State v. Oliver Iron Mining Co.

270 N.W. 609, 198 Minn. 385, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 769
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 11, 1936
DocketNo. 30,723.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 270 N.W. 609 (State v. Oliver Iron Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Oliver Iron Mining Co., 270 N.W. 609, 198 Minn. 385, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 769 (Mich. 1936).

Opinions

*387 Julius J. Olson, Justice.

We have for review orders of the trial court refusing new trials after findings and orders for judgment had been entered in proceedings brought by the state to enforce the unpaid taxes levied upon 43 iron ore mines on the Mesaba Range, St. Louis county, the issue being whether the trial court reached proper results in respect to the values of these mines for taxation purposes as of May 1, 1932.

Defendant Oliver Iron Mining Company and 14 other subsidiaries of the United States Steel Corporation declined to pay the last half of the 1932 taxes upon 36 iron ore mines in St. Louis county. Five companies owning seven different mines and occupying similar situations are the other defendants.

The tax commission, pursuant to statutory authority, fixed the valuations for assessment purposes upon these mines as of May 1, 1932. As permitted by and in conformity with the statute, the owners, for the purpose of raising the issue respecting valuations, refused to pay the second half of the taxes so levied, and the state proceeded to enforce judgment for the remaining portion. Proper pleadings were framed and issues joined. At the opening of the trial the state offered in evidence the delinquent list of real estate taxes for the year 1932, particular reference being had to the properties here involved. Having thus made a pruna facie case, it rested.

The sole issue was the value of these several mines as of May 1, 1932. The cases were heard before five of the judges of the eleventh judicial district. There was a lengthy and most thorough trial. Four of the judges joined in the findings made and therein fixed and determined the valuation to be placed upon each of these properties. As to seven mines the court found that the valuations placed thereon by the tax commission were proper and ordered judgment for the payment of the unpaid portion of the taxes and for interest, penalties, and costs. Respecting the remaining properties, the court determined the true value as to each thereof and ordered judgment for that part of the tax which the decreased valuations justified.

The state, excepting only the properties as to which, it had prevailed, moved for amended findings or, if such were denied, for new *388 trials. Except for certain relatively unimportant matters, the court denied the state’s motions. The mining companies sought similar relief as to the properties against which the court had sustained the valuations of the commission. Their motions having been denied, they too appeal. So the contending forces are both appellants and respondents here.

There is and can be no question that the basis for taxation of mining property has. for its foundation statutory authority and direction. 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 1992 and 1992-1, provides:

“1992. All property shall be assessed at its true and full value in money. In determining such value, the assessor shall not adopt a lower or different standard of value because the same is to serve as a basis of taxation, nor shall he adopt as a criterion of value the price for which the said property would sell at auction or at a forced sale, but he shall value each article or description of property by itself, and at such sum or price as he believes the same to be fairly worth in money. * * In valuing real property upon which there is a mine or quarry, the same shall be valued at such price as such property, including the mine or quarry, Avould sell for at a fair, voluntary sale, for cash.
“1992-1. It shall be the duty of every assessor and board, in determining the value of lands for the purpose of taxation and in fixing the assessed value thereof, to consider and give due weight to every element and factor affecting the market value thereof,

In an exhaustive memorandum prepared and concurred in by four of the district judges, the theory and bases for the conclusions reached are fully and adequately stated. A dissenting memorandum was filed by the dissenting judge. A reading of the two memoranda clearly points out the issues presented here for determination. We shall take up first the theory upon which the majority proceeded. The court found that there Avas no cash market for sales of iron ore properties upon the Mesaba Range “from a willing seller to a willing buyer, upon Avhich a Tax Commission or a court can base a valuation of such properties. All parties to these proceedings admit it.”

*389 The formula adopted by the majority is known as the Hoskold formula. This is now accepted, so the trial court found, “by both the State and the defendants as the best available basis for valuing ore deposits. It is used by other State Tax Commissions in making valuations of ore deposits, and is used by mining men in buying and selling ore properties. It is approved by the courts. Newport Min. Co. v. City of Ironwood, 185 Mich. 668; State Tax Comm. v. Magna Copper Co. 41 Ariz. 97, 15 P. (2d) 961. But its use is that of a guide, its results to be modified according to the judgment of parties interested as^to the accuracy of the factors used in applying it. The purpose of the formula is (1) to ascertain the difference between the selling price of the ore and the cost of producing it, and (2) to ascertain the factor to be used in order to arrive at the present worth of the estimated future profits of the ore produced from the property to be valued.”

The court remarked that it had been working under “great difficulties”; that the “prosperity” years were abnormal on that side and that the “depression” years had been just as abnormal in the other direction. Hence, so the court thought, “in the use of the formula, we have had to compose differences, sometimes quite reluctantly, because no one' of us could be certain how much of the past in the iron mining industry could be depended on to reflect the long future with which we had to deal.”

In fixing the value oí iron ore it has been the custom over a period of more than 20 years to take the “Lake Erie price” as a basis. In fixing values in the instant case the court took into account the actual Lake Erie price for the years 1929 to 1934. The court thought that in fixing the price as of May 1, 1932, it had a “right to consider subsequent years as a test of our conclusion that the base price that prevailed from 1929 to 1932 will continue into the future.” During these years, so the court found, no Mesaba Range ore “has been sold above the Lake Erie price; and some ore has been sold below” the same. The thought of the court was that this theory gave to the state “the highest possible profit spread under the Hoskold formula and therefore the maximum valuation insofar as the selling price determines it.” Respecting the propriety of this *390 formula, the court said that at least since 1929 it has been a “pegged” price. “We do not say that in criticism of it; for it is a top, not a bottom, price. If it is pegged high, it'has its social as well as its economic implications. Unless there is a profit spread between the producing cost and the selling price, the industry cannot operate.”

The application of the Lake Erie price seems to be the rock upon which the court split.

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Bluebook (online)
270 N.W. 609, 198 Minn. 385, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-oliver-iron-mining-co-minn-1936.