State v. Jemez Land Co.

226 P. 890, 30 N.M. 24
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1924
DocketNo. 2730.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 226 P. 890 (State v. Jemez Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Jemez Land Co., 226 P. 890, 30 N.M. 24 (N.M. 1924).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT.

BOTTS, J.

Following the action of the county assessor and board of equalization, appellee found its property, consisting of 110,308 acres of land, on the tax rolls for 1919 classified as 90,308 acres of grazing land, valued at $1.25 an acre, and 20,000 acres of timber land, valued at $12.50 an acre. Thereupon ap-pellee appealed to the state tax commission from the valuation of said timber lands as excessive, but did not appeal from the classification or valuation of the grazing lands. Notwithstanding there was no appeal except as to the valuation of timber land, the state tax commission ordered the whole 110,308 acres to be valued and assessed at $1.50 per acre, and added thereto the valuation of 400,000,000 feet of stumpage at 40 cents a thousand feet. Appellee refused to pay the taxes so assessed, and, upon suit being brought for the recovery thereof under the provisions of chapter 133, Session Laws of 1921, defended on the ground that the tax commission was without jurisdiction to increase the valuation of the 90,308 acres of grazing land, as to which no appeal had been taken, and was without jurisdiction to levy an assessment on said 400,000,000 feet of stumpage, apart from the land, and that, if it should be mistaken as to the jurisdictional defenses, the action of the state tax commission resulted in an excessive valuation of its property and constituted a discrimination against the appellee. By its answer appellee alleged its readiness and willingness to pay taxes on said real estate at such reasonable value as the court might fix, and contended for a valuation of $1.25 an acre on the grazing land and $4 an acre on the timber land. The state demurred on the ground that the allegations of the answer were insufficient in law to authorize the granting of the relief asked for. The demurrer was overruled, and thereupon the state replied, denying generally the new matter in the answer. The court heard evidence and concluded, as a matter of law, that the .state tax commission liad no power to ignore the appeal as to such 20,000 acres of timber land, and had no power, without appeal as to the 90,308 acres, to make a different classification or assessment, or pass on questions not brought up by appeal, and was without jurisdiction to assess the whole of the land separately at $1.50 an acre, and to assess separately the timber growing thereon. Judgment was rendered against the appellee for $3,-423.70, and in connection therewith the court specifically found that the appellee had produced in court and tendered to the treasurer said sum of $3,423.70, which represented the amount of the taxes based on the 90,308 acres valued at $1.25 per acre, and the 20,000 acres of timber land valued at $4 per acre, being the classification and values contended for by appellee. As a part of the final judgment, the court-ordered and directed the county treasurer to accept the amount of - the judgment in full payment of the taxes for the year 1919, and to issue appellee a receipt in full for said taxes and mark the same paid and fully satisfied on the tax roll. The treasurer complied with this direction, as appears from an affidavit filed in this case upon which appellee now contends that this appeal should be dismissed as presenting only a moot question in that the appellant has accepted the benefits of the judgment.

In State v. Fernandez Co., 28 N. M. 425, 213 Pac. 769, we applied to a similar situation the general rule that one cannot accept a benefit under a judgment and then appeal from it, where the effect of the appeal may be to annul the judgment, but called attention to an exception to the general rule that, where there is no possibility that the appeal may lead to a result whereby the appellant may recover less than has been received under the judgment appealed from, the right to appeal is unimpaired. In the Fernandez Co. Case the amount of the judgment appealed from was more than the amount conceded to be due by the defendant and less than the amount contended for by the plaintiff. In the present case appellee conceded that it owed the amount of taxes finally found to be due, and for which judgment was rendered by the court. Thus it is seen that, if this case were to be reversed and sent back for a new trial, the appellant could not recover less than has been received under the judgment appealed from, and the case comes squarely within the exception. In re Clark’s Estate (Cal. Sup.) 212 Pac. 622; Tyler v. Shea, 4 N. D. 377, 61 N. W. 468, 50 Am. St. Rep. 660. It follows that the appeal should not be dismissed.

In the case of State v. South Spring Ranch & Cattle Co. (No. 2770) 226 Pac. 886, this day decided, we have reviewed the legislation in force in 1919 governing appeals to the state tax commission, and there held that on an appeal the state tax commission had jurisdiction to re-examine the valuation of the property so brought before it, and to make such order in the premises as it might deem just and proper, with a view to having all lands in the state assessed at the actual value thereof. The question now before us, depending upon a construction of the same statutes, is whether or not the state tax commission had jurisdiction, on an appeal by a taxpayer as to one. item of property, to readjust the classification and valuation of other property of the same taxpayer not covered by the appeal. Bearing in mind that the property of appellee not covered by its appeal to the state tax commission was grazing land, appellant contends that the commission had authority and power to fix the value thereof under the proviso contained in section 4 of chapter 115 of the Session Laws of 1919, giving the state tax commission the original power and authority to classify and fix the valuation for purposes of taxation of all grazing lands within the state. An examination of the statutes relating to the state tax commission discloses that that body, in addition to its appellate jurisdiction, is given original jurisdiction with reference to certain specified matters,. among them being the valuation of grazing land just mentioned. If the record did not disclose that the action complained of was taken by the commission on the appeal from the valuation of the timber land, we might assume, on the presumption of regularity, that the valuation by the commission of the 90,308 acres of grazing land was in the exercise of its original jurisdiction; but the bill of exceptions discloses that, upon appellee’s demand on appellant to produce the records of the appeal for 1919 and the action thereon, the appellant admitted that the appeal, as alleged in the answer, was taken to the state tax commission, and that the action of the state tax commission, as alleged, was had for the year 1919, and reference to the amended answer discloses the allegation that the action complained of was taken on appeal. Thus appellant’s entire argument in support of the validity of the commission’s action relative to the lands of appellee other than the 20,000 acres of timber land, based on the commission’s original jurisdiction, necessarily falls.

As a general proposition, an appeal contemplates a review, and correction if found erroneous, of some action taken by a subordinate officer or tribunal with reference to the subject-matter brought before the appellate tribunal, and does not contemplate a general review of other subject-matters in which the appellant may be interested.

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Bluebook (online)
226 P. 890, 30 N.M. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jemez-land-co-nm-1924.