Robertson v. Bank of Yazoo City

85 So. 175, 123 Miss. 380
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1920
DocketNos. 21282-21284
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 85 So. 175 (Robertson v. Bank of Yazoo City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Bank of Yazoo City, 85 So. 175, 123 Miss. 380 (Mich. 1920).

Opinions

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding begun by the .revenue agent to back-assess the appellee banks on the shares of their capital stock, surplus, and undivided profits for the years 191.0 to 1915', inclusive, under the provisions of .section 4740, Code of 1906 (section 7058, Hemingway’s Code). The additional assessment directed by the revenue agent to be made sets forth the number of the shares of stock of each of the banks, his (the revenue agent’s) valuation thereof, and the amounts of their surplus and undivided profits for each of the years. The appellees each filed protests with the board of supervisors against this assesment, setting forth, among other things, that the shares of their capital stock and their surplus and undivided profits Avere assessed against them for each of the years included in the present back-assessment and the taxes due thereon were paid, and it appears from these protests that the assessments then made and those now sought to be made are identical, except the valuation of the shares of the appellees’ capital stock and their surplus and undivided profits Avas less in the original assessment than in the one here sought, to be made. This back-assessment was disapproved by the board of supervisors, and its order in so doing was affirmed by the court below. When the cause reached the court below the appellant, apparently proceeding on the theory that it was an ordinary eommon-laAV action, governed by the rules of pleading in such cases, filed what is styled in the record a “replication” to the appellees’ protest, setting forth that the original assessments of the property here in question were fraudulent and of no .validity whatever; the replication filed in the case of the Bank of Yazoo City, of which the others are substantial copies mutatis mutandis, being as follows:

“For replication to the objection of the Bank of Yazoo City, the state revenue agent says: The original assessment mentioned, set up as res adjudicada, and in bar of the assessment sought to be validated and approved in this [393]*393case, was a fraudulent one and of no validity whatever; because the bank of Yazoo City did not deliver to the assessor for any one of the years involved in this suit a sworn statement as required by law (Code 1906, Section 4273), but the said taxpayer rendered, as private persons usually render assessments, the assessment pleaded by it to the tax assessor of Yazoo county, the same not being under oath; knowing that the value placed by it on its shares of capital stock was not its par value nor its true and actual value, and knowing .that the true and actual cash vlue and the par value of its said stock at the time said assessment was rendered was not less than its par value, $100 per share, and that tlie par value of its said share of stock at said time aggregated a sum not less than $400,000., it nevertheless rendered the same to. the assessor at the aggregate value of $300,000, a much less sum than the par value of said shares and much less than its true and actual value at said time; and this the said Bank of Yazoo City did knowingly, willfully, and fraudulently, with the intent, purpose, and design to cheat and defraud the state of Mississippi and the county of Yazoo of their revenue and to. enable the said bank to escape the payment of taxes justly due from it to the state and county aforesaid.
“This the state revenue agent is ready to verify.”

These replications were demurred to by the appellees, their demurrers were sustained, and the revenue agent declining to plead further, judgment final was rendered against him.

Judges Sykes, COok and Smith are of the opinion that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed, but Judges Ethridge,, Holden and Stevens are of the opinion that it should be reversed. We are therefore unable to reverse the judgment of the court below; consequently it must be affirmed.

Prodeeding- now to set forth the reasons for the opinion of Judges Sykes, Cook and Smith, section 4740, Code of 1906 (section 7058, Hemingway’s Code), under which this proceeding was begun, and which is the measure of the [394]*394appellant’s power to cause property to be back-assessed for taxation, provides that— “Should the revenue agent discover that any . . . property . . . has escaped taxation by reason of not being assessed, it shall be his duty” to cause the tax collector to assess it, etc.

The question here presented, therefore, is, Has the property which the appellant seeks to have back-assessed escaped taxation by reason of not being assessed? The admission of the appellant that the property has been assessed would seem to answer the question, if it were not for his contention that although it has been in fact assessed the assessment is void in the eyes of the law; consequently the property has escaped taxation within the meaning of the statute. The grounds on which the contention that the original assessment of this property is void rests are, first, that the statement of the appellees’ property filed with the assessor was not sworn to by its officers as required by section 4273, Code of 1906 (section 6907, Hemingway’s Code); and, second, that the property listed in this unsworn statement was knowingly, willfully, and fraudulently undervalued, with the intent, purpose, and design to cheat and defraud the state.

The fact that the statement of the appellees’ property filed with the assessor on which the original assessment was made was not sworn to cannot be held to invalidate the assessment, for the filing of such a statement is not at all necessary to the making of an assessment. The assessor has the power and it is his duty to assess property, although not listed with him at all by its owner. Sections 4265 and 4281, Code of 1906 (sections Q899 and 6915, Hemingway’s Code).

Nor does the intentional undervaluation of his property by the taxpayer when listing it with the assessor invalidate the assessment thereof. Neither the assessor nor the board of supervisors in passing on the assessment roll is bound by the taxpayer’s valuation of his property. If in the opinion of the assessor the property has been undervalued, it is his duty to report that fact to the board of supervisors when [395]*395he files the assessment roll with the hoard for approval. It then becomes the board’s duty to inquire into the correctness of the taxpayer’s valuation of his property and to increase it if in its judgment it is just to do so, and where the undervaluation appears to have been willfully made to escape taxation it is the board’s duty to report that fact to the grand jury. Section 4268', Code of 1906 (section 6902, Hemingway’s Code). Moreover section 4305, Code of 1906 (section 6939, Hemingway’s Code) provides that— “At the meeting for the hearing of objections to assess-' ments, the board of supervisors shall not only hear and determine all objections that shall be filed, but it shall as well carefully examine the roll or rolls, and shall then and there cause to be assessed any person or thing that may be found to be omitted, and anything found to be undervalued may be correctly valued.”

The identical property here sought to be back-assessed was enumerated and valued on the assessment roll when the original assessment was passed on by the board of supervisors, and the correctness veil non of that valuation was a question which it was the duty of the board to then determine, and when determined it became final and conclusive against both the public and the appellees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 So. 175, 123 Miss. 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-bank-of-yazoo-city-miss-1920.