GEORGIA RAILROAD & BANKING CO. v. REDWINE, Commissioner.
No. 17467
Supreme Court of Georgia
JUNE 13, 1951
JULY 24, 1951
208 Ga. 261
No. 17467. ARGUED MAY 15, 1951—DECIDED JUNE 13, 1951—REHEARING DENIED JULY 24, 1951.
James E. Harper, Spalding, Sibley, Troutman & Kelley, Furman Smith, and Joseph B. Cumming, for plaintiff.
Eugene Cook, Attorney-General, M. H. Blackshear Jr., Deputy Assistant Attorney-General, Lamar W. Sizemore, Assistant Attorney-General, and Robert E. Hicks, for defendant.
Victor Davidson, Joseph G. Faust, Joel H. Terrell, Carlisle Cobb, James Barrow, J. Glenn Stovall, C. C. King, Harold Sheats, Standish Thompson, William T. Dean, J. H. McCalla, A. M. Kelley, Roberts & Roberts, Julius A. McCurdy, A. F. Jenkins, Osgood O. Williams, J. F. Hardin, W. P. Congdon, for persons at interest, not parties.
CANDLER, Justice. On May 26, 1950, Charles D. Redwine, as State Revenue Commissioner for Georgia, assessed for ad valorem taxation certain real and personal property in this State belonging to the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company and notified the company that the assessment as made by him would become final after the expiration of thirty days there
It is argued by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the trial court had no jurisdiction to entertain an appeal in this case from the State Revenue Commissioner‘s final decision. If that be true, the judgment complained of is a nullity and must be reversed.
The right of appeal from one court to another is not a common-law, right, but depends on statute; and the same authority which bestows it may likewise withhold or withdraw it. Griffin v. Sisson, 146 Ga. 661 (92 S. E. 278). Our Constitution of 1945 provides that the superior court shall have appellate jurisdiction “in all such cases as may be provided by law,” and in DeLamar v. Dollar, 128 Ga. 57, 66 (57 S. E. 85), it was said: “The appellate jurisdiction of the superior court must be exercised, and can only be exercised, in such cases as are provided by law.” Therefore we must look to and find authority in our statutes for the right of appeal to the superior court in this case if it exists as counsel for the defendants in error insist. By Chapter 92-59 of the
The legislature, however, in 1943 passed an act (Ga. L. 1943, p. 204), which in several respects materially changed the act of 1938. By Section 2 of it, all the sections in Chapter III of the act of 1938, which created the Board of Tax Appeals and defined its jurisdiction, were expressly repealed and new sections were enacted in lieu thereof. Concerning the right of appeal, Section 18 of the amending act of 1943 reads as follows: “Except as otherwise provided by this act, all matters, cases, claims and controversies, of whatsoever nature arising in the administration of the revenue laws, or in the exercise of the jurisdiction of the State Revenue Commissioner or the Department of Revenue, as conferred by this act, shall be for determination by the State Revenue Commissioner, subject to review by the courts as provided for by Section 45 of Chapter IV of this Act. The effect of this section shall be that, except as hereinafter provided, all final rulings, orders, and judgments of the State Revenue Commissioner shall be subject to appeal and review under Section 45 of this act in the same manner, under the same procedure, and as fully, as if same had been considered and passed upon by the State Board of Tax Appeals.” But Section 19 of the amending act of 1943 expressly declares that “The provisions of the foregoing section with reference to reviewing assessments of the State Revenue Commissioner shall not apply to assessments for ad valorem taxation against any person, corporation or company which was required by Chapter 92-59 of the
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Duckworth, C.J., and Atkinson, P.J., who dissent. Pharr, Judge, concurs specially.
DUCKWORTH, Chief Justice, and ATKINSON, Presiding Justice, dissenting. For the reasons stated in division 1 of the special concurrence of Judge Pharr, we dissent from the opinion of the majority and do not concur in the judgment of reversal upon the ground on which the majority judgment is based. Since, under the ruling by the majority, the merits of the case are not passed upon, we therefore intimate no opinion with reference to the merits.
PHARR, Judge, concurring specially. 1. For the reasons hereinafter set forth, I am compelled to dissent from the foregoing opinion on the question of jurisdiction.
Originally, all railroads were required to make their tax re
Without the excepting clause
Under the language of these sections, without the excepting clauses, any final ruling, order, or judgment of the Revenue Commissioner may be appealed to the superior court, and it appears clear that this would include any ruling, order, or judgment in which the taxpayer is a railroad company. Thus, unless the determination of liability for ad valorem tax of a railroad is specifically excluded or excepted, then a railroad may appeal such a ruling to the superior court. . . .
