The assessors appeal from a decision of a majority of the Appellate Tax Board abating as illegal an assessment made by the assessors for the year 1950 upon machinery, poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes of the company. The ground of illegality is failure to assess in accordance with G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 39, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 254, § 36, and as most recently amended by St. 1939, c. 451, § 22. The entire section as amended is printed in the. footnote. 1
The facts essential to an understanding of the issue now
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presented appear in a “Case Stated” filed with the board and are these: On February 10, 1950, the commissioner of corporations and taxation in accordance with § 39 certified to the assessors the value of the property here involved as $3,265,400. On February 16 the assessors appealed this valuation to the board, which nearly twenty-two months later, on December 13, 1951, determined the value of the property to be $6,382,328. Upon appeal to this court the decision of the board fixing the last mentioned value was reversed and the proceeding in which that value was fixed was ordered dismissed as moot for the reason that any decision of the board would then necessarily come so late that the company would lose the right of appeal to the commissioner secured to it by § 73, which it must exercise not later than December 1, 1950.
Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation
v. Assessors
of Springfield,
It is plain that this assessment by the assessors at a valuation determined by themselves was not in accordance with § 39, which provides for an assessment by the assessors “at the value determined by the commissioner or by the appellate tax board.” But the assessors contend that - they were not required to act in conformity with § 39; that their general powers of valuation and assessment of property under § 38 and other sections of c. 59 remained unimpaired notwithstanding the enactment of § 39; that they acted lawfully under their general powers; and that § 39 merely furnished an alternative method of valuation which they *201 were not obliged to adopt and which was permissive only and not mandatory or compulsory.
We are unable to accept the contentions of the assessors.
Section 39 reads, “The valuation at which the machinery, poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes of all telephone and telegraph companies shall be assessed by the assessors of the respective towns where such property is subject to taxation shall be determined annually by the commissioner, subject to appeal to the appellate tax board . . ..” “The assessors shall, in the manner provided by law, assess the machinery, poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes of all telephone and telegraph companies as certified and at the value determined by the commissioner or by the appellate tax board . . .,” with a further provision that such assessment shall be deemed full compliance with the oaths of office of the assessors and full performance of their official duty, except for the requirement of giving information to the commissioner under § 40. It is difficult to see how language could have been framed which would more clearly and categorically impose an absolute obligation upon the assessors. Although undoubtedly in some contexts the word shall can be construed as equivalent to may, its usual and correct signification is mandatory.
McCarty
v.
Boyden,
An examination of the history of § 39 leads to the same conclusion. That section was originally enacted as St. 1915, *202 c. 137, § 1. The tax commissioner in his report for the year ending November 30, 1914, at pages 27-30, had forcefully directed attention to the difficulties involved in the assessing of poles, wires, and underground conduits by local assessors, who in general were unfamiliar with the value of such property, and who were obliged to place values upon fragments of a system which ought to be valued as a whole. He complained that "There has thus grown up in the various cities and towns of the Commonwealth the greatest inequality in standards of valuation for poles, wires and underground conduits. It has been impossible to establish any proper standard of depreciation or to secure adequate consideration of the factors of disuse and abandonment of property. The companies themselves are put to unnecessary inconvenience, and justly complain of the various standards of valuation adopted by the different cities and towns. They find themselves justly irritated where a line of poles and wires is valued at one basis of value per mile in one town and at quite another basis of value in the adjoining town, whereas the property in the two towns is the same in character, in cost of construction and in general condition. ” He strongly recommended the method in use in some other States whereby a State agency valued the system as a whole and certified to the cities and towns the proportion of the whole located within their limits. At the next session of the Legislature after this report the act of 1915 was passed. That act was in the form, common at that time, of an entirely new enactment and not in the form of amendments to existing laws. It therefore had the effect of overriding all previous laws inconsistent with it. It cannot be doubted that the act of 1915 was intended to adopt the recommendation of the tax commissioner with respect to the "poles, wires, and underground conduits, wires and pipes” of telephone and telegraph companies and to take the valuation of such property out of the hands of local boards of assessors and to require them to accept the valuations of the tax commissioner, subject to appeal to the designated board. To hold that this act was intended *203 merely as an alternative to previously existing methods of valuation and as advisory and not mandatory upon local assessors would be to perpetuate the very conditions which both the words of the statute and the circumstances of its enactment show were intended to be corrected.
In so far as there are any decided cases bearing upon the issue they point in the same direction. In
Assessors of Springfield
v.
Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation,
The assessors press upon our attention certain other provisions of statute, particularly, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 38, c. 63, § 55, as appearing in St. 1951, c. 641, § 12, and c. 63, § 68A, as appearing in St. 1947, c. 622, § 4, which they contend indicate that the local assessors still possess power to assess the property here involved at valuations fixed by themselves. We have considered the arguments based on these sections and are not impressed by them. Some of the provisions of these sections antedated the statute of 1915 and were overridden by that statute as to the assessment of the machinery, poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes of telephone and telegraph companies. Others apply generally and still have full scope with relation to other kinds of property or to the poles, wires and *204 underground conduits, wires and pipes of companies other than telephone or telegraph companies. There is nothing in these sections, whether considered separately or together, sufficient to overcome the plain requirements of § 39 in the limited field in which that section operates.
When the questioned assessment was made in August, 1950, the only legal basis for a valuation was that certified by the commissioner. The .assessors had appealed from the commissioner’s valuation, but the Appellate Tax Board had made no decision and never in fact made a binding decision because the decision which was made long after the assessment was reversed by this court, and the proceeding before the board was ordered dismissed.
Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation
v.
Assessors of Springfield,
In our opinion the decision of the majority of the Appellate Tax Board was right, and the tax must be abated in the amount of $283,203.
.So ordered.
Notes
“The valuation at which the machinery, poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes of all 'telephone and telegraph companies shall be assessed by the assessors of the respective towns where such property is subject to taxation shall be determined annually by the commissioner, subject to appeal to the appellate tax board, as hereinafter provided, and shall by him be certified to the assessors on or before March fifteenth. A board of assessors aggrieved by a valuation made by the commissioner under this section may, within ten days after notice of his valuation, apply to said appellate tax board. Said board shall hear and decide the subject matter of such appeal and give notice of its decision to the commissioner and to the assessors; and its decision as to the valuation of the property shall be final and conclusive, except as provided in section seventy-three, relative to abatements. The assessors shall, in the manner provided by law, assess the machinery, poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes of all telephone and telegraph companies as certified and at the value determined by the commissioner or by the appellate tax board, and such assessment by a board of assessors shall be deemed to be a full compliance with the oath of office of each assessor and a full performance of his official duty with relation to the assessment of such property, except as provided in the following section.”
Section 73, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 254, § 44, to which reference is made in § 39, provides that any company aggrieved by the taxes assessed on it relating to any property valued in accordance with § 39 may, on or before December 1 of the year to which the tax relates, apply to the commissioner for an abatement.
The “following section” (§ 40) requires assessors to furnish to the commissioner information in regard to property which by § 39 he is required to value.
