W. S. Land & Cattle Co. v. McBridge

28 N.M. 437
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1923
DocketNo. 2382
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 N.M. 437 (W. S. Land & Cattle Co. v. McBridge) 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
W. S. Land & Cattle Co. v. McBridge, 28 N.M. 437 (N.M. 1923).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

BRATTON J.

The appellants, the W. S. Land & Cattle Company and others, duly returned during the year 1913, in the manner and within the time prescribed by law, to the tax assessor of Colfax county, their respective lands, which aggregated approximately 175,000 acres. The board of county commissioners of that county fixed the actual value of grazing lands, for the purpose of taxation for that year, at $1.80 per acre, and the law then in force requiring such property to be assessed on the basis of one-third of its actual value, the lands in question were valued at 60 cents per acre. No appeal was taken from the assessments in question or the action of said board in so fixing the value of such lands.

Thereafter, and on July 26, 1913, during its regular meeting, the state board of equalization by an order duly and regularly entered in its effort to equalize values throughout the state, raised some properties and reduced others. It increased the value of grazing lands within Colfax county 30 per cent., which fact was duly certified to the tax assessor of said county, who extended the taxes upon all such property on the tax rolls accordingly. After the said rolls had been completed, in the form prescribed by law, and had been delivered to the treasurer of Colfax county for the collection of taxes, the appellants obtained their first actual notice of such increaset valuation. They paid all the taxes due according to their rendition and the valuation fixed by the assessor and the board of county commissioners, but instituted this suit to restrain, by injunction, the collection of the additional taxes caused by such increase in valuation by the state board of equalization. A temporary writ of injunction was granted, but was dissolved after final hearing.

In their complaint appellants fullly pleaded that their lands had been valued for taxation purposes by the state board of equalization, in its order which increased their value 30 per cent., to a sum in excess of their actual value; that they had been assessed higher than other lands of a like class; that grazing lands in Colfax county were valued higher than lands of the same class and kind in other counties of the state; that immediately after they learned of such raise, which was subsequent to the completion of the tax rolls and their delivery to the treasurer for collection of taxes, they presented their complaint to the district attorney of the eighth judicial district with the request that he proceed, as required, by law to obtain relief for them, by presenting the matter to the district court for correction; that said district attorney refused to hear them, and being thus denied a hearing, their property was being taken without due process of law in violation of the constitutional provisions of both this state and the United States.

A denial that appellants’ lands had been excessively valued, or that they were higher than other lands of like class, or that by such order grazing lands in Colfax county were valued higher than lands of the same class and kind in other counties, was interposed. A full hearing was had in which evidence was offered by all parties with regard to the value of the lands involved, as well as grazing lands in Colfax county as a whole. Upon such evidence the trial court made numerous findings of fact, among them being the following:

“That none of the' plaintiffs above named were, under said order of said board of equalization, assessed as to their property disproportionately to other taxpayers, within the county and throughout the state, paying taxes u,pon property of like classes.
“That the value of the property involved in this action, as finally fixed under the order of said board of equalization, is not in excess of the true, actual, and cash value of said property, and that, under the levies made upon said valuations, none of the plaintiffs were and are required to pay taxes upon more than 33 1-3 per centum of the full, true, actual, and cash value of said property as of the 1st day of January, A. D. 1913.”

This is supported by substantial evidence although there was an issue of fact with respect thereto. Under the declared law of this state, such finding will not be disturbed on appeal.

Under tbe law in force during the year 1913 the state board of equalization was required to meet in regular session on the first Monday in July of each year, for the purpose of examining the assessment roll of each county within the state, to ascertain the rate of assessment and the valuation of property therein. It had the power to adjust and equalize each assessment rolls, so that the valuation of property throughout the state for taxation purpose should be of substantial uniformity. This power was derived from section 13, chapter 84, Laws 1913, which is in the following language:

“The state Board of Equalization shall at its said meeting on the first Monday in July, examine the assessment roll of each county of the state, for the purpose of ascertaining the rate of assessment and valuation of property therein, and the board shall have the power * * * to hear and determine any appeals taken as hereinbefore provided, and any other appeals from action of any county board, which may be taken by the state, or by any county, or by not less than ten tax payers of any county acting through a district attorney; and in case of any such appeal the appellant must file with the secretary of said board a complete transcript of the appealed case in time for consideration by said board at said meeting in July.”

The contentions urged by the appellants in this case are very similar to those involved in and determined by this court in the case of South Spring Ranch & Cattle Co. et al. v. State Board of Equalization, 18 N. M. 531, 139 Pac. 159, wherein it was held that such board had the power to increase or decrease values of property without giving actual notice to the person or persons affected thereby; that the statute which fixed the time when such board should meet, and which gave it the power to so increase or decrease values constituted constructive notice to all concerned that such action might be taken. It is further held therein, however, that such constructive notice extended and applied only to legal or lawful action which might be taken, and did not apply or extend to any thing of an illegal or unlawful character which might be done, such as raising the property of a taxpayer to a sum which exceeded its actual value, or increasing its value in such way as to amount to a discrimination against him. It was further held there ,that section 5475, Code 1915, which provides that when property, which has been rendered and valued by the local taxing officials at its full value, is thereafter increased by the state board of equalization without actual notice to the owner thereof, and thereby such owner is injured, he may present his complaint embracing such facts to the district attorney; that if such district attorney is satisfied that an injustice has been done it becomes his duty to present the matter to the district court for correction. This statute is as follows :

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Related

In Re Trigg
121 P.2d 152 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1942)
In Re United Power Co. Taxes for 1937
105 P.2d 741 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1940)
Morris v. State Ex Rel. State Tax Commission
69 P.2d 924 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.M. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-s-land-cattle-co-v-mcbridge-nm-1923.