Ohio Farmers Insurance v. Hard

59 Ohio St. (N.S.) 248
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Ohio St. (N.S.) 248 (Ohio Farmers Insurance v. Hard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Farmers Insurance v. Hard, 59 Ohio St. (N.S.) 248 (Ohio 1898).

Opinion

Bradbury, J.

The questions to be determined arise on the pleadings. The plaintiff in error was plaintiff below and interposed in the court of common pleas a demurrer to the answer to the amended petition. The court of common pleas sustained the demurrer on the ground that the answer contained no defense to the action, and rendered a judgment perpetually restraining the treasurer from collecting the taxes complained of. This judgment the circuit court reversed, and thereupon the cause was brought into this court to reverse the judgment of the circuit court and to reinstate that of the court of common pleas.

The first question that confronts us relates to the particular action of the county auditor of which complaint is made. Was it such as the law authorized or not ? To determine this it is necessary to learn what his action was. Did he add to the returns made by the plaintiff in error certain property omitted from those returns, or, being satisfied that all of its taxable property had been returned, but at too low a valuation, did he simply increase that valuation ? Or did he both add omitted property and also increase the valuation of that which had been returned, and when did he act? The amended petition discloses that the county auditor on the ninth day of April, 1892, added to the returns made by plaintiff in error for the years, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889,1890 and 1891, including a penalty of fifty per cent., the following amounts :

For the year 1886, $938,972.00; for the year 1887, $1,005,111.00; for the year 1888, $1,136,866.00; for the year 1889, $1,151,779.00; for the year 1890, $1,235,468.00; for the year 1891, $524,318.00; and that the taxes resulting from these additions [250]*250aggregated $60,490.04. The validity of the greater part of this addition depends upon the power or jurisdiction of the county auditor to proceed under section 2781, Revised Statutes. The specific acts of the county auditor upon which these additions rest, do not clearly appear in the record. The amended petition, however, states in respect to this matter as follows :

“The plaintiff further says that the real estate with the improvements thereon and all the moneys, credits, and movable propertj7- of. this plaintiff added thereto were duly listed for taxation as required by section 2744 of the Revised Statutes, and the return thereof made to the auditor of the county for the years 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889, 1890, and 1891, and was in said year 1886, duly valued for ^taxation at $880,864.00, and for the year 1887 said property, moneys, and credits were valued for taxation at $930,861.00, and for the year 1888 at $932,186.67, and for the year 1889 at $1,010,171.08, and for the year 1890 at $1,066,444.92, and for the year 1891 at $1,118,198.30.

The said valuations so fixed for said respective years was the fair and full valuation of said property; and taxes for each of said years were duly assessed thereon for state, county, township, and school purposes, and which the plaintiff has fully paid for each and all of said years. ”

These averments clearly state two things: first, that the plaintiff in error returned to the auditor for the years named all its property; and, second, that it fixed upon such property a full and fair valuation. By reference to tb e answer to the amend ed petition the following paragraph is found:

‘ iAnd said defendant says, that the valuations fixed and returned by said plaintiff for said respec[251]*251tive years were not fair and full valuations of said property for the reason that all the credits owned and held by said plaintiff were returnable at their full face value and in like manner all money held by said plaintiff were returnable for the full amount so held, and this defendant says that said plaintiff did not return to exceed 50 to 66 per centum of its credits, moneys, and investments in stock and bonds; that under the law it was required to list all such personal property as above mentioned at its full 100 per centum valuation. ”

The answer contains no other matter that bears materially on this question. We think a fair and reasonable construction of the amended petition and answer to it shows that the plaintiff in error had in fact returned to the county auditor for taxation all its property, but that in the opinion of that officer it was valued too low and that the addition he made to the returns of piaintiff in error for the years mentioned simply increased that valuation, without bringing any other property whatever on the tax list.

Plaintiff in error contends that the only authority granted to county auditors to correct tax returns made by corporations of its class is found in section 2744, Revised Statutes. That section in as far as concerns the question before us reads as follows:

“The president, secretary, and principal accounting officer of every * * * insurance company, telegraph company, or other joint stock company, except banking or other corporations whose taxation is specifically provided for * * * shall list for taxation, verified by the oath of the person so listing, all the personal property, which shall be held to include all such real estate as is necessary [252]*252to the daily operations of the company, moneys and credits of such company or corporation within the state, at the actual value in money, in manner following: In all cases return shall be made to the several auditors of the respective counties where such property made be situated. * * * If the county auditor to whom returns are made is of the opinion that false or incorrect valuations have been made, or that the property of the corporation or association has not been listed at its full value, or that it has not been listed in the location where it properly belongs, or in cases where no return has been made to the county auditor, he is hereby required to proceed to have the same valued and assessed; provided, that nothing in this section shall be so construed as to tax any stock or interest in any joint stock company held by the state.”

The plaintiff in error is an insurance company, created under the laws of this state, and therefore, falls within the class required to make its tax returns un'der the above section (2744). That section clothes a county auditor with general power to correct among other matters any undervaluation of property found by him in returns for taxation made by such corporations under its provisions. The section does not prescribe any period of time within which the correction must be made, but doubtless the authority of a county auditor for that purpose continues during the current year, but as that section contains no language extending its operation beyond the current year, his authority to act under it should be confined to the taxes of the current year. Because of this authority vested in a county auditor under section 2744, supra, defendants in error contend that even [253]*253if it should he conceded that the county auditor in case under consideration has no jurisdiction over plaintiff in error under section 2781, Revised Statutes, nevertheless, as he in this instance had before him and passed upon, among earlier returns, the return for the current year (i. e., the year during which his action was had) and increased the valuation of the plaintiff in error’s property for that year, and as the answer set forth among other matters this action of the auditor, it disclosed a valid defense to this extent, and the demurrer to it should have been overruled. As to this claim, it should be said that the action of the auditor was had on-April 9, 1892.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Ohio St. (N.S.) 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-farmers-insurance-v-hard-ohio-1898.