71 P. 946 | Ariz. | 1903
This is an appeal from a decree entered by the district court in Cochise County enjoining the county of Cochise and M. D. Scribner, treasurer and ex officio tax-collector of said county, from collecting or attempting to collect from the appellee, the Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Company, taxes levied for the year 1901, in excess of a specific sum found to be due from the appellee for that year.
It was alleged in the complaint that the county assessor of said county listed for the year 1901' all the property of the Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Company owned by it on the first Monday of February, 1901, and assessed the same at sums aggregating $368,139.76; that said list included sixty-five patented mining claims, improvements consisting of hoisting works, pumping and other machinery on the same, a stock of merchandise, surveyor’s instruments, an assay outfit, and twenty work horses; that at its July meeting the board of equalization, after due notice, raised and added to the assessment of said property, as made by said assessor, as follows; The sum of $3,150,000 was added to the valuation of the patented mines and the improvements thereon. The sum of $203,520 was added to the valuation of the stock of merchandise. The sum of $375 was added to the valuation of the surveyor’s instruments. The sum of $400 was added to the valuation of the horses. The sum of $600 was added to the valuation of the assaying outfit. That this made a total
The complaint further averred that for many years it had been the custom in Cochise County to list patented mining claims as land, and to assess the same at the uniform valuation of five dollars per acre; that the assessment-roll of said county for the year 1901 included three hundred and twenty-two patented mining claims, which were assessed at the total valuation of $3,676,831; that notwithstanding the fact that many of these patented mining claims not owned by the plaintiff were of great value, and had yielded large returns during the preceding year, which facts were well known to the board of equalization, yet said board, fraudulently, and for the purpose of placing an unfair and undue burden upon the plaintiff, raised the valuation of the patented mining-claims owned by it, to the exclusion of other like property in the county, so that, of the total valuation placed upon the said three hundred and twenty-two patented mining claims, the plaintiff was assessed upon the claims owned by it the sum of $3,204,000; that the said board in making the said assessment made no investigation into, and heard no evidence concerning, the cash value of said mining claims, and made no determination or finding thereof, but acted in the premises arbitrarily, and with the intent to wrong, defraud, and oppress the plaintiff, and to discriminate against it.
Plaintiff further alleged, “upon information and belief,” that the valuation placed by the said board upon its said patented mining claims was, “according to any just known method of arriving at the cash value of such property, grossly excessive. ’ ’
It was further alleged in the complaint that there were within Cochise County during the year 1901 several thousand unpatented mining claims, which had not been assessed and had not been included in the tax-list or the assessment-roll for said year; that the board of equalization, at the time
The complaint further alleged that the board of supervisors fraudulently, and with the unlawful design of forcing the plaintiff to pay an unequal and unfair portion of the taxes of the county for the year 1901, arbitrarily and without inquiry in the matter, and without any evidence before them, raised the assessment on the hoisting Avorks and improvements upon said patented mines in the amount of sixty thousand dollars in excess of the full cash value of said property.
With regard to the assessment of the stock of merchandise, the complaint charged that the board of equalization, in equalizing the taxation for the year 1901, adopted the general rule of assessing such property at seventy-five per cent of the invoice price thereof; that the superintendent of the plaintiff company informed the board that the invoice price of all the merchandise owned by it on the first Monday of February, 1901, was about two hundred and twenty thousand dollars, and offered to produce proof thereof, but, notwithstanding such avowal and proffer of proof, the board of equalization assessed such merchandise in the full sum of $293,875.
It was further alleged that the plaintiff, before filing its complaint, tendered to the tax-collector of said county the full amount of taxes which it deemed were due, at the rate fixed by the superAdsors of said county for the year 1901, but that the said tax-collector refused to accept the same.
The plaintiff prayed that the county of Cochise, and the tax-collector of said county, be enjoined and restrained from collecting or attempting to collect from the plaintiff, for taxes for the year 1901, any sum in excess of that tendered by it,—to wit, the sum of $14,133.12. The defendants filed a general and certain special demurrers to the complaint, and
The court found that the sum of $3,150,000, being the valuation placed upon the patented mines of plaintiff and the hoist and other improvements on the patented claim known as the “Holbrook Mine,!’ was wrongfully added by the board of equalization to the assessed valuation of the plaintiff’s property for the year 1901, in that the action of the board in thus adding to the valuation of said property was not based upon any information or evidence had or obtained by said board, but was taken arbitrarily and capriciously, and for the purpose of imposing on the plaintiff an unjust measure of the burden of taxation.
The court further found that the action of the board in adding to the assessed valuation of the remaining property of the plaintiff was based upon information and evidence, and'was a bona fide decision of the questions before said board for consideration.
A decree was entered restraining defendants from collecting or attempting to collect the taxes assessed against plaintiff upon the $3,150,000 found to have been wrongfully added to the valuation of its property, upon the condition that plaintiff pay the taxes found to be justly and equitably due and owing by plaintiff for the year 1901. From this judgment the defendants have appealed.
