This is an action to enjoin the collection of taxes for the years 1910, 1911 and 1912, against certain platted property, and to compel the acceptance of a less amount than that assessed in satisfaction of the tax. It is claimed that the tax as assessed is illegal because of gross inequality in the valuation of the property in question as compared with adjacent unplatted property, which it is asserted is of similar character and of equal value. The facts are these: During the year 1909, the plaintiff was the owner of a large tract of land in what is known as the Port Susan District, in Snohomish county. This tract lies between the shores of Puget Sound and two small lakes, known as Lake
During the summer of 1909, the plaintiff caused the property in question to be platted as C. D. Hillman’s Birmingham addition to the city of Everett, Division One. Most of that part of the land along the water front of Puget Sound and the two lakes was platted into lots thirty by one hundred feet and running about thirteen lots to the acre, with abutting streets and alleys. Four blocks in the southwest corner were cut into two-acre tracts, and the remainder lying between this water front property was cut into approximately one hundred and eighty five-acre tracts, with dedicated streets extending north and south, and east and west throughout the whole plat in such manner as to make all the lots and all the acre tracts abut upon some street. At the time of the platting, some of the streets were cleared to the extent of light slashing. Some of these lots and tracts were sold soon after the filing of the plat, but at the time of the valuation for assessment-in March, 1910,-there had been little change in the physical conditions, except that some of the purchasers had commenced to clear their land and some houses were being built. The settlement on the plat then consisted of two stores and about a dozen houses. There were some sidewalks. For transportation facilities, there is a good road to Stanwood and a boat to Everett, -running at least three times a week and sometimes daily. ' . ' -
' In March, 1910, the county assessor visited this platted property, remaining for two or three days and examining it thoroughly for thé purpose- of valuation. He. extended it upon the tax rolls in ■ subdivisions- according to the plat, as required by law.' The assessment for 1912 was made hi.the
At the conclusion of the evidence adduced on behalf of the plaintiff, the defendants moved for a nonsuit upon several grounds. The court granted the nonsuit upon the ground that the plaintiff had failed to show that the assessor had acted arbitrarily or fraudulently or that the assessments in question were excessive or fraudulent. The plaintiff appealed.
The governing statute, Rem. & Bal. Code, § 9112 (P. C. 501 § 113), provides that “all property shall be assessed at its true and fair value in money,” that the assessor shall value each description of property “by itself, and at such sum or price as he believes the same to be fairly worth in money at the time such assessment is made,” and that “the true cash value of property shall be that value at which the property would be taken in payment of a just debt from a solvent
In the nature of the thing, market value is largely a matter of opinion. So long, therefore, as those charged by the law with the duty of valuation for taxation act in good faith the court can grant no relief. Olympia Water Works v. Thurston County, 14 Wash. 268, 44 Pac. 267; Olympia Water Works v. Gelbach, 16 Wash. 482, 48 Pac. 251; Templeton v. Pierce County, 25 Wash. 377, 65 Pac. 553; Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Pierce County, 55 Wash. 108, 104 Pac. 178; Doty Lumber & Shingle Co. v. Lewis County, 60 Wash. 428, 111 Pac. 562, Ann. Cas. 1912B. 870.
In Templeton v. Pierce County, supra, the court reviewed many of its prior decisions, summarizing them to the effect that the court will grant relief against an arbitrary, fraudulent or maliciously excessive valuation by the assessing officer, and fraud may be presumed from a palpably exorbitant overvaluation, but where the assessing officer has exercised an honest judgment and no fraudulent, arbitrary or capricious action in making the assessment is shown or can be presumed, the court will not interfere; that where it appears that there has been an honest endeavor to get at the true value and there is room for an honest difference of opinion as to the value, the judgment of the officer is conclusive; that if property, though overvalued, be assessed in the same proportion as other like property, and the system of valuation adopted operates equally on all other like property, the constitutional provision as to uniformity is complied with.
In Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Pierce County, supra, these principles are reaffirmed, the court adding, that “the assessor in placing valuations upon property acts in a quasi judicial capacity, and the law presumes that he has per
Applying these principles, we find no sufficient ground for interference with the assessment here in question. There is no evidence of fraudulent or capricious action on the assessor’s part. He assessed all property within the addition, whether owned by the appellant or others, on the same basis. His valuations on all such property was governed by the same considerations. If all the sales of property in the addition are any criterion of market value, he has assessed this property at not exceeding twenty per cent of its selling price at the time of the valuation. This must be conceded, but the appellant argues, in substance, that the mere platting of land cannot change its value and that the assessor, who admitted taking the platting into' consideration as an element of value differentiating this land from-that adjacent to it, was influenced by an impossible factor. This presents the sum and substance of the issue.
The very purpose of platting land is to add to its value— its salability-—its market price. If it did not as a general rule have that effect, it is fair to assume that expert real estate men would not go to the trouble and expense of platting their lands. It is a matter of common knowledge, of which no observant man can reasonably feign ignorance, that lands so situated as to be available for city lots, suburban residences or summer homes are greatly increased in actual salable value by platting .into lots or tracts suitable for such purposes, with potential streets, alleys and approaches dedicated to public use. Land which is at all suitable for these purposes, by the single fact of segregation into lots surrounded with dedicated streets, thus rendered capable of separate purchase, access and use, acquires a salability, an actual market value, over and above its value en masse as acreage, often measured in multiples. These conclusions are matters of common experience-,- but they are also amply sustained by ■ the evidence in this case. ' The assessor pointed
The trial judge in summing up the evidence so convincingly expressed the situation as to warrant a quotation.. He said :
“We start out in this case with this fact, that the assessor personally went over there and stayed .three days and endeavored to arrive at a just valuation of this property, and nobody has contradicted that. He was on the ground; he saw what was going on; he saw the activity there, and made a valuation accordingly.”
Reviewing the testimony of the appellant’s manager, he said:
“Now those are the figures I took from the witness when he was giving those prices. He didn’t say that was the list price; he said that was what they were selling for. He used the exhibit, and he may have made his deductions or may not. Those lots were assessed, at the highest, at twenty dollars a lot, lots selling for one hundred and fifty dollars apiece, and the assessor over there and getting all the information he could as to the value of this property, and assessed lots selling for one hundred and fifty dollars at fifteen dollars, and now you have sold all the property and come in here and say that is an exorbitant assessment. Now you cannot blow hot and cold like that. I think the property was worth—at any rate, I think it is not assessed at sixty per cent of its fair cash value at that time, and the assessment will average about twenty per cent of the selling value, according to the sales that I have taken down—I have taken down nearly all the sales that have been made. None have been made for less than one hundred dollars an acre, with the exception of one that was on the ridge which sold for four hundred dollars for five acres. That is the only parcel that has ever been sold for less than one hundred dollars an acre. Now, I am satisfied that the property in this county, taken as a whole, is assessed at least at fifty per cent of its value.”
The judgment is affirmed.
Morris, C. J., Fullerton, and Main, JJ., concur.