Yuma County v. Arizona Edison Co.

180 P.2d 868, 65 Ariz. 332, 1947 Ariz. LEXIS 161
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1947
DocketNo. 4785.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 180 P.2d 868 (Yuma County v. Arizona Edison Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yuma County v. Arizona Edison Co., 180 P.2d 868, 65 Ariz. 332, 1947 Ariz. LEXIS 161 (Ark. 1947).

Opinion

UDALL, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment voiding for want of jurisdiction an order of the State Board of Equalization increasing the valuation, for taxation purposes, of the electric, gas and water plants of the Arizona Edison Company in Yuma County. For convenience’ sake this taxpayer, plaintiff in the court below, will be referred to as the Company, and the State Board of Equalization, one of the defendants in the lower court and an appellant here, as the Equalization Board.

A resume of the "facts will make more understandable the legal problems involved. For the year 1943 the Yuma *334 County Assessor placed on its tax rolls three utilities belonging to the Company, as follows, viz.:

Electric plant and distribution system ......*................ $215,130

Gas holders, mains and services.. $ 95,140

Water plant, mains, services and meters ...................... $160,150

These items total $470,420. The County Board of Equalization made no changes in this assessment. By statute, Sec. 73-108, A.C.A.1939, the State Tax Commission is created a State Board of Equalization and is required to meet on the first Monday in August, and it must complete its functions as an equalization board by the second Monday in August as upon the latter date, after having determined the final valuations for the state and each county thereof, it sets the state tax rate for the ensuing year (Sec. 73-109). On Monday, August 2, 1943, this Board met for the purpose of equalizing the valuation and assessment of all property throughout the State of Arizona. On Tuesday August 3d, the Board proposed a number of increases including a net raise of $1,035,000 on utility properties owned by the Arizona Edison Company and situated in four different counties in Arizona.. The Company’s three Yuma County utilities were, as a part of this total, given a proposed blanket raise of $200,000 by increasing -their assessed valuation from $470,420 to $670,420. A telegram dated August 3, 1943, advising in detail as to all the proposed increases was sent to the Company at its home office in Douglas, Arizona, and was received by them the following morning. On August 4th, the Equalization Board sent a letter of the same tenor by registered mail and similarly addressed, which was received by the Company in Douglas at 8:30 a. m. on Friday. Both the telegram and the letter directed the.Company to show cause on that same Friday, August 6th, at 1:30 p. m., why such proposed increases should not be sustained. At the appointed hour, Philip B. Shaw, President of the Company, together with attorneys, made a special appearance before the Equalization Board protesting the Board’s jurisdiction to proceed with a hearing on such short notice. They also filed a written protest to the proposed increases. No evidence was submitted and, as a matter of fact, the entire proceedings cover but two pages of the reporter’s transcript. On August 7, 1943, the Equalization Board by appropriate resolution denied the protest of the Company and sustained all of its proposed increases-The Board also directed that the increases be transmitted to the respective boards of supervisors with instructions to change the tax rolls in accordance therewith. No appeal was taken by the Company from this order of the Equalization Board increasing the assessed valuations of the Company’s properties, though the new section 73-110 now expressly gives an aggrieved taxpayer this right.

*335 The Company, on November 1, 1943, paid under written protest the first installment (one half) of the taxes levied against all of its properties in Yuma County. Then, on November 9, 1943, it brought the instant suit, doubtless under the provisions of Sec. 73-841, asking that the order of the Equalization Board made August 7, 1943, increasing the assessed valuations of its properties, be adjudged and decreed invalid, void and of no effect. Further, it prayed for judgment against the defendants Yuma County and its Treasurer for $2,681.49, with interest, being the excess amount the Company had been required to pay by reason of the $200,000 increased assessment of its properties.

