Overstreet v. Chatlos

135 So. 2d 870
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 21, 1961
DocketNo. 61-90
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 So. 2d 870 (Overstreet v. Chatlos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overstreet v. Chatlos, 135 So. 2d 870 (Fla. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The appellants, tax collector, tax assessor, and state comptroller, appeal from a final decree which, inter alia, ordered payment by the appellee of the sum of approximately $19,000 in addition to the sum of approximately $83,000 already paid as ad valorem taxes on a hotel and a motel. The decree found and adjudicated: (a) that there had been an overassessment for the year 1959; (b) that the appellee’s property was not assessed uniformly with comparable properties and the assessment was therefore arbitrary, excessive and discriminatory; (c) that the 1958 assessment of improvements on appellee’s property was proper; (d) that land assessments for the year 1959 were valid; (e) that personal property assessments were valid; and (f) that the cubic foot content of both hotel and motel had been miscalculated.

The appellee is the owner of a hotel located between State Road A-l-A and the Atlantic Ocean, near the southern boundary of Golden Beach, Florida. The ap-pellee also owns a motel immediately opposite the hotel, lying between State Road A-l-A and the Intércoastal Waterway. The two properties are connected by a tunnel. On the property comprising the motel, there is also a restaurant operated by Howard Johnson’s, Inc., under lease. The tax assessor assessed the appellee’s property for 1959 as follows:

Appellee sought review of these assessments before the Board of County Commissioners sitting as a board of equalization. His protest as to the assessment and valuations was denied and he instituted this [872]*872action. After instituting this action, the appellee paid to the tax collector a sum in excess of $83,000 which he admitted to be legally due and payable.

In effect, the chancellor’s decree approved the tax assessor’s valuation of the appellee’s land and personal property for the year 1959, and disapproved the assessor’s valuation of improvements on these properties, substituting therefor the assessor’s valuation for the year 1958. The chancellor then subtracted from the combined totals of the land assessment and the improvement assessments adjustments to-talling some $443,000, comprising a miscalculation of the cubic area of the hotel on the east side of State Road A-l-A and a miscalculation of the cubic area of approximately twenty buildings on the west side of State Road A-l-A. After subtracting the approximate sum of $443,000 from the sum total of the land valuation and the 1958 assessed valuation for improvements, adopted by the court, he then added to that total the personal property valuation for 1959 of $450,000 which he found to be a valid assessment. This resulted in a total valuation of land, buildings and personal property of the sum of $2,-562,504. The chancellor then applied against this figure the millage rate established by the Board of County Commissioners of Dade County for the year 1959, and computed a total tax on appellee’s properties amounting to the sum of $103,-140.80. He then decreed that the appellee owed an additional sum of $19,258.99 on his 1959 taxes.

Primarily the appellants complain that the chancellor assumed the duties of a tax assessor in making a determination of the correct assessments by applying to the assessor’s 1958 valuation the 1959 millage rate.

It is obvious that the jurisdiction and authority of the circuit court grow out of the constitutional provision contained in Article V, Sec. 6(3), F.S.A. as implemented by § 196101, Fla.Stat., F.S.A.

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534 P.2d 541 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1975)
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229 So. 2d 629 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1969)
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219 So. 2d 752 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1969)
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156 So. 2d 31 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
135 So. 2d 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overstreet-v-chatlos-fladistctapp-1961.