Southern Amusement Co. v. City of Jennings

157 So. 720, 180 La. 800, 1934 La. LEXIS 1574
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 29, 1934
DocketNo. 33137.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 157 So. 720 (Southern Amusement Co. v. City of Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Amusement Co. v. City of Jennings, 157 So. 720, 180 La. 800, 1934 La. LEXIS 1574 (La. 1934).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

The plaintiff is a private corporation which owns property in the city of Jennings. Its real property was assessed for the year 1932 at $23,500, and its furniture and fixtures at $3,000. The assessments with the valuations as fixed were finally approved, and the tax rolls were filed in the recorder’s office, turned over to, and filed by, the tax collecting authorities.

After the rolls had been received and filed by the sheriff and ex officio state and parish tax collector and the tax collector for the city of Jennings, the Louisiana tax commission ordered the valuations as shown on the rolls reduced as follows:

Real estate from $23,500 to $9,000; •
Personal property from $3,000 to $1,000.

The state and parish tax collector accepted the reductions made and collected taxes accordingly. The tax collector for the city of Jennings refused to recognize the reductions thus made and signified his intention to collect the taxes due the city based on the valuations originally made. The plaintiff brought the present suit to restrain the city and its tax collector from collecting taxes on valuations in excess of those fixed by the tax commission.

The city and its tax collector filed exceptions of no cause and no right of action, which were sustained by the court, and plaintiff’s suit was ordered dismissed. The court’s ruling was based on the proposition that as a matter of law the Louisiana tax commission has no authority or power to change valuations fixed on the property of private corporations or individuals after the rolls are finally completed and approved by the assessing authorities and are delivered to and filed by those authorized to collect the taxes.

The law under which the Louisiana tax •commission claims authority to make such changes in valuations as it did in this case is Act No. 120 of 1918, p. 193, the title of which reads as follows:

‘‘An act to provide for the correction of assessments against public service corporations and other corporations that are valued and assessed directly by the Board of State Affairs.”

Section 1 of the act reads as follows:

“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Louisiana, That the Board of *804 State Affairs be, and it is hereby, authorized and empowered to correct or change the assessment of any public service corporation or other xmoperty owner, when the assessment is made directly by said Board, in order to make said assessments conform to the true facts.”

Section 3 of the act is as follows:

“Be it further enacted, etc., That whenever the Board of State Affairs shall mate any change or correction in the assessment of any public service corporation or other corporation or individual whose property is directly valued and assessed by the said Board, it shall at the same time forward to the Auditor of Public Accounts of the 'State of Louisiana a copy of the instructions furnished to the assessor and tax collector.”

Plaintiff carried the case by appeal to the Court of Appeal, First Circuit, and under the authority conferred by section 25, art. 7, of the Constitution of 1921, that court certified the case to this court, asking for instructions. After stating the issues involved, the court asks the following questions:

(1) “Has the Louisiana Tax Commission the right arid power to reduce an assessment of a property owner and tax payer, regardless of whether such property owner or tax payer be a public service corporation, a private corporation, or an individual, if the tax roll has been filed and is in the hands of the local tax collecting authorities?”

(2) “Is Act 120 of 1918 unconstitutional in view of the fact that some of its provisions as appearing in the body of the act are broader than is indicated by its title?”

The assessment involved in this case was made for the year 1932. It is alleged that the assessment of plaintiff’s property was made by the assessor. Presumably the valuations appearing on the rolls were approved by the parish board of reviewers, created by Act No. 231 of 1920, and the Louisiana tax commission, otherwise the rolls would not have been filed with the tax collecting authorities.

On June 12, 1933, some months after the rolls had been filed in the clerk’s office and placed in the hands of and filed by the tax collectors, the Louisiana tax commission made this change in the valuation of plaintiff’s property by reducing it as set out above. The letter addressed to the sheriff and tax collector ordering the changes stated: “These reductions are made to place this property on the same assessment value as carried on the adjoining and other properties of a similar character in the city of Crowley, as evidenced by maps showing assessment values on file in this office.”

Plaintiff’s property is in the city of Jennings, Jefferson Davis parish. Crowley is another city in an adjoining parish. Manifestly the reduction was made for the sole purpose of equalizing values in the parish of Jefferson Davis.

The letter addressed to the sheriff is dated June 13. 1933; the first paragraph of which reads as follows:

“Under the provisions of Act 120 of 1918, you are hereby directed and instructed to make the following reductions on your rolls for the year 1932.”

It is clear that, if the Louisiana tax commission (formerly board of state affairs) has authority under Act No. 120 of 1918 to reduce assessments, for the purpose of equalizing values in the parish, after the rolls are filed with *806 the tax collector, it may also increase values for the same purpose, 'because by section 1 of the act the board of state affairs (now the Louisiana tax commission) is “authorized and empowered to correct or change the assessment.” If the Legislature intended, by the passage of this act, to authorize and empower the tax commission to change assessments as to values after the rolls are thus filed, it was intended that they might be changed by either raising or lowering values.

It is inconceivable that the Legislature intended by that act to authorize the tax commission to disregard and set at naught assessments of property authorized to be assessed by the assessor after such assessments have become final under existing laws. To hold that the Legislature did so intend would be to bring the act into hopeless conflict with all the statutes of the state adopted to regulate assessments of property and the equalizing of values for taxation purposes, as well as the settled jurisprudence of the state.

There is now, and there always has been, a date set on which assessments become final. That date is a deadline beyond which neither the assessing authorities nor the taxpayers can go for the purpose of changing values. Section 26, Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
157 So. 720, 180 La. 800, 1934 La. LEXIS 1574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-amusement-co-v-city-of-jennings-la-1934.