Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Wilcox

85 F.2d 352, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4115
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 1936
DocketNo. 10555
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 85 F.2d 352 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Wilcox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Wilcox, 85 F.2d 352, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4115 (8th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

The Western Union Telegraph Company brought this suit in equity against members and the secretary of the Missouri state tax commission and the state auditor to enjoin the certification to the various counties in the state for taxation purposes of an alleged excessive and discriminatory assessment of the company’s property as of June 1, 1932. Injunction was denied after trial of the issues in the District Court, and the company has appealed. Diversity of citizenship and jurisdictional amount in controversy were shown; also want of adequate remedy at law; and no question is presented here as to the form of the suit or the sufficiency of the petition.

It appears that under the laws of Missouri the state tax commission is charged with the duty of originally assessing for taxation the property of telegraph companies such as the plaintiff on the basis of its true value in money in the same proportion as other property is assessed; said assessment being subject to equalization by the state board of equalization. The telegraph company pleaded that, although the true value of its property within the state did not exceed the sum of $4,300,000, the tax commission, at first tentatively and then, after a hearing and the introduction of evidence, finally assessed its property in Missouri in the sum of $6,556,192, which assessment the state board of equalization, after hearing, refused to reduce. Plaintiff alleged further: “That in valuing the plaintiff’s property and equalizing said assessment, said Tax Commission and Board of Equalization, under the law and in accordance with the settled practice and custom of said Commission and Board, were required to determine the value of plaintiff’s property in the State of Missouri by taking such percentage of the total value of the plaintiff’s property within and without the State of Missouri as the total mileage of the plaintiff’s poles and wires in the State of Missouri bore to the total mileage of the plaintiff’s poles and wires within and without the State of Missouri”; that, “Within the time required by the laws of the State of Missouri, the plaintiff filed * * * a statement, duly subscribed and sworn to, * * * which statement set out the kind of property composing plaintiff’s telegraph system in the State of Missouri * * * and also the number of miles of poles and miles of iron and copper wire in said State * * * ”; “that from the statements filed by the plaintiff, aforesaid, and evidence offered before said Tax Commission, said Commission had before it the facts showing the total property owned by the plaintiff within and without the State of Missouri, including the total mileage of poles and wires within and without the State of Missouri, and the total cost thereof, the average cost per mile of various kinds of property, such cost less depreciation, together with earnings of the plaintiff’s property prior to such assessment, as well as the market value of its outstanding stock and bonds, over a reasonable period of years prior to such assessment”; “that in making and approving the said assessment of $6,556,192.00, the said (Tax) Commission and- Board of Equalization deliberately, intentionally and arbitrarily grossly overassessed the plaintiff’s said property to the extent that the said assessed value was fixed in excess of $4,300,000.00, by deliberately, intentionally and arbitrarily basing said assessed value upon a cost basis alone, in total disregard of the earning power of plaintiff’s said property and the true value in money of its said property; that the valuation of plaintiff’s said property fixed by said Commission and approved by said Board of Equalization is not supported in any manner by any representative method or basis of valuation; that to arrive at any value of said property in excess of $4,300,000.00, said State Tax Commission could only have gróssly overassessed the plaintiff’s property in Missouri or considered valuations of plaintiff’s property outside of the State of Missouri, not [355]*355legally forming a part of plaintiff’s property within said State; that in so valuing the plaintiff’s property, and in basing its valuation upon cost alone, and disregarding the earning power and the market value or true value in money of plaintiff’s said property, the said Commission and Board of Equalization proceeded upon a fundamentally wrong theory of valuation, for all of which said reasons the amount of such valuation in excess of $4,300,000.00 constitutes a fraud against this plaintiff, and deprives and will deprive the plaintiff of its property without due process of law,” “and denies to the plaintiff the equal protection of the laws.”

The plaintiff further alleged “that while intentionally, deliberately and arbitrarily assessing the plaintiff’s property, as aforesaid, as of June 1, 1932, for the taxes for the year 1933, grossly in excess of its true value, as aforesaid, and upon such fundamentally erroneous basis of valuation, the said State Tax Commission and State Board of Equalization deliberately, intentionally and arbitrarily fixed, approved and equalized the assessment of all other property in the State of Missouri, for the same year, in the same class for the purpose of taxation, at not to exceed eighty per cent, of its true value in money; that such action by said taxing authorities was and is a discrimination against, and a fraud upon, the plaintiff * * * ” And more particularly it was alleged that real estate and personal property were underassessed at 65 per cent, of true value and that flat reductions were made in the assessment of real and personal property, especially upon flat rates of value for livestock on account of the financial depression since 1929, and that all such underassessment has been so open and notorious that the same has developed into a well-established practice and custom of underassessment.

These claims were put in issue by the answer of the defendants, and on the trial of the case-a member of the state tax commission, Mr. A. J. Murphy, who had participated in making the assessment complained of, testified as a witness for the defendants, and narrated in detail how the assessment was arrived at and made by the board. The contentions argued in this court can be more readily introduced by a consideration of Mr. Murphy’s account of the making of the assessment.

Mr. Murphy said that the sworn return of their properties to the tax commission was supposed to be filed by the public utilities before the end of the year (in this case 1932), and the board passes on it in the spring of the following year or sometime in the summer. In its return for the tax year in question the company omitted to report certain properties amounting to around $800,000 which it had always included in the reports in previous years,' and it also claimed greatly reduced values, so that upon the face of its return its assessment would be much less than it had been. Accordingly, a study was made by Mr. Murphy, not only of the returns made by the company to the tax authorities in Missouri, but of its reports to the Interstate Commerce Commission, the . Missouri Public Service Commission, and to stockholders. Mr. Murphy prepared tables showing what the assessments of the Western Union property had been in the state of Missouri over a number of years. The assessments from 1921 to 1931 were as follows:

1921 $5,470,540.00

1922 5.724.447.00

1923 5.499.156.00

1924 5.865.121.00

1925 5.851.999.00

1926 5.840.633.00

1927 5.853.930.00

1928 5.918.248.00

1929 5.893.139.00

1930 5.955.751.00

1931 5.955.653.00

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Related

Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. State Board of Equalization
191 Cal. App. 3d 938 (California Court of Appeal, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 F.2d 352, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-wilcox-ca8-1936.