132 Ky. 588 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Two questions are involved upon this appeal: First, the right of one who is proceeded against by an auditor ’s agent to require the agent to verify his statement; and, second, the right of the alleged delinquent to require that the auditor’s agent shall make his statement so describe the property sought to he assessed that it can he identified.
Under the provision of section 4260 of the Kentucky Statutes (Compilation of 1909), which is as follows: “It shall he the duty of the revenue agent, and the sheriff in each county shall have like power and authority as the revenue agent for said county, to cause to he listed for taxation all property omitted hy the assessor, hoard of supervisors, hoard of valuation and assessment or railroad commission, for any year or years. The officer proposing to have the property assessed
“Plaintiff, commonwealth of Kentucky, by Holland U Anderson, duly appointed, qualified and acting revenue agent for the state at large, states that the defendant, Henry Glover, was on September 1, 1907, a resident of Jefferson county, Kentucky. Plaintiff states that the said defendant on September -1, 1907, was the owner of the following personal property, to wit: Cash on hand $600; cash on deposit in the bank $6,600; secured notes, $38,000; including lien notes, assigned to him and secured by mortgage on land in Woodford county $25,000, unsecured notes, $3,000; two hundred and sixty-five shares of stock in foreign corporations not paying taxes on all their property to the state of Kentucky, $25,000; fifteen bonds, $14,000; household effects, $2,000; library, $500; pictures, $500; jewelry, $250; all of which property was subject to assessment for state and county purposes for the year 1908, and no part of which was assessed by the assessor or any other assessing officer of the state or this county, at or on the date aforesaid, or for the year named. Plaintiff states that the assessment of said property at and on the date above mentioned was omitted from taxation and is yet omitted, and that
Thereafter the agent filed the following amended “ statement: ’ ’
“The plaintiff, commonwealth of Kentucky, by Holland L. Andeson, duly appointed, qualified, and acting revenue agent for the state at large, for amendment to its original statement and in order to make same more specific, definite, and certain, and to conform with the order of this court, states: That on September 1, 1907, the defendant, Henry Glover, was the owner of the following personal property, not set forth in the original statement, in such a specific way as to conform with the rule of this court: Accounts, $8,000; 200 shares of foreign railway stock, consisting of Permnyl*597 vania, Reading, Atchison, Illinois Central, Union Pacific, Southern Pacific, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Southern Railway, Baltimore & Ohio, Northern Pacific, $16,000; three hundred and fifty shares of foreign' industrial stock not paying taxes on same to the state of Kentucky, to wit, American Oar & Foundry Stock, Amalgamated Copper, American Locomotive, American Smelting & Refining, American Sugar Refining. Company, American Tobacco Company, Pacific Mail, People’s Cas, Pullman Palace Car, Virginia-Carolina Chemical, Pressed Steel Oar, Westinghouse Electric and Western; Union, $25,000; twenty-five traction bonds, to wit, Rochester, St. Louis United Railway, Springfield, Louisville Railway, New Orleans Railway & Light, Pascagoula Street Railway, Seattle Electric, $25,000; twelve city of Louisville bonds, eight Louisville water bonds, twenty railroad bonds, to wit, Pennsylvania, Reading, Atchison; Illinois Central, Union Pacific, Southern Railway, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Southern Pacific^ Baltimore & Ohio, and Northern Pacific, $40,000.; eighteen industrial bonds of .local corporations organized under the laws of the state of Kentucky, $18,000‘; twenty-eight industrial bonds of foreign corporations, to wit, American Car & Foundry, Amalgamated Copper, American Locomotive, American Smelting & Refining, American Sugar Refining Comyany, American Tobacco Company, Pacific Mlail, People’s Gras, Pullman Palace Car, Virginia-Carolina Chemical, Pressed Steel Car, Westinghouse Electric, and Western Union, $28,000. Wherefore the plaintiff prays as in its original statement heretofore filed.”
Appellee first moved that the Auditor’s agent be required to verify his statement. This motion was
The proceeding to assess this omitted property is ini every sense a proceeding on behalf of the commonwealth, and the commonwealth is in each instance the real party in interest. This proceeding, as was expressly decided in the case of Commonwealth, etc., v. Ryan’s Ex’rs, 104 S. W. 727, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 1070, is neither an action nor a special proceeding, as defined by the Code, but is simply a supplemental means
This board likewise has power to increase or decrease the valuation fixed by the assessor upon any property which, in their opinion, is valued too low or too high, and, in cases where this is done, the party affected is likewise notified to appear and show cause why the valuation of his property should not be increased or decreased. Formerly any property which the vigilance of the assessing officer and the tax supervisors .failed to discover went untaxed unless the sheriff of the county should thereafter discover same and cause it to be listed in the manner pointed out in the statutes, but, as the sheriff received practically no compensation for this- character of service, he usually made no effort to discover property that had not been listed. It was apparent that the assessor, in the hurry with which he had to proceed in order to complete his work within the time fixed, necessarily failed to list for taxation a great deal of property, and the county board of supervisors within the limited time
This principle is often recognized in proceedings under the statute regulating appeals from the probate ■of wills, proceedings in the county court for the purpose of opening, closing or altering roads, and in applications for license. In this class of cases it has been invariably held that the ends of the law are ■satisfied only by compliance with the provisions of the statute. We see no reason for not applying this principle to the statute under consideration. As above •stated, this statute is a full, perfect, and complete law of the subject with which it deals, and directs in detail each of the successive steps that must be taken by the officers of the state in order to! list omitted property and collect the taxes that may be found to-be due thereon. In the discharge of his duties as set .forth in this- statute, the revenue agent acts in a purely ministerial capacity. His duties are to discover such property of the taxpayer as he has failed
As above stated, this provision was inserted in the law for the purpose of preventing revenue agents from proceeding against citizens without reasonable grounds for believing that they had omitted certain of their property. Under the provisions of this act, two things must appear before the revenue agent can proceed with hope of success: First, that the taxpayer owns certain property; and, second, that he has failed to list it. Now, if the agent is not able to describe the-property, his information in regard thereto' must be very meager, and such information is in the language of the statute too1 meager to authorize even a default
As to the items of the “statement” which the trial judge rejected, we deem it but necessary to state that, as the descriptions wholly failed to meet the requirements of the statute, the trial judge correctly held that they were insufficient. We are at a loss to understand how the agent could charge that appellee was the owner of accounts of a stated value, and not be able to state from whom such accounts were due and owing, and the amount owing by each. The fact that he refused to so state was evidence that he could not do so, and was simply pursuing the “dragnet” policy which the Legislature sought to condemn by the enactment of the very law under which appellant was proceeding. The same is true as to the items in the “statement” of “notes, secured and unsecured.” The items wherein it is sought to charge appellee with the ownership of 200 shares of stock in foreign railways, consisting of Pennsylvania, Reading, Atchison, Illinois Central, Union Pacific, Southern Pacific, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Baltimore & Ohio, and Northern Pacific, of the value of $16,000, and 350 shares in foreign industrial corporations, consisting of American Oar & Foundry Stock, Amalgamated Copper, American Locomotive, American •Smelting and Refining, American Sugar, American
The trial judge having entertained and expressed these views, his judgment is affirmed.