State v. Central Pacific Railroad

7 Nev. 99
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 7 Nev. 99 (State v. Central Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Central Pacific Railroad, 7 Nev. 99 (Neb. 1871).

Opinion

By the Court,

Lewis, C. J.

The state filed a complaint, in the usual statutory form, against the defendant, for the recovery of a tax due and unpaid for the year 1869. The defendant’s answer was demurred to, and the demurrer sustained. A supplemental answer was also filed, and after-wards an amended answer, which was also demurred to, and the demurrer sustained; and upon refusal to amend, judgment was rendered for the state, from which defendant appeals.

The grounds taken by the demurrer are: first, that the facts relied on in the answer are not alleged with sufficient certainty; and secondly, admitting the pleading to be sufficient in this particular, still the facts do not constitute a defense. The defense pleaded is fraud in the assessment, and the facts constituting it are thus charged in the defendant’s pleading: “ That on or about the tenth day of August, a. d. 1869, John Corning, then being the acting general superintendent and managing agent of the Central Pacific Railroad Company of California, the aforesaid defendant, did furnish and deliver to said assessor a duly verified statement of the property belonging to the said railroad company, with the value thereof set down, as required by the act of said state, entitled “An act supplemental to an act, entitled an act to provide revenue for the support of the government of the state of Nevada, approved March 19th, 1865, amendatory thereof,” approved March 6th, 1869. Said statement was duly sworn to by the said John Corn[102]*102ing, as managing agent as aforesaid, before an officer of and in the state of Nevada, duly authorized to administer oaths, of which said assessor had full knowledge; but the said John Corning had accidentally omitted to describe himself in the affidavit appended to said statement as the acting general superintendent of said defendant, and also omitted, through inadvertence, to sign the same; and the said assessor, although it was his duty so to do, and although he had ample time and opportunity so to do, failed and refused to call the attention of the said John Corning, or the said defendant, to said mistake; but craftily and fraudulently intending to disregard his duty in the premises, and to evade the laws of the said state in such case made and provided, and to impose upon said railroad company an excessive, illegal and fraudulent valuation, did conceal the said omission from said railroad company, and fraudulently determine that he would take advantage of said omission and mistake, and in disregard of his official duty and judgment, would assess said property at more than its value ; that he knew and was satisfied that said statement, so sworn to by said Corning, contained a fair valuation of said property, and had it been properly signed he would have assessed the same as so stated; but in view of said omission, he assessed the said property at a much higher figure, contrary to his official judgment, and with intent to impose an excessive valuation and tax upon said defendant. That in said statement, so verified by said John Corning, the said railroad and telegraph line of the said railroad company were set down as of the value of six thousand dollars per mile, which was a fair valuation thereof, and was so known to and believed by the said assessor; yet the said assessor, without notice to the said defendant or the said John Corning^ or other officer of said company, and without availing himself of other evidence under oath, and contrary to his official judgment, did fraudulently and craftily set down and assess the said railroad of defendant at the sum and value of fifteen thousand dollars per mile.”

The first question necessary to be determined here is, whether there is a direct allegation that the property was assessed beyond its real and just value — whether fifteen thousand dollars per mile was an excessive valuation; for if there be no such allegation, it must be [103]*103admitted at once there is no showing of injury resulting from the fraud charged, and consequently it constitutes no defense to the recovery of the tax. It will be seen the answer alleges that Corning set down the value of the road, in the statement made by him, at six thousand dollars per mile, and then it is directly averred that the value so set upon it was a fair valuation thereof. This is not an allegation that Corning deemed that sum a fair valuation, but the defendant itself makes the direct and positive averment that the value so fixed by him, that is, six thousand dollars per mile, was the fair value of the road. This is substantially and virtually an allegation direct and unequivocal that six thousand dollars per mile was its just and fair value. If the allegation referred to does not amount to this, we are at a loss to determine what is meant by it. If the mind be not influenced by the remembrance of the old rule, that a pleading must be construed most strongly against the pleader, but seek to solve the question in hand solely by the broader, more sensible and just rule of the code, namely, that “ in the construction of a pleading for the purposes of determining its effect, its allegations shall be liberally construed, with a view to substantial justice between the parties,” (Practice Act, Section 70) there can certainly be no question but the defendant has, in that portion of the answer referred to, directly alleged that six thousand dollars was a fair valuation of the property assessed.

It is equally clear that the law only requires property to be assessed at its fair value — by which it is to be understood, its just, honest, equitable or reasonable worth or price. Does the law require more ? Certainly not. It only demands that an honest and just estimate of value shall be placed upon property for the purpose of taxation. Nor does it always require its exact value ; for in a majority of cases there is something which cannot be ascertained by fixed and unalterable rules; where it has no fixed market value, it can only be arrived at approximately, by calculation or estimation, by comparing it with other property of similar character, by the extent of its productiveness, or the revenue which may be derived from it, taking also into consideration its durability, the probable length of time that it will yield a profit, with numerous other matters which often necessarily enter into or affect its value. In [104]*104such case, oppression upon the citizen by an excessive valuation is to be avoided on the one hand, and wrong to the state on the other, by an insufficient estimate ; but its fair' or just value (all the influencing circumstances considered) should be ascertained for the purpose of taxation. When this is done, the law is undoubtedly satisfied and justice accomplished. Property may — nay, often does —have a temporary and fictitious value, which, however, can seldom be realized. Can it be .claimed that in such case it should be assessed at such value, which would often be far beyond what it is probable can ever be realized from it, and which is only transitory in its character ? No assessor who is actuated by the honest purpose and just motives which should always control public officers in the discharge of their duties, would consider it his duty to place such fictitious and uncertain value upon it, but would rather ascertain its true, real or just value by the best means within his power, and assess it accordingly; for every man is satisfied, by intuition even, that the law requires only the real and'fair value of the property for the purpose of taxation. If it is estimated beyond that, an injustice is done the citizen; if less, a wrong is perpetrated on the commonwealth.'

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Nev. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-central-pacific-railroad-nev-1871.