Raef, County Clerk v. Radio Broadcasting, Inc.

190 S.W.2d 1, 209 Ark. 253, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 544
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
Docket4-7726
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 1 (Raef, County Clerk v. Radio Broadcasting, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raef, County Clerk v. Radio Broadcasting, Inc., 190 S.W.2d 1, 209 Ark. 253, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 544 (Ark. 1945).

Opinion

McFaddin, J.

This present appeal and the case of Jensen v. Radio Broadcasting, Inc., 208 Ark. 517, 186 S. W. 2d 981, both, stem from the efforts of Radio Broadcasting, Inc., to settle its property tax liability for 1942, 1943 and 1944 on its own valuation figures. We refer to the present case as the “Raef Case,” and the previous case as the “Jensen Case,” and the appellee as “Radio.”

In the Jensen case a complaint was filed in the Garland chancery court-on November 17, 1944, for an injunction against Jensen, as delinquent, tax collector of Garland county, to prevent him from seeking to collect from Radio $3,713.60 as 1942 taxes, which Radio alleged to be erroneous and void. Jensen contented himself with filing a motion to dismiss. No proof was offered. The chancery court granted a temporary restraining order when Radio made a $5,000 bond. Jensen appealed from the order granting the temporary injunction, and this court affirmed the. chancery court in an opinion which concluded with this language :

“The chancellor’s action in granting a temporary injunction upon the uncontroverted allegations of tho complaint is sustained. The interests of the State and its political subdivisions pending a final hearing of the suit were adequately protected by a bond.”

According to the unchallenged allegations in tho briefs in the present case, the Jensen case is -still pending in the Garland chancery court, to be tried on its merits.

Notwithstanding the pendency of the Jensen case, Radio filed in the Garland chancery court on December 14, 1944, a complaint in this Raef case, out of which comes this present appeal. In this Raef case the sole defendant was “Roy C. Raef, as County Clerk of Garland county, Arkansas.” Radio alleged that Raef, as County Clerk, had custody and control of the tax books of Garland county for the years 1942, 1943 and 1944; that for each of these years Radio had personal property in Garland county of the value of $6,000, and had assessed the same at the figure of $2,000, and had paid 1942 taxes of $73.54, and 1943 taxes of $73.54; and would in due time pay 1944 taxes of $73.54; Radio also alleged that due to error the tax books disclosed an unpaid tax for 1942 in excess of $3,000, and that, due to a mistake, there was entered on the tax books for 1943 an erroneous valuation of $68,570 against the property of Radio (which would make a tax in excess of $3,300); and for 1944 there was an erroneous valuation of $50,000 against the property of Radio; and that Roy C. Raef, as County Clerk, should be authorized and directed to correct said erroneous valuations; and that in all such instances, the plaintiff did not receive any notice of any change in its assessment of $2,000; and that the plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law, and offered to do equity. There was no allegation as to %uhen the entries were made of which Radio complained.

On January 3, 1945, Raef filed his motion to dismiss, in which he said, inter alia, “that he is the County Clerk of Garland county, and that he is not the proper, person to change the tax records of Garland county. Defendant further states that this court is without jurisdiction in this matter; and that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law. ’ ’ The Garland chancery court evidently treated this as an answer, because Radio’s evidence was heard on February 7, 1945.

Radio presented two witnesses, Kellam, the local manager of Radio, and McCormack, the president of Radio. Kellam testified that Radio took over station KTHS on June 21, 1942, and that no investigation of taxes was made at that time; that on April 10, 1943, Kellam went to the assessor’s office, and was advised that Radio’s property was already assessed at $687.50 valuation, and the tax would be approximately $22, and would be payable in October, 1943. Kellam said that he signed an assessment sheet showing this valuation of $687.50. This is the 1943 assessment that now appears in the tax books to be $68,750 as the valuation. Kellam testified that in October or November, 1943, he received a'notice from Jensen, the Delinquent Tax Collector, that the tax for 1942 was delinquent in an amount in excess of $3,700; and that Kellam immediately contacted the tax assessor and arranged for a conference between the tax assessor and Kellam and McCormack. McCormack and Kellam both testified that they had a conference with G-illenwater, the Tax Assessor, in November, 1943, about this 1942 tax, and that Wilson, the Tax Collector, was present and took part in this conference. (We interpolate here to point out that nobody even intimated that Jensen, the Delinquent Tax Collector, was ever notified o.f this conference, which was obviously being held for the purpose of defeating Jensen’s efforts to collect the alleged delinquent tax.) McCormack and Kellam testified that they informed the Tax Assessor that the property was assessed for 1943 at a valuation of $687.50, and they offered to pay a 1942 tax based on a “fair valuation.” The Tax Assessor had read in the newspaper that Radio had paid $225,000 for the KTHS station; and the assessor was desirous of basing an assessment on that figure. But Kellam and McCormack convinced the Tax Assessor that only the actual personal property of Radio was taxable, and that the full value of this personal property was $6,000; and on that basis, the assessed valuation was placed at $2,000, and agreed to by the Assessor and a check for $73.54 for 1942 personal property taxes was paid to Wilson, the Tax Collector, the same day of the conference, November 26, 1943. (We again interpolate to point out that personal property should be assessed at 50% of actual value under § 2038(c), Pope’s Digest, and the certificate of the Commission empowered by that section.)

The witnesses testified that in this same conference the assessment for 1943 was made by Badio at a valuation of $2,000, and this was approved and signed by the Assessor. (We further interpolate to point out that the previous 1943 assessment of $687.50, according to Kellam, seems to have been overlooked or forgotten by the parties in this conference.) Kellam and McCormack further testified that the 1943 tax of $73.50 was paid, based on this $2,000 valuation, and that on March 22, 1944, Kellam assessed Badio’s property at $2,000, and this was agreed to by the Assessor, and that no notice of any change had ever been received by anyone for Badio. Kellam testified that it was not until November 13, 1944 (evidently after Jensen had served the 1942 delinquent tax notice on Badio), that Kellam and his attorney checked the tax books and discovered, then for the first time, that the tax books reflected an unpaid 1942 tax in excess of $3,000, and a 1943 valuation of $68,750, and a 1944 validation of $50,000.

Such was the evidence. Badio evidently treated the conference between Kellam and McCormack, on the one hand, and Gillenwater, the Tax Assessor, on the other, as a bargaining process whereby .the value of $2,000 was determined; because, in the testimony, the attorney for Badio, explaining one of his objections to the cross-examination, said: “. . . we are not here on the question now of the court reassessing values; we are here to seek a carrying out of the agreements as to the acts that had been previously performed rather than asking the court to reappraise the station, and I don’t believe matters relating to values are competent. ... I might state, we are trying to have a specific performance of the contract, ...”

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Related

John v. Turner
542 S.W.2d 293 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1976)
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399 S.W.2d 15 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1966)
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190 S.W.2d 5 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 1, 209 Ark. 253, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raef-county-clerk-v-radio-broadcasting-inc-ark-1945.