Perry County v. Kentucky River Coal Corp.

118 S.W.2d 550, 274 Ky. 235, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 17, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 550 (Perry County v. Kentucky River Coal Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry County v. Kentucky River Coal Corp., 118 S.W.2d 550, 274 Ky. 235, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 254 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellee, Kentucky River Coal Corporation, has for a considerable time been the owner of a large acreage of coal bearing land in eastern Kentucky, the larger portion of which (and possibly all) lies in Perry and Knott counties, which adjoin. Appellee does not appear to be an operating company, but leases its property to others for mining purposes on a royalty basis, with a guaranteed minimum royalty. As of the date of July 1, 1935, it made and certified to a schedule wherein it listed its taxable properties located in Perry county the total value of which it fixed at $731,682.00, and the county tax commissioner approved and reported that valuation. Later the Board of Supervisors for Perry county made a tentative raise in the assessment to the aggregate amount of $912,930.00. It gave notice as required by law to appellee of such tentative raise and it appeared in accordance therewith and presented arguments, reasons — and possibly testimony- — against the raise; but the board overruled its objections and made its raise permanent. Whereupon appellee filed with the State Tax Commission — in pursuance of what it supposed to be its proper procedure for relief under sections 4114Í-16 and 4114Í-18 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes — a statement in which it set out its grievances and objections, as well as errors in the assessment of its property made by the county board of supervisors, and which procedure it designated as an appeal from the county board of supervisors’ certification to the state tax commission. It obtained process from the latter agency for Perry county and, perhaps, the members of its fiscal court, who appeared before the state tax commission at the date designated therein and objected in every manner known to the law-to the jurisdiction of the commission in the premises and to the procedure adopted. As a part of its practice it filed a special demurrer to the *237 jurisdiction of the commission as an appellate tribunal for the investigation of such matters. It also moved to strike certain portions of the statement wherein jurisdiction was attempted to be asserted and, finally, it filed a general demurrer to the statement — all of which were overruled by the state tax commission and a trial of the alleged appeal was ordered for a fixed day.

On that day evidence was heard by the board and it later rendered an opinion reducing, the total assessment of appellee’s property for the year mentioned to the sum of $873,030.00. From that and all of the other rulings made by the state tax commission Perry county appealed — in the manner provided *by section 4114Í-18, supra, of our statutes — to "the Franklin circuit court at Frankfort, Kentucky. In that court it renewed its objections to the procedure employed by appellee (to which we shall hereafter refer as the tax payer), by filing the same motions, demurrers, etc., as it did before the state tax commission during the hearing before it; but the court overruled all of them and assumed jurisdiction. Whereupon appellee (tax payer) filed its pleading which it termed an answer, counterclaim and cross appeal. For cross relief it made the same contention that it made before the state tax commission, i. e., that the raise made by the Perry county board of supervisors was excessive, unauthorized, illegal and void, and it asked that the final certification of the value of its property for the year indicated be fixed at the schedule rate made by it to the county tax commissioner and which that officer approved. The issues were made by following taken steps and a denovo trial was had in that court, when it approved (or affirmed) the certification made by the state tax commission, and it is from that judgment that Perry county prosecutes this appeal. Since the filing of the appeal in this court the tax payer has obtained a cross-appeal — each party insisting by their respective counsel upon the same contentions made by them in the inferior tribunals through which the proceeding passed.

The section of the statute supra (4114Í-18) under which the controversy was taken to Franklin circuit court prescribes that in a proper case — to which that and related sections are applicable — the state tax commission after it shall have equalized the assessment involved “shall certify its action to the county court, to *238 gether with a copy of said certification to the county court clerk, to be laid before the fiscal court of the county,” etc.

It is then provided that the fiscal court “may direct that the action of the state tax commission be submitted to the courts for review and correction.” If it so concludes' it shall pass a resolution to that effect and a copy of it shall be forwarded to the state tax commission within ten days after the certification from the state tax commission “has been placed in the hands of the county clerk.” Within the same time the county attorney of the county may prepare a statement “showing in detail wherein the action of the state tax commission is unfair or unjust to the county, and file same in the office of the circuit court clerk of Franklin county,” and also a copy with the state tax commission. Within fifteen days after receipt by the state tax commission of such statement it, through the attorney general of the state, “may file an answer to said statement,” and within fifteen days thereafter the appellant county shall prepare and file its proof in support of its contentions, and which may be by affidavits, or depositions. Within fifteen days thereafter the state tax commission “shall prepare and file proof in support of its position, which may be affidavits or by depositions.” The appeal shall then be submitted to the appellate court (Franklin circuit) which shall render judgment within ten days thereafter. “If either party to the controversy be dissatisfied with the judgment rendered such party may take an appeal to the court of appeals within ten days thereafter.”

Under the provisions of section 4114Í-16 a tax payer is given the same right to invoke the same procedure if the state tax commission has made a ruling adverse to him and has so notified him thereof by process in the manner indicated. It is further provided that, the clerk of the Franklin circuit court “shall not be required to copy the record but shall transmit to the clerk of the court of appeals the original record with a certification that it is the complete record.”’ Section 4114Í-18.

This appeal was so taken and because of which we have experienced trouble in assorting and arranging its parts applicable to the various agencies and tribunals through which the case has traveled. The testi *239 mony brought here convinces us that a considerable part of the raise of the tax payer’s assessment as made by the county board of supervisors was unauthorized, or at any rate not sustained by a preponderance of the proof later heard before the Franklin circuit court, and perhaps, also heard before the county board of supervisors, as well as at the hearing before the state tax commission. But for reasons hereinafter stated we feel that we are mandatorily barred from correcting the certification made by the county board of supervisors in accordance with what we might conclude is the correct one. We will now proceed to state the reasons for that conclusion.

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Related

McCracken Fiscal Court v. McFadden
122 S.W.2d 761 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 550, 274 Ky. 235, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-county-v-kentucky-river-coal-corp-kyctapphigh-1938.