Wahkonsa Investment Co. v. City of Ft. Dodge

125 Iowa 148
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 13, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 125 Iowa 148 (Wahkonsa Investment Co. v. City of Ft. Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wahkonsa Investment Co. v. City of Ft. Dodge, 125 Iowa 148 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Deemer, C. J.

Plaintiff is a loan and trust company doing business in the city of Ft. Dodge, with a capital stock of $50,000, divided into 400 shares, of the par value of $125, but of the actual value of $150 each. In- the year 1901 the then assessor called upon plaintiff’s secretary, and presented [150]*150to bim a blank to be filled ont for tbe purposes of - assessment. Pursuant to this request the secretary filled out the blank, which showed the following:.

“ ASSETS.
Amount of money on hand or in transit......$ 425 03
Amount of credits, consisting of bills receivable. 59,486 31
Total assets........................$59,911 37
“ LIABILITIES.
Amount of all deposits made with us by others. .$59,911 37
“ The amount of capital stock of said corporation is $50,000.00. The amount of surplus of said corporation is $32.05. The amount of undivided earnings of said corporation, none. The amount of the capital of said corporation actually invested in real estate is $50,000.00.”

The assessor also obtained the last report made by the secretary to the directors of his company, which made the following showing:

Eesources —
Loans.......'......................$111,‡00 23
Eeal Estate........................ 1,659 64
Cash on hand....................... 425 .03
$113,784 90
Liabilities —
$ 50,000 00 Capital stock .
59,911 37 Deposits'....
641 55 Expenses paid
' 3,232 05 Net Gain . . . .
$113,784 97

He also made some investigation as to the number of mortgages standing in plaintiff’s- name, as disclosed by the county records. After obtaining this information, he made no assessment against the plaintiff, but presented the matter [151]*151to the defendant as a hoard of review, with nothing but the name of the plaintiff company upon his hooks; the amount and character of the assessment to be made, if any, being left blank. He also returned to the board the statement which had been made to him by the secretary, and also presented a copy of the secretary’s report to his company. The .defendant, sitting as a board of review, proposed to raise, or, rather, to assess, the plaintiff company on moneys and credits to the amount of $59,911.3'7; being the exact amount of its assets as shown by the statement made to the assessor. Plaintiff appeared by counsel and objected to this assessment, the record made by the secretary for the board reciting the following: “Objected to as illegal, exorbitant, unjust, and not authorized by the assessment laws of the State.” There is some conflict in the evidence, as to just what these objections in fact were, as they were orally pronounced; and the clerk, as he says, did no more than record the substance thereof. We are satisfied that this attorney objected to assessing anything against his company for moneys- and credits, claiming that the board could not legally do- so. We are also satisfied that some member _of the board asked him as to how it should be assessed, and that he finally answered that they co-uld find that out in court. Much was said between this attorney and the various members of the board, and it is doubtful if either side was in a strictly judicial frame of mind at the time the objections were heard. At a subsequent meeting of the board this assessment of moneys and credits was approved. The assessor was present at the time, but instead of entering this assessment, or order for assessment, on his books as against or upon “ moneys and credits,” he entered it as upon “ corporation, stock.” He does not claim that he had any authority for so doing, and there is no doubt that the only assessment made by the board was upon moneys and credits. The district court, when the matter came before it on appeal, evidently changed this assessment to “ corporation stock,” deducted the value of [152]*152real estate actually owned by the company from the value of tbe stock, and ordered an assessment as heretofore stated. It not only changed the amount of the assessment, but placed it upon a different, kind of property from that ordered by the board of review.

1. Loan and trust companies: taxation. The first point made by appellant is that it could not be assessed on moneys and credits, and that the action of the board was therefore illegal and void. There is no doubt that plaintiff is a loan and trust company — indeed, that is practically conceded — and the primary question is, may it be assessed on moneys and credits ? Section 1323 of the Code provides, in substance, that “ loan and trust companies shall be assessed upon the value of corporation stock, and in arriving at the value of such stock, the amount of their capital actually invested in real estate owned by them shall be deducted from the value of such shares, and such real estate shall be assessed as other real estate, and the property of such corporation shall not be otherwise assessed.” As the statute provides a method for the assessment of plaintiff’s property, that method is exclusive. There can be no doubt of this where, as here, the statute expressly provides that the property of such corporation shall not be otherwise assessed. Layman v. Iowa Co., 123 Iowa, 591.

2. Assessment: objection; appeal. II. Appellee nds, however, that the objections made by plaintiff befo he board of review were not sufficient to raise the point nst determined. Section 1313 of the Code provides, in substance, that any person whose assessment has been raised, or whose property has been' added to the assessment rolls, shall, if aggrieved thereby, make oral or written complaint thereof to the board of review, which shall consist simply of a statement of the errors complained of, with such facts as may lead to their correction. As has been observed, the complaint in this case was oral, and there- is some dispute as to the. exact purport thereof. There is no doubt, however, that [153]*153the hoard understood plaintiff was contending that it was not assessable on moneys and credits, and that such assessment was without authority of law. For some reason — the exact cause being a ’ matter in dispute — the board w'as not' informed by plaintiff as to how it thought it should be assessed, but we are not sure that plaintiff was bound to furnish this information. As said in Brown v. Town of Grand Junction, 75 Iowa., 488: “ He [it] was not required to show that it did not have other property upon which he [it] was liable to taxation.” Referring to such complaint, we said in Burns v. McNally, 90 Iowa, 436: “-It- will be observed that the law does not limit the right of appeal in such cases from a judgment or order of the board. Nor does it require any particular form of objection to be made by the aggrieved party. He must appear, and if, when he so appears before the board of equalization, he, in any form, 'makes his grievance known to the board, it is sufficient to give him the right to appeal from its action, if it be unfavorable to him. If his grievance is understood by. the board, it matters not as to the manner in which he presents his case.

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Bluebook (online)
125 Iowa 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wahkonsa-investment-co-v-city-of-ft-dodge-iowa-1904.