Sheppard v. Atlantic Pipe Line Co.

165 S.W.2d 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 1942
DocketNo. 9351
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 138 (Sheppard v. Atlantic Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheppard v. Atlantic Pipe Line Co., 165 S.W.2d 138 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

This appeal is by the members of the State Tax Board, herein called Board, from a temporary injunction restraining them from certifying for taxation purposes the value of the intangible assets of ap-pellee, Atlantic Pipe Line Company, to the tax assessors of the various counties through which the company’s pipe lines run. See Arts. 7105-7113, R.S. 1925, as amended, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 7105— 7113. The injunction was sought upon the ground that the formula used by the Board in arriving at the value of appellee’s intangible property is fundamentally wrong: (1) because the formula primarily considered past earnings, whereas there is no connection between appellee’s past earnings and what it will earn in the future; and (2) because it inevitably discriminated against appellee and in favor of other pipe line companies which had not theretofore made as much net earnings as had appellee. The trial court granted the injunction upon the ground that the “case presents substantial questions as to the validity and legality of the method used by defendants in fixing the value of plaintiff’s intangible property tor intangible tax purposes, and justice requires that these substantial questions be fully developed through evidence and argument, which can only be done in a trial on the merits.”

The evidence adduced on the extensive hearing of the temporary injunction application does not authorize it under the law applicable. The preliminary value fixed was $4,243,300, of which preliminary valuation appellee was given notice, and after a full hearing the Board reduced the value of $3,606,800. Each member testified that he exercised his best judgment in arriving, at this value,' taking1 into .consideration the reports required' to be filed by appellee under Art. 7106, all data which could be secured, and the value ascertained by the Board’s expert valuation employe, who submitted the formula complained of and two other formulas to check the fairness and reasonableness of the said formula; all of which formulas are agreed to be those used and approved in the valuation of intangible property or going concern value of business enterprises. The three formulas showed the value of 40% of ap-pellee’s intangible assets to be from $3,-764,352 to $5,371,777, each of which was higher than the reduced and final value of $3,606,800, as fixed by the Board. In reducing the preliminary valuation the Board took into consideration the reduced income of appellee due to a decision of a federal court prohibiting appellee from paying to the holding corporation, which owned practically all its stock and was practically its only customer, more than 7% on the valuation of its property as fixed by the Interstate Commerce Commission, and due to war conditions. The experts agreed that the formula complained of was an approved method for valuation of intangible properties, their difference of opinion arising only as to whether it had been properly applied to the facts of the instant case. All experts agreed that the matter of value of intangible property was largely one of opinion, and differed materially as to different business enterprises.

The formula attacked as being wrongful was known as the capitalization-of-net-income method. Under the Elkins Act, as amended, 34 Stat. 587-589, 49 U.S.C.A. § 41, appellee was subject to the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and a federal court consent decree prohibited appellee from paying after January 1, 1942, to the holding corporation, which owned 99.995% of appellee’s stock and which was practically its only customer, more than 7% on the valuation of its property as fixed by the Interstate Commerce Commission. Prior to this decision appel-lee had for the years 1938, 1939, 1940 and 1941, paid the holding corporation from 19%- to 23% as net earnings. The Board capitalized these four years’ past earnings with its estimated net income under the reduced tariffs claimed to be required by the federal court decision for 1942, and these net annual incomes for the five-year period (1938-1942) were averaged to determine'the amount of the net income to be capitalized, and as thus capitalized' the preliminary value of 40% of appellee’s [140]*140intangible property in Texas was fixed at $4,243,300, but which the Board reduced on final hearing to $3,606,800, and as to this value each member of the Board testified that he exercised his best judgment. That appellee does not attack the formula used but only its application to the facts above detailed is shown by the following summation of its contention:

“The Board used a formula involving capitalization of net earnings. Appellee finds no fault with that general method. The Board has capitalized on the theory that a very risky enterprise like a pipe line business should be permitted to earn 11% on its intangible property. Appellee' finds no fault with that. Where appellee and the Board differ is over the earnings figure capitalized by the Board. It is more than twice the earnings that can be or will be realized in any future year by appellee. It is more than twice as much because the Board used a net earnings figure arrived at by averaging four years of past earnings with one year of future earnings, in spite of the fact that the past earnings furnish no basis whatsoever for forecasting future earnings. Under the circumstances, the method used by the Board was fundamentally wrong.”

We regard the undisputed facts as bringing the instant case within the rule of Druesdow v. Baker, Tex.Com.App., 229 S.W. 493, 495, wherein the court held:

“The decisions of the Tax Board in the matter of valuations are quasi judicial in their nature. * * * No mere difference of opinion, as to the reasonableness of its valuation, when such valuations, though deemed erroneous, are the result of -honest judgment, will warrant interference by the courts. [Cites authorities]
“The formulas, which the railway company attacked as fundamentally wrong, were used as the bases for the preliminary estimate or valuation. These formulas were exhibited to the representatives of the railway company prior to the hearing and were the subject of discussion at the hearing. The process used by the Board in reaching its preliminary valuation is wholly immaterial, the ultimate conclusions or final valuations being the matters under investigation; and unless it be shown that the method used brought about unjust and unlawful results, its judgment will not be disturbed.
“The evidence by the Tax Commissioner is to the effect that the Board, in assessing intangibles of all railroads, considered all the evidence and information, and that, disregarding the mathematical calculation, the valuation finally determined represented in each instance the best judgment of which the Board was capable under the circumstances; that the Board withheld its decision in each instance until the evidence was all in, and if the formula did not reflect what the Board considered a fair and just valuation, the Board changed it.”

The substance of appellee’s contention is that the formula used was fundamentally wrong because it took into consideration the four years’ past earnings which amounted to from 19% to 23%; whereas, under the federal decision it would not thereafter be permitted to pay the holding company more than 7% based upon the I. C. C. valuation of its property; and in consequence its experts were of the opinion that appellee did not now have any intangible value or property.

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165 S.W.2d 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheppard-v-atlantic-pipe-line-co-texapp-1942.