Swetland Co. v. Evatt

37 N.E.2d 601, 139 Ohio St. 6, 139 Ohio St. (N.S.) 6, 21 Ohio Op. 511, 1941 Ohio LEXIS 376
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1941
Docket28617, 28618, 28619 and 28620
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 37 N.E.2d 601 (Swetland Co. v. Evatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swetland Co. v. Evatt, 37 N.E.2d 601, 139 Ohio St. 6, 139 Ohio St. (N.S.) 6, 21 Ohio Op. 511, 1941 Ohio LEXIS 376 (Ohio 1941).

Opinion

Turner, J.

Some preliminary observations are in order. It should need no citation of authority to convince that this court will not go outside of the record in the consideration of facts in appealed causes.

No consideration will be given to Section 5609-2 or 5609-3, General Code (119 Ohio Law^s, —), which were not in effect at the time of the decision of these appeals by the Board of Tax Appeals. Neither will any attention be paid to amendments of the General Code which became effective after these appeals became pending proceedings upon complaint being filed with the county auditor, except such as are embraced within the provisions of Section 1464-11, General Code, effective May 15, 1939 (118 Ohio Laws, 351), which provides in part:

“All proceedings of whatsoever character, pending before the Tax Commission of Ohio or a commissioner or member thereof at the time said commission and *17 said offices of commissioners or members thereof, shall, by the provisions of this act, be abolished, and all proceedings pending in any court, in which the Tax Commission of Ohio or a commissioner or member thereof is a party shall continue to completion under this act.” (Italics ours.)

These appeals were presented in oral argument and briefs upon a statement of facts, a part only of which facts are to be found in the transcripts of the record and the proceedings before the Board of Tax Appeals.

Section 5611-2, General Code, as amended in 118 Ohio Laws, 355, provides in part:

“The Board of Tax Appeals, upon written demand filed by an appellant, shall, within thirty days after the filing of such demand, file with the Supreme Court a certified transcript of the record of the proceedings of the Board of Tax Appeals pertaining to the decision complained of, and the evidence considered by the board in making such decision.
“If upon hearing and consideration of such record and evidence the Supreme Court is of the opinion that the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals appealed from is reasonable and lawful it shall affirm the same, but if the Supreme Court is of the opinion that such decision of the Board of Tax Appeals'is unreasonable or unlawful, it shall reverse and vacate same or it may modify same and enter final judgment in accordance with such modification.” (Italics ours.)

Appellants state the question of law here involved as:

“The sole question involved in this appeal is — Does payment of taxes during the pendency of an appeal from the appraisal of real estate by the county auditor to the- county board of revision and then to the Board of Tax Appeals before said boards have acted on said appeal, and where the valuation is for a period of six years under Section 5548, General Code, abate the appeal, and leave only a moot question for decision?”

*18 While we shall answer the question as propounded, we do not agree that it is the sole or controlling question in this case.

Proceeding to a discussion of appellants’ law question as stated, we are not unmindful that a motion to certify was overruled in the ease of Heuck, Aud., v. Devon, 49 Ohio App., 478, 197 N. E., 374, wherein it was held by the Court of Appeals that “a property owner’s right to appeal from an appraisal of real property by a county auditor, where the valuation is for a period of six years under Section 5548, General Code, is not abated by the payment of taxes for one year during the pendency of the appeal.”

As was said by Judge Jones in the case of Village o f Brewster v. Hill, 128 Ohio St., 343, 352, 190 N. E., 766:

“We have heretofore announced that, in cases knocking at our door for certification, the refusal of a motion to certify, even if the same legal question is decisively involved, does not furnish an adjudication of the question by this court as an established precedent for future cases.”

See, also, concurring opinion of Chief Justice Marshall, in Cleveland Ry. Co. v. Masterson, 126 Ohio St., 42, 59, 183 N. E., 873, 92 A. L. R., 15.

Besides, as we have observed and will give the reasons therefor later, we do not think that the question decided in Heuck, Aud., v. Devou,, supra, is decisive of the appeals here in question.

Under the provisions of Section 5597, General Code, a county board of revision is limited to hearing complaints relating to the valuation and assessment of real property ‘ ‘ as the same appears upon the tax duplicate of the then current year.” (Italics ours.) The Board of Tax Appeals has no greater jurisdiction upon appeal.

We are of the opinion that neither the revaluation by the county board of revision under Sections 5597 and 5602, General Code, nor a revaluation by the Board *19 of Tax Appeals under Section 5610 et seq., General Code, freezés the valuation of the real property in question for any part of the sexennial period except the year specifically complained of. The correctness of the valuation for the then current year complained of is the only question which either the county board of revision or the Board of Tax Appeals has the authority to determine. A review of our tax-assessment laws shows that the sexennial valuation is tentative or prima facie and may be increased or decreased from year to year dependent upon the surrounding circumstances obtaining for the year in which the correction is made. A correction by either the county board of revision or the Board of Tax Appeals merely substitutes for the then current year complained of a valuation which is binding only for the year in question. While such corrected valuation may stand'for the balance of the sexennial period, there is no provision of law preventing further correction of - the valuation for any later year.

While appellants state the sole question of law as set forth supra, yet as a part of their argument to show that the question before the Board of Tax Appeals was not moot, appellants claim that their payment of taxes for the year 1937 was not voluntary and that upon a correction of the valuation by the Board of Tax Appeals any overpayment might be recovered under Section 12077, General Code.

So far as is shown by the transcript of the record before the county board of revision the proceedings were dismissed by that board solely because the complainants (appellants here) failed to produce any evidence in support of their complaint of the valuation for the year 1937.

As stated by the Board of Tax Appeals in its decision: “However, the county board of revision instead of dismissing the complaint, considered and determined the same and fixed the taxable valuation of the *20 property, both as to the land and the improvements thereon, at the same figures indicated in the assessment made by the county auditor. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E.2d 601, 139 Ohio St. 6, 139 Ohio St. (N.S.) 6, 21 Ohio Op. 511, 1941 Ohio LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swetland-co-v-evatt-ohio-1941.