The correctness of the court’s ruling upon the general demurrer presents the first question for our determination. The cause of action accrued and the complaint was filed before the Eevised Statutes of 1901 took effect. Prior to the revision of 1901, the statutes gave no right of appeal from the action of the board of equalization, nor was any other legal remedy afforded by the statutes for the correction of an illegal or fraudulent assessment of property. No other remedy than that which equity afforded was therefore available to the plaintiff for the redress of the wrongs complained of. The limitation upon the powers of a court of equity in the matter of restraining the collection of taxes has been settled for this court in the State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S. 575, 23
Does the complaint present a case under any recognized head of equitable jurisdiction? An analysis of the complaint will disclose that the purpose of the pleader was to charge the board of equalization, in adding to and increasing the valuation of plaintiff’s property for the year 1901, with fraud: (1) In that the said board arbitrarily and capriciously, and with the intent to wrong, defraud, and oppress the plaintiff and to discriminate against it, raised the valuation of its property, without any investigation, and without any evidence as to the cash value of the property assessed; and (2) that the said board of equalization, for the purpose of placing an unfair and undue burden upon the plaintiff, contrary to the custom theretofore prevailing in the county of Cochise and in the territory of assessing patented mines as 'real estate at five dollars per acre, and notwithstanding that there were a large number of patented mines in said county (not included among those assessed to plaintiff) which were of great value, and known to be such by said board of equalization, the latter, without evidence and without investigation, arbitrarily and capriciously added to the valuation of plaintiff’s patented mines in the sum aggregating $3,150,000; and, further, that plaintiff, in thus being made to pay taxes upon its patented mines, was discriminated against, and made to pay an unjust and unequal burden of taxes, for the further reason that there were within the county of Cochise, at the time the said board raised the valuation of plaintiff’s property, a large number of unpatented mining claims of great value which have not been listed by the assessor of the county nor required to be listed by said board of equalization, although said board had full knowledge of the existence of said unpatented mining claims, and that they -were of great value. It is a general rule of pleading that, in alleging fraud, the facts which constitute such fraud must be stated.
The charge in the complaint that the board of equalization did, without inquiry or evidence, arbitrarily raise the assessment of plaintiff’s property, and that they did this with the design and purpose of forcing plaintiff to pay an unequal and an unfair portion of taxes, without the additional charge of excessive valuation, is an insufficient allegation of legal fraud. The allegation with reference to the assessment of the improvements upon the plaintiff’s mines does, in effect, charge overvaluation as to such improvements. The allegations relating to the assessment of the patented mines are open to the criticism that they do not unequivocally state that there was, in fact, an overvaluation of these by the board of equalization. The same is true regarding the allegation relating to the assessment of the stock of merchandise. Plaintiff alleged that, “upon information and belief,” the valuation placed by the board of equalization upon the patented mines of plaintiff was, “according to any just known method of arriving at the full cash value of such property, grossly excessive.” Why the plaintiff should state in this connection “upon information and belief” does not appear. It is reasonable to suppose that it, better than any one else, would know whether its property was excessively valued by the assessment. Then, again, the phrase “according to any just known method of arriving at the full cash value of such property” is indefinite. The revenue act provides that “all taxable property must be assessed at its full • cash value. ’ ’ The term “cash value” is defined by the act to mean “the amount at which the property would be taken in payment of a just debt due from a solvent debtor.” The pleader in this instance may have had in mind another method of arriving at the value of property for the purposes of taxation than that pointed out by the statute. These defects in the pleading were not made a ground of special demurrer, and, as there was a positive allegation of overvaluation as to a part of the property affected by the action of the board of equalization, the complaint must be held good upon the general demurrer.
This court has held that both patented and unpatented mining claims are subject to taxation; that patented claims are subject to taxation as real estate, and unpatented mining claims as personal property; and that both classes should be assessed upon the basis of their cash value. Waller v. Hughes, 2 Ariz. 114, 11 Pac. 122. There should have been, in addition to the finding of misconduct on the part of the board, some determination of the true cash value of the patented mines, and a finding as to how much was due for taxes on the same, based upon such valuation.
We do not overlook the allegations of the complaint which aver an unjust discrimination against the plaintiff in the assessment of its patented mines at a high valuation while other patented mines in the county, of great value, are alleged to have been assessed upon the valuation of five dollars per acre, and that the trial court may have had this in mind in decreeing that the collection of the taxes levied upon said patented mines of the plaintiff at the valuation placed upon the same by the board should be enjoined, and in decreeing that taxes should only be paid thereon upon the valuation of the same as made by the assessor, which was fixed by the latter at five dollars per acre. Assuming, as the complaint «charges, that the assessing officers in Cochise County have intentionally ahd habitually failed and neglected to assess unpatented mining claims within the county, and during the year 1901 intentionally omitted to assess a large number of patented mining claims at their cash value, but arbitrarily
To hold that the court, in redressing a wrongful overvaluation of property, should conform to the valuation which the taxing officers, have made upon other similar property, and not to the statutory requirement that all property should be assessed at its full cash value, would result in an additional wrong being done to the owners of property which may not fall within the class in which the discrimination is made. Hence to say that, because it may be 'the custom, or may be the deliberate plan and system, of the taxing officers in Cochise County or in the territory to tax patented mining claims at five dollars per acre, regardless of their cash value, the patented mines of the plaintiff should be so assessed, would be to disregard the rights of the owners of other species of property to have the burdens of taxation uniformly and equally distributed upon the basis of the cash value of all property subject to taxation.
The findings of the court must cover sufficient of the issues raised by the pleadings to sustain the judgment. Under the
An inspection of the record shows that some testimony was introduced at the trial as to the cash value of certain of the patented mines, but we find the evidence upon this point too unsatisfactory to warrant us in modifying the decree, or in making any disposition of the ease other than the reversal of the judgment and the remanding of the cause for a new trial; and it is so ordered.
Kent, C. J., and Doan, J., concur.