usage of elevators, and in accordance with the laws of this state, as to all of which the court is asked to take judicial notice; that as a condition for operation said elevator it furnished a bond to the state and paid into the state treasury a license fee of $12 per annum for the privilege of operating.” “That in this state the chief industry is grain raising, and that the volume of grain raised for market is so large that has been necessary for this and other railroads to permit the construction and operation of receiving elevators and grain elevators on side tracks on their right of way, which of necessity are located at frequent intervals and adjacent to its tracks; that the great bulk of grain raised and marketed is shipped to Minneapolis, Duluth, and Superior; that a quick market and ample facilities for ready marketing, storage, and shipment are necessary, which is accomplished by the erection and operation of grain elevators located adjacent to railroad tracks; that since statehood, through legislative acts, they have borne the character of public warehouses, and statutes have been enacted and are in force authorizing individuals complying therewith to obtain sites upon railroad right of way for elevator warehouses by condemnation, if necessary.” “That plaintiff, without intending to segregate any portion of the land used and set apart for right of way to private individual use, but for the purpose of furnishing proper facilities for marketing and transportation of grain, made the revocable lease in question for the purpose of enabling said elevator company to operate as a public warehouseman, the said grain elevator to receive, store, and ship grain, according to the usage of grain elevators.” A similar stipulation as to the lumber yard and oil site is made, and to the effect that the land embraced within its limits was not set apart thereby for private use, but only to furnish proper facilities for the particular business for the convenience of it and the railroad company in the [637]*637conduct of their respective business. It was stipulated further “that the said elevator company was assessed by the proper taxing officers, and paid taxes on its elevator building and upon the grain therein which was taxable under the law for each and every year in question,” in addition to the license fee for the privilege of operating the elevator. As to the lunaber-yard and oil-tank sites it was stipulated “that the tract occupied under said lease or license was a part of plaintiff’s right of way, and was assessed by the state board of equalization for the years herein in question, and the taxes so levied and assessed were paid by it; that the oil company was assessed by local taxing officers for its oil tanks and oil and other property used on said site,” and that “the local taxing officers assessed and taxed said Dietz for all of his buildings and-lumber and other property situated upon the lumber-yard tract, and he paid all of said taxes so assessed for each of said years.” That such a tax against the oil company’s tanks and property was paid each year. The historical facts concerning the granting by the United States of the original right of way to plaintiff and the purposes for which the same was granted, including therein the reservation by the government of the right to use the same as a post and military road, are stipulated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 N.W. 226, 32 N.D. 627, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-pacific-railway-co-v-morton-county-nd-1915.