69 W. Va. 426 | W. Va. | 1911
On this writ of error, involving an assessment of taxes against the plaintiff in error for the year 1907, our jurisdiction in cases of this class is questioned, and, after that, the correctness of the judgment of the circuit court.
The nature of the controversy is the same as that involved in Hannis Distilling Co. v. County Court, reported in 62 W. Va. 442, which was an assessment of the same company for the year 1905. Taxed with several thousand barrels of whiskey, found in its bonded warehouse, and claiming not to be the owner thereof, the plaintiff in error tested the assessment unsuccessfully in the county court, appealed from its order to the circuit court, anad obtained a writ of error from this Court to the judgment of the circuit court. The appellate jurisdiction of this Court was not then denied. Here, the objection of want of such jurisdiction is interposed. A distinction between controversies involving only questions of valuation of admittedly taxable propertjr, and controversies involving the taxability of property or taxation thereof in the name of a particular person, supposedly made by the. statute, has been often adverted to, and it has been generally conceded that the right of review stops in the circuit court, in the former class, but extends to this Court in the latter.
Upon mature and laborious consideration, the jurisdiction
On the writ of error disposed of in 62 W. Va. 442, we held that the joint custody and control of a bonded warehouse, by the proprietor thereof and the federal store-keeper in charge, did not constitute such a change of possession of the liquor stored therein as to destroy presumption of ownership thereof by the distiller; and that, upon an application for relief from erroneous assessment, by the distiller, upon the theory of owner
Seeing the proof of such ownership did not measure up to the legal requirements, the judgment of the circuit court, refusing to disturb the assessment, was affirmed. In this case, we are confronted with proof Avhich we deem sufficient to overcome the presumption. Insufficiency of the evidence to prove it has been argued at great length in the brief, but we think the position of the attorneys for the defendant in error is untenable. They have also insisted that the plaintiff in error is a trustee in possession or a pledgee in possession against whom the tax on the property may be lawfully assessed. We are not convinced by this argument either. The distilling company has no title to the property or beneficial interest therein. It is a mere bailee for hire. It is, therefore, clearly not a trustee within the meaning of that provision of the statute. Neither is it a pledgee. The property is not held for any independent, collateral or antecedent indebtedness of any kind. It is.merely stored in the warehouse and subject to a lien by contract, as well as by the common law, for storage charges, for the enforcement of which no power of sale is given either by the contract or the law.
If the record disclosed nothing more, the applicant would have been entitled to relief. In its return to the assessor, it charged itself with 8,305 barrels qf whiskey, claiming that to be all it owned, although there were 22,000. barrels more in the warehouse. This it disclaimed ownership of and failed to list as the property of any other person. Thereupon the assessor charged it with $176.000.00, as the value of the omitted property. Assuming failure of duty on the part of the applicant, respecting the listing of this property, an inquiry arises as to which the briefs are silent, namely, whether such failure denied the applicant any remedy for the assessment of this property against it.
In the case between these same parties, reported in 62 W. Vá. 442, we held that, for the purposes of taxation, the title to personal property was presumed to be with the possession thereof, and that an assessment against this applicant' of property in its possession, but not owned by it, on its refusal to disclose
The assessment was made under an act passed by the Legislature on February M-, 1905, and in effect from its passage. That act made it the duty of the owners of property to furnish the assessor, ou his application, all necessary information concerning the same, and also provided that lists, according to a prescribed form, should be made and furnished; in the case of the property of a minor, by his guardian, if any, and if none, by his father, if living, or if not, by his mother, if living, and if neither was living or resided in the state, by the person having charge of the property; in the ease of property of a married woman, by herself or her husband, in her name; in the case of the property of a husband, out of the state or incapable of listing the properly, by his wife; in the ease of property held in trust, by the trustee, if in possession thereof, otherwise by the party for whose benefit it was held; in the case of -property of a deceased person, by the personal representative; in the case of the property of an insane person, or a person confined in the penitentiary, by his committee; in the case of the property of a company, incorporated or not, whose assets "were in the hands of an agent, factor or receiver, by such agent, factor or receiver, or the president, proper accounting officer, partner or agent within the state. Other provisions were made for listing property held under other peculiar circumstances. In all these cases, the person required to list the property was directed to list it separately from his own, designating the person, company, estate or trust to which it belonged. The plain object of this provision was to secure a full and complete return of all personal property for the purposes of taxation. It is less general in its terms than the corresponding provision found in the previous statute, section 41 of chapter 29 of the Code of 1899. The first clause of that section required every person of full age and sound mind to list for taxation the property belonging to him, subject'to certain exceptions, and the persons and property under his charge and control subject to taxation, and fur
Assuming its refusal to do so, after a proper demand, wp must ascertain the consequences of such failure. Sections 71 and 72 of said chapter 35 of the Acts of 1905 require persons listing property for taxation to append to the lists certificates of a prescribed form and then provided as follows: “'Any person whose duty it is by law to list property for taxation and who shall refuse to verify such list, being called upon to do so shall, in addition to any other penalty provided for such refusal, be denied the right to apply to any court to have the assessment and valuation of his property, -which the assessor may make, changed in any manner.” Section 73 provides as follows: “If any person whose duty it is by law to list any real or personal property, being called upon by the assessor to do so, refuse to furnish a proper list thereof, or to make such oath as is required by this chapter; or if any person refuse to answer, or answer untruly, any question lawfully asked by the assessor, or fail or refuse to deliver any statement required by law, * * * he shall be denied all remedy provided by law for the correction of any assessment made by the assessor.” In the ease of the failure of any person to furnish a proper list or the furnishing of an incomplete or erroneous list, the assessor was authorized by section 74 to list the property and fix its value, or to supply the omission and correct the errors, upon the best information he could obtain from other sources.
Thus the law provided a remedy in case of refusal to furnish a list or the rendition of an incomplete or erroneous list. It authorized the assessor to charge the derelict person with such property as, in his opinion, based upon the information obtainable, he ought to be charged with. It also inflicted upon the obdurate citizen a penalty for his misconduct by denial of any relief from the error, if any, in the assessor’s list and valuation. Section 129 of the same chapter gave a right to apply to the
Obviously, then, the remaining and conclusive inquiry is, whether a demand was made upon the applicant to list the property and it refused to do so. That a blank list was delivered to it is beyond question. It filled out that list, charging itself with all of its own property, but omitting the 22,000 barrels of whiskey in question. As to that property it made no list, and the assessor testified that its agent in charge refused to do so. In response to the question, whether he had any conversation with the agent about-the assessment of this property, he says, “Well, as well as I can recollect when Mr. Parks handed me that blank it was filled up by the Hann,is Distilling Company. I don’t know whether I could go over the exact words that he said, he said I would have to get it like I got it before, and I got it.” lie then testifies that, for the year 1905, he went to the officials of the company and they told him they could not give him any information about the whiskey in the warehouse, and he then reported the matter to the State Tax Commissioner who directed him to assess it to the com
Seeing no error in the judgment, we affirm it.
Affirmed.