Wisconsin Gas & Electric Co. v. Tax Commission

266 N.W. 186, 221 Wis. 487, 1936 Wisc. LEXIS 380
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 266 N.W. 186 (Wisconsin Gas & Electric Co. v. Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wisconsin Gas & Electric Co. v. Tax Commission, 266 N.W. 186, 221 Wis. 487, 1936 Wisc. LEXIS 380 (Wis. 1936).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed March 31, 1936:

Wicichem, J.

It is very difficult within the compass of a useful judicial opinion to state the facts and adequately discuss the various questions presented to the court upon this appeal. Some idea of the difficulty will be had when it is stated that the several volumes of the printed case total one thousand seven hundred fifty-five pages and that there are six hundred eighty-seven pages of briefs.

The plaintiffs are public utility companies, and their property is assessed under ch. 76, Stats., by the Tax Commission. Sec. 76.07 (1), Stats. 1931, requires the Tax Commission on or before the 1st day of July in each year, “according to' their best knowledge and judgment,” to “ascertain and determine the full market value of the property of each company within the state.” Sec. 76.07 (2) provides :

“The value of the property of each of said companies for assessment shall be made on the same basis and for the same period of time, as near as may be, as the value of the general property of the state is ascertained and determined.”

Sec. 76.03 prescribes in sub. (1) :

“The property, both real and personal, including all rights, franchises and privileges used in and necessary to the prosecution of the business of any company enumerated in sec. 76.02 [491]*491shall be deemed personal property for the purposes of taxation, and shall be valued and assessed together as a unit.”

Sec. 76.08, Stats. 1931, provides, in substance, that after the assessments have been determined as provided in sec. 76.07, the commission shall continue in session from day to day for such period as may be necessary, not later than the 1st of September, for the purposes of reviewing the valuation and assessment theretofore made. It is further provided that any company whose property has been assessed shall have the right to appeal and to be heard as to the assessment of the property of such company. The commission, on such an application or on its own motion, may correct the assessment in such a manner “as will, in its judgment, make the valuation thereof just and relatively equal with the valuation of the general property of the state.”

Having completed the assessment of utilities in accordance with the directions of ch. 76, the Tax Commission then computes the rate of taxation applicable thereto by applying an equalization process prescribed by secs. 76.10 and 76.12, Stats. Since no questions applicable to this equalization process are here involved, it is unnecessary to do more than state that the use of this process results in a lower tax rate applicable to utilities than the average local rate throughout the state, for the reason that local assessments are on the average somewhat lower than the full value of the property assessed. Thus,' this case does not involve an examination or inquiry into the assessment of other properties within the state for purposes of comparison as would be the case if the rate were to vary according to the assessment.

Sec. 76.18, Stats. 1931, provides:

“The proceedings of the commission shall be presumed to be regular and the determination of the commission shall not be impaired, vitiated or set aside upon any grounds not affecting the substantial justice of the tax. ...”

[492]*492Sec. 76.19, Stats. 1931, prohibits the issuing of any injunction, order, or writ to restrain payment or collection of taxes unless the company seeking this relief shall pay to the state treasurer for the use of the state “the amount of taxes which the court shall determine primarily to be justly and equitably due from such company.”

Sec. 76.20, Stats. 1931,.provides :

“Any company defined in sec. 76.02 claiming to be aggrieved by the levy of a tax .upon its property, and alleging facts showing substantial injustice in the determination of the commission, may within six months from the payment of the tax, not thereafter, bring and maintain an action against the state in the circuit court of the state to recover such part of the tax as shall exceed the amount the company should have paid. ...”

In this case, each plaintiff asked for a primary determination of the amount of tax pursuant to sec. 76.19, Stats. 1931, and a permanent injunction restraining defendants from levying or collecting any sums in excess of that amount, but thereafter stipulated, without prejudice to its rights, to allow the trial court to enter a temporary order for the full amount of the tax upon the assessment complained of. This amount was thereafter paid into the state treasury. Thus, the question is whether plaintiffs established facts upon the trial showing substantial injustice in the determination of the Tax Commission. The combined effect of secs. 76.19 and 76.20, is to require the circuit court to determine primarily the amount of tax justly and equitably due from each company, and to give judgment for the plaintiffs for any excess over this amount if substantial injustice in the determination of the Tax Commission is found. Since the plaintiffs object to what they claim is an overassessment of the value of their property, and since, after an examination de novo of the facts relative to plaintiffs’ property, the trial court has sustained the assessment, the question before this court is whether there [493]*493is evidence to sustain the findings of the trial court and the presumptively valid assessment by the Tax Commission.

At the outset, it should be clearly understood that the calls of the statute are for the application to the facts by the commission of “their best knowledge and judgment.” Applying such knowledge and judgment, the commission is required to find the full market value of the property of plaintiffs. No other standards are set by the statute, no particular method or basis of assessment or appraisal is specified or preferred to any other, and the determination of the commission is not required to be arrived at by the application of any set formula or method.

In Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. State, 128 Wis. 553, 108 N. W. 557, a case involving the ad valorem'assessment of a railroad company, the court stated :

“To our minds the only reasonable inference is that the board, from all the evidence before it, performed the duty that it was required to perform. . . . The board considered the report of the person who, as before suggested, performed the feat of separating and valuing the physical property, the market price as to each company of its bonds and stocks for a period of five years, reports of the engineers of the railway companies as to the physical property, the gross and net earnings of each company, both in the whole and in this state, and other elements, and fixed the value of the entire property of each company in this state at its due proportion of the value of the entire system, not giving to any particular factor of the evidence any particular weight separate from the other, nor placing any particular value upon any particular element of the property separate from the rest. We see no infirmity in that in any respect.”

In State v. Pullman Co. 178 Wis. 240, 189 N. W. 543, also dealing with ad valorem assessment of a public service corporation, the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 186, 221 Wis. 487, 1936 Wisc. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisconsin-gas-electric-co-v-tax-commission-wis-1936.