115 Va. 552 | Va. | 1913
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court. * !
Section 437-a of the Code, as amended by an act of Assembly approved February 19,1910 (Acts 1910, pp. 52-54), provides for the special and separate assessment of all mineral lands, improvements, fixtures and machinery thereon, and for the entry of such lands on the land books separately from other lands charged thereon. It further provides that a copy of such assessment shall be certified to the State Corporation Commission with the name and post-office address of each person, firm or corporation in whose name any such lands or interests therein have been assessed upon the land books with the amount of tax extended thereon. Upon receiving such copy it is made the duty of the State Corporation Commission to examine into the justice of such assessments, and if it shall appear to the commission that any tract of land or any part thereof or improvements, etc., thereon has not been assessed at its fair market value, the said commission shall direct the Commonwealth’s attorney for the county or corporation wherein such land is situated, or any special attorney it may designate, to apply in the name of the Commonwealth to the circuit court for the county, or corporation court of the city, to have said assessment corrected. It further provides that any person feeling himself aggrieved by such assessment may apply to the same court to have the assessment corrected.
Under the provisions of this act Max Grief, the petitioner in this case, moved the circuit court of Bland county to correct an alleged erroneous assessment of his lands lying in said county. Upon a hearing of his motion,
On March 12, 1913, C. Lee Moore, Auditor of Public Accounts, offered to file his petition for a rehearing of said order. His petition was objected to by Grief, the land owner, upon th'e grounds,
“(1) That section 573 of the Code, under which said petition by its terms is offered to be filed, has no application to mineral assessments, but applies to general assessments ;
“(2) That the Auditor is not a proper party to make any motion in the matter, and that section 437-a, under which the original notice was had, gives full proceedings in the matter by appeal at the instance of the Corporation Commission and not by the Auditor.”
These objections were overruled and the petition, by leave of the court, was filed.
By section 567 of Pollard’s Code it is provided that any person assessed with taxes on lands, or other property, or a license tax, aggrieved thereby, may, “unless otherwise specially provided by law,” apply within a time named for relief to the court in which the commissioner gave bond and qualified, or to which or to whose clerk such bond and the certificate of his qualification w'ere returned. That section requires the attorney for the Commonwealth to defend the motion, and that the commissioner making the assessment or his successor in office shall be examined as a witness touching the application, and the facts proved certified.
Section 568 provides when the court may order such assessment to be corrected, and requires a copy of any order made under it correcting an erroneous assessment to be certified by the court to the Auditor of Public Accounts and the Treasurer of the State.
11] is clear, as it seems to us, from a comparison of the provisions of section. 437-a of the Code, as amended by the act of February 19, 1910, with the provisions of sections 567, 568 and 573 of the Code, that the petition filed by the Auditor for a rehearing of the application of Max Grief, and the order entered in that proceeding by the circuit court at its October term, 1912, is without authority of law. The manner in which erroneous assessment of mineral lands may be corrected is specially provided for by section 437-a of the Code and amendments thereto, and, therefore, by the express provisions of section 567, the correction of mineral land assessments is excluded from the operation of that section and sections 568 and 573.
By section 437-a and amendments thereto, copies of the assessments of mineral lands or interests therein are to be certified to the State Corporation Commission. Upon receipt of such copies it is made the duty of that commission to examine into the justice of any such assessments, and if it shall appear to the commission that any tract of land, or any part thereof, or the improvements, fixtures or machinery thereon, or any right or interest in the same, or any part thereof, has not been assessed at its fair market value, the commission is required to direct the Commonwealth’s attorney for the county or corporation where the assessment was made, or any other special attorney it may designate, to apply in the name of the Commonwealth to
The provisions of section 437-a as amended furnish all the necessary machinery for fully protecting the rights of the Commonwealth in proceedings to correct erroneous assessments of mineral lands. They clothe the Corporation Commission with the power and impose upon it the duty of seeing that the mineral lands of the Commonwealth are assessed at their fair market value.
Section 437-a as amended confers no power and imposes no duty upon the Auditor of Public Accounts to represent the Commonwealth in the proceedings provided by that section for the correction of erroneous assessments of mineral lands. It confers that power and imposes that duty upon the State Corporation Commission, and it is manifest when that section is read in connection with chapter 24 of the- Code’that the legislature’ never intended that)
The next question is: Is this a proper case for a writ of prohibition?
It is well settled that the writ of prohibition does not lie to correct error, but to prevent the exercise of the jurisdiction of the court by' the judge to whom it is directed, either where he has no jurisdiction at all, or is exceeding his jurisdiction. If the court or judge has jurisdiction to enter any order in the proceeding sought to be prohibited, the writ does not lie. Fidelity, &c. Co. v. Beale, Judge, 102 Va. 295, 303, 46 S. E. 307; Burks’ Pleading and Practice, 777-779, and cases cited.
The averments of the petition of the Auditor show that it is a proceeding under section 575 of the Code. As we have seen, that section gives the Auditor no authority to file a petition in any proceeding instituted under the provisions of section 437-a as amended for the correction of an erroneous assessment of mineral lands. Neither has the circuit court jurisdiction to consider or grant any relief in such a proceeding upon a petition filed by the Auditor. As the Auditor has no right to file a petition to rehear the order entered in the proceeding instituted by Grief, under section 437-a of the Code as amended, for the correction of the erroneous assessment of his mineral lands, and as the circuit court has no jurisdiction to enter any order in such proceeding upon the petition of the Auditor, it follows that the petitioner is entitled to a writ of prohibition, as prayed for.
Writ Aioarded.