State v. Pollock

38 So. 2d 870, 251 Ala. 603, 7 A.L.R. 2d 757, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 804
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 23, 1948
Docket6 Div. 731.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 870 (State v. Pollock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pollock, 38 So. 2d 870, 251 Ala. 603, 7 A.L.R. 2d 757, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 804 (Ala. 1948).

Opinions

Appellee, Jacob Pollock, filed his return with the State Department of Revenue for his income tax for the calendar year of 1944. On the 26th day of February, 1947, the State Department of Revenue entered an assessment against him on account of income tax for the year 1944, for a deficiency of $249.33, interest thereon to be added; and on that day gave the taxpayer notice that he could appear before the department at the State Capitol on the 12th day of March, 1947, and show cause, if any, why said assessment should not be made final. By instrument dated March 11, 1947, the taxpayer filed a protest with the department, through his attorney, assigning several separate grounds of objection to the assessment, among them being that the assessment was void and barred by the statute of limitations, and that the assessment was not authorized by law, and that the statutory notice of fifteen days of the hearingwas not given, as required by section 407, Title 51, Code.

The department had said protest before it on said 12th day of March, 1947, and on that day neither the taxpayer nor his attorney appeared in person before the department, but an order was entered by the department making the assessment final, not only for the $249.33 deficiency referred to above, but also added thereto a penalty of $203.01, which was fifty percent of the total tax assessed for the year of $406.03, the taxpayer having previously paid $156.70, *Page 606 which deducted from the $406.03 leaves a deficiency of $249.33. Notice was given the taxpayer by the department as of March 12, 1947, of such final assessment, including the penalty and interest, making a total of $482.26 deficiency. Thereupon the taxpayer filed notice of appeal with the secretary of the department, and gave a supersedeas bond; the appeal being to the Circuit Court of the Tenth Judicial Circuit, sitting in Equity. The taxpayer in due time filed in the circuit court his original bill pursuant to practice in such cases provided, in which it is claimed that the assessment violated section 384, Title 51, Code, by including as assessable income an amount of $5,000.00 paid by the taxpayer's employer for the purchase of annuity contracts of insurance, and that the assessment as made by the department on March 12, 1947, was void because it was made fourteen days from the date of notice, and not fifteen days, as required by law, and, therefore, that it violated section 407, Title 51, Code. The bill also complained that the final assessment erroneously included a penalty of fifty percent, and that the facts which justified such a penalty under section 413 (416?), Title 51, Code, were not made to appear.

The State of Alabama, through the Department of Revenue, made answer to the bill of complaint, insisting that the amount of the premium of $5,000.00 paid by the taxpayer's employer for annuity contracts of insurance was properly considered income by such taxpayer, and was not included in his return, and therefore it should be included in the computation of his income tax and, further, that the return by the taxpayer to the extent that said amount was omitted was willfully false and fraudulent within the terms of section 416, Title 51, Code.

The cause came before the Tenth Judicial Circuit Court on said bill and answer and testimony, and the court was of the opinion that since the notice was sent to the taxpayer on February 26, 1947, and the day set for hearing was March 12, 1947, he only had fourteen days' notice of the time when the hearing would be had upon the question of whether the assessment should be made final, and not having had fifteen days' notice, as required by section 407, Title 51, Code, the entire deficiency assessment was on that day beyond the power of the Department of Revenue, and was therefore void in its entirety, and especially in respect to the penalty of $203.01, when no notice had been given to the taxpayer of any intention to impose such penalty. The court thereupon entered a decree to the effect that the assessment made final on the 12th day of March, 1947, was illegal and void. From that decree, the State of Alabama has prosecuted this appeal.

The first question to be considered on this appeal, raised by the Attorney General for the State, is the insistence that by taking an appeal from the assessment made on March 12, 1947, the taxpayer waived the effect of the failure to give the fifteen days notice of such hearing upon the ground that on such appeal the proceeding is triable in the circuit court, in equity, de novo, and that legal status is a waiver of any claim that the taxpayer may have that he did not receive the fifteen days' notice, required by law.

We are constrained to agree with the State in such contention for the reasons which we will discuss. In the first place, we have held, and we think correctly so, that an appeal by the taxpayer under such circumstances as provided by section 140, Title 51, Code, contemplates a trial in the circuit court, in equity, de novo. State v. Louis Pizitz Dry Goods Co., 243 Ala. 629 (11), 11 So.2d 342. It is provided in that statute as follows:

"The circuit court in equity, or the supreme court of Alabama on appeal to it may, if it be of the opinion from all the evidence that the assessment as made is either too high or too low, fix the amount of such assessment. The court shall hear such appeals according to its own rules and methods or (of) procedure so far as practicable and shall decide all questions both as to the legality of the assessment and the amount thereof."

It is true that notice being required by the statute should be given. State Tax Commission v. Stanley, 234 Ala. 66 (8),173 So. 609. *Page 607

The taxpayer was properly before the department as a court, and made a written protest as of that day. In that appearance he protested the merits of the deficiency assessment, and an absence of the full fifteen days' notice of the hearing, but made no personal appearance. By so doing, he did not waive the fifteen days' notice.

The trial court seemed to have assumed that the judgment was void on its face, and that no appeal would lie to the circuit court upon the authority of that line of our cases typified in Craig v. Root, 247 Ala. 479(12), 25 So.2d 147.

In that case the trial court did not acquire jurisdiction of the subject matter. Since the court did not acquire jurisdiction, it had no power to render any judgment except to dismiss the proceeding. Such also was the status in the case of Burgin v. Ivy Coal Coke Co., 127 Ala. 657, 29 So. 67. But in this case the department had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the person of the taxpayer. Campbell v. State, 242 Ala. 215 (19, 20), 5 So.2d 466; Howell Graves v. Curry, Com'r,242 Ala. 122(2), 5 So.2d 105. True, he was entitled to fifteen days' notice of the hearing, and a failure to give such notice is an irregularity, but it does not deprive the court of jurisdiction. This theory has many applications. Powell v. Union Bank Trust Co., 173 Ala. 332(2), 56 So. 123; Craft v. Simon, 118 Ala. 625, 24 So. 380; Jones v. Henderson, 228 Ala. 273 (3), 153 So. 214.

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Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 870, 251 Ala. 603, 7 A.L.R. 2d 757, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pollock-ala-1948.