The cause was submitted to the trial court upon an agreed statement of facts and, by stipulation, the issues to be tried were carefully limited to these three propositions: (1) No proper notice was given to the Company of the hearing at which the increases complained of were made. (2) No hearing such as required by Sec. 73-108 was had. (3) The order which was made by the Equalization Board was so indefinite and uncertain as to invalidate the increased assessment. The trial court found for the Company and entered judgment as prayed for in its complaint. From this judgment the defendants have appealed to this Court. “While the assignments of error detail the general proposition that the judgment of the court is contrary to law and not sustained bv the evidence, we believe that this appeal may well be determined upon the two jurisdictional propositions of the Company (1 and 3, supra), viz.: the sufficiency of notice and the indefiniteness and uncertainty of the order for increase made by the Board.

Sec. 73-108 in setting out the powers and duties of the State Equalization Board provides in part that: “ * * * The board may require any county board of supervisors, or clerk thereof, to furnish statements showing the assessment of the property of any person within the county. It shall consider and equalize such assessments and, after hearing, may increase the assessment of any person above the amount returned by the county board of equalization, when said assessment shall appear to be too low, first giving notice by registered letter to such person of its intentions so to do, and of the time and place of hearing (Emphasis ours.)

The Company claims that under the facts previously recited, neither proper notice nor an adequate hearing was afforded them and, therefore, these being mandatory provisions of the statute and conditions precedent to any valid order of the State Equalization Board increasing the assessment of an individual taxpayer, the Board’s action in question was without jurisdiction and, therefore, a nullity. It was upon these bases that the learned judge in the court below found for the Company. And it is clear that this finding is well supported in law, for although notice requirements are *336 liberally construed where the statute either makes' no provision for notice or merely provides generally that notice shall be given, still the rule is more stringent where the statute details the method of giving notice; “ * * * if the statute provides for notice to be given, (as does 73-108 quoted in part above) the notice which is prescribed must be given, and the failure to do so will render any order of the board void.” 61 C.J., Taxation, sec. 973. (Emphasis supplied.) See also 39 Am.Jur., Notice, sec. 9, p. 237; Copper Queen Consol. Min. Co. v. Board, 7 Ariz. 364, 65 P. 149; People ex rel. Bracher v. Orvis, 301 Ill. 350, 133 N.E. 787, 24 A.L.R. 331; Beveridge v. Baer, 59 S. D. 563, 241 N.W. 727, 84 A.L.R. 197.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Simkus v. Cavalry Portfolio Services, LLC
12 F. Supp. 3d 1103 (N.D. Illinois, 2014)
Northern Arizona Gas Service, Inc. v. Petrolane Transport, Inc.
702 P.2d 696 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1984)
Garcia v. Industrial Com'n of Arizona
685 P.2d 1336 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1984)
Carefree Improvement Ass'n v. City of Scottsdale
649 P.2d 985 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1982)
LeDesma v. Pioneer National Title Insurance
629 P.2d 1007 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1981)
Ledesma v. PIONEER NAT. TITLE INS. CO.
629 P.2d 1007 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1981)
Thomas v. Freeman Wrecking Co., Inc.
388 So. 2d 968 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1980)
Smith v. Smith
571 P.2d 1045 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1977)
Bevans ex rel. Bevans
13 V.I. 251 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 1977)
Smith v. D. R. G., Inc.
331 N.E.2d 614 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1975)
Lewis v. Ehrlich
513 P.2d 153 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1973)
Polansky v. Richardson
351 F. Supp. 1066 (E.D. New York, 1972)
In Re the Appeal of Harris
159 S.E.2d 539 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1968)
Stuart v. Winslow Elementary School District No. 1
414 P.2d 976 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1966)
Board of Medical Examiners v. Schutzbank
383 P.2d 192 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1963)
Davidson v. Wee
379 P.2d 744 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1963)
Maestro Music, Inc. v. Rudolph Wurlitzer Company
354 P.2d 266 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1960)
Hart v. Bayless Investment & Trading Company
346 P.2d 1101 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 P.2d 868, 65 Ariz. 332, 1947 Ariz. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yuma-county-v-arizona-edison-co-ariz-1947.