Starkey v. Carson

189 So. 385, 138 Fla. 301, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1402
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 26, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 189 So. 385 (Starkey v. Carson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starkey v. Carson, 189 So. 385, 138 Fla. 301, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1402 (Fla. 1939).

Opinion

Whitfield, J. —

This appeal is limited to an order denying a motion to strike specified portions of the bill of complaint relating to liability to taxation of certain intangible personal property. Pertinent parts of the bill in effect allege that the Plaintiff, John F. Carson, is a citizen and resident of Pinellas County, Florida, and has been such citizen and resident during the times mentioned in this bill; that the Tax Assessor of Pinellas County, Florida, for the taxable ye/ar 1938 did assess and value the intangible personal property of this Plaintiff at the sum of $1,111,960.00 and the tax assessor has levied upon said valuation a tax equivalent to two mills- on such assessed valuation, and the tax assessor and board of county commissioners have certified the roll carrying such assessment and levy to the defendant tax collector for collection of said two-mill tax predicated upon said assessed valuation, and taxes so assessed thereon are by law made a lien upon all the real and personal property owned by plaintiff in Pinellas County, Florida; that said assessment and tux levy- are illegal and void, and should in equity and good conscience be declared illegal and void, and the collection or attempted collection thereof should be enjoined for reasons herein stated; that plaintiff filed his return of intangible personal property in this State owned by plaintiff; that the tax assessor, in placing a valuation for taxation purposes, ignored said return and unlawfully undertook to and did assess as the valuation of intangible personal property for plaintiff the total sum named above, which said valuation was arrived at in the following manner, to-wit:

*303 “Shares of stock of this plaintiff in the Paducah Coca-Cola Bottling Co. were given a valuation of Five Hundred Seventy Thousand ($570,000.00) dollars; shares of stock owned by this Plaintiff in Evansville Coca-Cola Bottling Co. were given 'a valuation of One Million Four Hundred Ninety-Five Thousand ($1,495,000.00) dollars; notes and bonds claimed by said tax assessor to be owned by this Plaintiff were given a valuation of One Hundred Fifty-eight Thousand Nine Hundred Twenty ($158,920.00) Dollars. Making a grand' total for such Valuation purposes of Two Million Two Hundred Twenty-three Thousand Nine Hundred Twenty ($2,223,920.00) Dollars, and after having given such valuation to such intangible personal property, said Tax Assessor did divide such total Valuation in half and thereupon assess one-half of such grand total as the assessed valuation of the intangible personal property of this Plaintiff.”

That Plaintiff upon being notified of such assessed valuation did thereupon and prior to the meeting of the Board of Equalization of said county, register his protest of such assessed valuation with the tax assessor, (and did then and there make known to such tax assessor that none of the stock or stock certificates evidencing stock ownership of the plaintiff in Paducah Coca-Cola Bottling Company was ever in the State of Florida, further that none of the stock or stock certificates evidencing the ownership of such stock in the plaintiff of Evansville Coca-Cola Bottling Company was ever in the State of Florida) and that the plaintiff owned no notes or bonds other than those set forth in Exhibit ‘A’ to the return as aforesaid filed with the Tax Assessor, to-wit:

*304

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 So. 385, 138 Fla. 301, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starkey-v-carson-fla-1939.