The words, “with reference to reviewing assessments,” are different from the language used in the preceding section. The preceding section gives the Revenue Commissioner the broad power to make a determination of all matters, cases, claims, and controversies of whatsoever nature arising in the administration of the revenue laws, and gives the right of appeal from
Thus we must determine whether the words, “assessments for ad valorem taxation” (against a railroad), as used in
At first glance, and because of the broad and varied meanings given to the word “assessment” in statutes, decisions, and common usage, the right of appeal by a railroad may seem to be excluded. However, in order to determine the present issue it is necessary to give careful consideration to the meaning of the word “assessment” as used in this section, and endeavor to ascertain what the legislature intended in using it as it did. While the language used says “the provisions of the preceding section with reference to reviewing assessments,” nothing is said in the preceding section with reference to reviewing assessments. The preceding section deals only with the power of the commissioner to determine all matters, cases, claims, and controversies of whatsoever nature and it further says that the effect of the section shall be that all final rulings, orders, and judgments of the commissioner shall be subject to review. By referring to the preceding section, it is apparent that “assessment” is embraced in the larger power of determining all cases, claims, matters, and controversies of whatsoever nature, and is included somewhere in rulings, orders, and judgments. Thus the exception carves out of the orders, rulings, and judgments only the assessment portion. To break it down a little further, we should look to the language of
Let us analyze it another way. What does the word “assess” mean? Its origin is from the Latin word “assessare,” which means to value for taxation. In Webster‘s New International Dictionary (2d ed., 1947) one of the definitions of “assess” is “to value,” and one of the meanings of “assessment” is “valuation of property for the purpose of taxation.” It is true that other definitions are given. In Dunn v. Harris, 144 Ga. 157, 163 (86 S. E. 556), the court said: “Assessment is quasi judicial, and consists in making out a list of the taxpayer‘s taxable property and fixing its valuation or appraisement.”
In Columbus Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Gullatt, 189 Ga. 747, the court discusses “assessment” at some length and shows a
Of course, a great deal of the confusion is brought about by the loose use of the word “assessment.” Common usage has brought it to mean anything relating to the imposition of taxes, and it is not uncommon to use the expression as synonymous with levying a tax, imposing a tax, fixing tax liability, or determining value. But, in the ad valorem taxing process, the present case is a good illustration of what occurs. First, of course, there must be a law imposing the tax. Second, there must be a determination of tax liability against the person or corporation. Third, there must be a determination of the value of the property taxed ad valorem, and fourth, the necessary proceeding to enforce the tax. Upon analysis, it will appear clear that only the third step is the assessment step, that is, where the value of the property is determined the act of assessment is performed. No assessment can be made until the second step is complied with, and that is the determination of taxability. So, in the present case the commissioner made a determination of tax liability. The assessment followed by virtue of the agreement, both of the taxpayer and the commissioner, on the valuation of the railroad‘s property. The only issue raised was the taxability, not the valuation or assess-
If the words, “shall not apply to assessments for ad valorem taxation against” a railroad, embrace the determination of liability rather than simply the determination of property and value, then the law means that every taxpayer except a railroad has the right to appeal the legal determination of his liability for taxes to the superior court, and a railroad is given the right of appeal to the superior court only where the question of true value or amount is concerned, by demanding arbitration, and thereafter appealing to the court. Such a construction would mean that every taxpayer could have all questions of liability, property, and values appealed to the superior court, except that railroads could not have the sole question of liability or taxability determined by the superior court on appeal, even though they, like all other taxpayers, could have all other questions determined by appeal to the superior court. As we view it,
In the present case, there is no controversy between the commissioner and the railroad as to value, and the word “assessment” is not used by the commissioner in making his determination of liability on May 26, 1950. The only question is that of determination of liability by virtue of the contention of the railroad that it is not subject to ad valorem tax as such, but only to the tax fixed upon its net income by its charter. That the commissioner has the power to determine this question under
It seems to us from all of the language used that a sound, common-sense construction of the provisions of the act of 1943, as codified in the sections referred to, and the provisions of section 45 of the 1938 act, as codified, means that from a determination of liability the railroad may appeal directly to the superior court, and that the only exception to the right of appeal of any taxpayer is that, where value or amount is involved upon a return of a public-service corporation, arbitration shall first be had before appealing to the superior court. Any other construction leaves uncertain and indefinite how a railroad company, or similar body, can have its tax liability adjudicated in the courts. Why should that remedy be clouded or denied by a construction of language which, if susceptible of two constructions, ought to be construed as affording a clear, speedy, and direct path for the judicial determination of a taxpayer‘s liability?
While the taxpayer owes the State the duty of paying every tax legally imposed upon him, the State owes him a corresponding duty of good faith in providing a means of having a judicial determination of whether or not he is subject to the tax imposed. We are fortified in our determination of the issue under consideration by the fundamental conviction that it is right and just for the taxpayer to have this opportunity for an adjudication by the court of the question of taxability. From a study of the provisions of Title 92 of our Code, we are constrained to the view that there is no part of our law more perplexing and confusing than the Code provisions relating to procedures involved in the administration of those laws. There exists much confusion as to the matter of affidavit of illegality, and other procedure for a taxpayer of the kind here involved to raise the issue of taxability. The history of this litigation demonstrates that confusion. It is our belief that one of the purposes of the 1938 and 1943 Georgia Laws was to clarify rather than add to that confusion. We believe that the construction herein placed upon those sections will result in that clarification, and we therefore conclude that the railroad had the right to appeal from the decision of the commissioner to the superior court, and that this court has jurisdiction to determine the case now before us.
The majority of the court being of the opinion that the court does not have jurisdiction, a discussion of the other issues in the case would be of only academic interest. As written, my views on the fundamental principles involved are somewhat voluminous and it would be a useless burden upon the record to add them here. It is sufficient, therefore, for me to say that in my opinion the determination of liability for ad valorem taxation against the plaintiff in error in this case was erroneous. It is by virtue of this conclusion that I concur in the judgment of reversal.
