Stewart v. Mayor of Vicksburg

13 So. 2d 40, 195 Miss. 189, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 117
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1943
DocketNo. 35314.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 So. 2d 40 (Stewart v. Mayor of Vicksburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Mayor of Vicksburg, 13 So. 2d 40, 195 Miss. 189, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 117 (Mich. 1943).

Opinions

On January 1, 1941, Mrs. Harrison Stewart, now deceased, for whose estate the appellant is the executor, owned Lot 287, Square or Block 60, in that part of the City of Vicksburg known as Vicksburg Proper, and which was returned to the city tax assessor for ad valorem taxation at the sum of $400 as compared with the previous *Page 194 assessment of $1,350. The owner then being absent from the city, such return was made and verified by an attorney who requested the privilege of so doing, and on which return the property was listed as West Center Part, Lot 287, 26 x 100, Block No. 60, Vicksburg Proper. The assessor having later completed his rolls, filed the same with the city clerk on October 24, 1941, which was within the time required by the city ordinances, to be submitted to the mayor and board of aldermen at its regular session on November 3, 1941, for approval, listing this property as "WC pt. 287, 26 x 100, Block No. 60," without specifying the subdivision in which the same was located, and with a recommendation that the assessment returned by the attorney for the property owner be raised to $1,150. After certain proceedings were had, as hereinafter mentioned, the board, at a subsequent meeting, raised the assessment to the sum of $1,350, describing the property as "Mrs. Harrison Stewart, WC Pt. of Lot 287, 26 x 100 ft., Sq. 60, Vicksburg Proper;" and from which assessed valuation there was an appeal by the property owner to the circuit court as provided for by Section 62, Code of 1930, which does not require a bill of exceptions therefor, but declares that: "Any person aggrieved by a decision of . . . the municipal authorities of a city, . . . as to the assessment of taxes, may, within ten days after the adjournment of the meeting at which such decision is made, appeal to the circuit court of the county, upon giving bond, . . . in double the amount of the matter in dispute, . . . and conditioned to perform the judgment of the circuit court . . . and the controversy shall be tried anew in the circuit court . . ."

Upon the trial in the circuit court on the record of the proceedings had by the mayor and board of aldermen and an oral proof, there was a verdict by the jury in favor of the appellees in the following form: "We, the jury, find for the City of Vicksburg," upon which a judgment was entered assessing the value of the property at $1,350, and from which judgment this appeal is taken. *Page 195

The validity of the judgment appealed from is challenged on numerous grounds, including the insufficiency of the description as "WC Pt. of Lot 287," etc., the want of due process on the property owner prior to the adoption of the order raising the assessment, the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the increase in valuation, the giving of alleged erroneous instructions and the refusal of other instructions requested, and the alleged invalidity of the verdict rendered by the jury in failing to fix the value of the property involved.

In order to determine whether the errors assigned, or either of them, are well taken, it is necessary that we state what the charter and ordinances of the municipality required as relating to the assessment of property for ad valorem taxation, and that we shall also state what was done pursuant thereto.

The City of Vicksburg operates under a special charter, which, as amended, requires, among other things, that the tax assessor shall apply to each property owner or his or her agent for a sworn valuation or assessment of property on blanks similar to those prescribed by law for state and county assessments; that the assessor shall report to the mayor and aldermen any undervaluation, at a time to be prescribed by them, with a statement of what he believes to be a reasonable and just taxable value of the property; that such report of the assessor shall be received and considered by the mayor and aldermen at such time and upon such notice to the property owner as may be fixed by ordinance; and that upon the hearing of any protest or objections made by the property owner, if it be found that the valuation be less than the mayor and aldermen should believe the property to be worth, they may of their own motion, and without any statement or recommendation from the assessor as to what he believes it to be worth, raise the valuation to an amount that, in their opinion and belief is fair, reasonable and just, upon such previous notice to the owner of the property as may be fixed by an ordinance of the City of *Page 196 Vicksburg. The authority is also given to the mayor and aldermen to equalize the assessment of all property in the city so that property of the same value shall be assessed for an equal sum, but not to exceed its fair and full worth and market value. The ordinances prescribing the notice provide that when the board shall have completed its work, the city clerk shall publish a notice once a week for two consecutive weeks in the "official paper" of the city, notifying the property owners that the assessment roll has been revised and that all objections or exceptions thereto must be filed with the city clerk within twenty days from such first publication; and the ordinances further provide that after the expiration of such twenty days, the mayor and aldermen will consider and pass on the objections or exceptions filed.

It appears that on November 3, 1941, the mayor and aldermen met in regular session, received the report of the assessor submitting for final approval his assessment rolls for the year 1941, adjourned to meet as a Committee of the Whole at four o'clock P.M. on November 6th for the purpose of reviewing and revising the assessment rolls, continued from day to day through November 15th, the 16th being Sunday, and that on November 17th, the date for the second regular meeting of the month, they met and adjourned until four o'clock of the next day when the Committee of the Whole made a report of its work in revising the assessments and showing the increase of the appellant's property from $400 to $1,350, and which report was thereupon approved and adopted by the board, and an order entered stating that the taxpayers shall have until Thursday afternoon at four o'clock, December 11, 1941, within which to examine the assessments as made by the assessor and the recommendations made by the Committee of the Whole, and to file any objections or exceptions which they may have thereto, and the order also states that any person failing to file objections or exceptions within the time named shall be precluded from filing them thereafter; also that the board would take up *Page 197 said assessments and all objections thereto for consideration at its meeting on December 11, 1941, at the hour above stated. It appears that the first Monday in December, the regular day for the meeting, was December 1st, and that the next regular meeting, the third Monday of December, was December 15th; wherefore, objection is here made that the meeting of December 11, 1941, was held on an arbitrary date and is illegal and void. But, without undertaking to recite the various provisions of the different ordinances of the city, we have reached the conclusion that the various meetings of the board heretofore referred to were duly authorized and legally held.

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Related

Lavecchia v. Mayor, of Vicksburg
20 So. 2d 831 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1945)
Stewart v. Mayor of Vicksburg
13 So. 2d 40 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 So. 2d 40, 195 Miss. 189, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-mayor-of-vicksburg-miss-1943.