8 Haw. 148 | Haw. | 1890
Opinion of the Court, by
It does not appear from the record how this cause has reached the Court in Banco, but it was argued before us under an undoubted mutual understanding of both sides. The following agreed statement of facts and issues of law was submitted by counsel of both parties.
The Hilo Sugar Company is lessee of various tracts of land, containing in all an area of 1288 acres, under covenant to pay taxes. The Hilo Sugar Company returned these lands for taxation by name at the same rates per acre as their fee simple lands of similar nature, viz., Fifteen dollars ($15) per acre for cane lands and one dollar per acre for bush land. The Board of Tax; Appeal raised the assessment of cane land to twenty dollars ($20) per acre. Taxes at this valuation were paid by the Hilo Sugar Company upon all of said lands.
The Hilo Sugar Company were further assessed upon these
The qustions agreed to be submitted are :
1. Can there be legally, assessed against a tenant upon his interest an amount greater than the established value of similar land held in fee simple ?
2. Can assessment legally be made against a landlord’s interest and a tenant’s interest, the sum of which would be greater than the assessable value of the same land held in fee ?
3. The Hilo Sugar Company having made no separate return of their leasehold interest in the above named lands, can .they maintain this suit ?
A deposition of John Scott was also filed by both counsel as evidence.
It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff having covenanted with his lessors to pay the taxes that should be payable upon the lands under the several leases, undertook to make returns of such taxes directly to defendant, the Deputy Assessor, which arrangement the Deputy Assessor fell in with, and looked to the plaintiff alone instead of his lessors for the assessment returns and the taxes of the lands in question.
This method was irregular, for a private agreement between lessor and lessee that the latter should pay the taxes does not affect the liability of the landlord to the Government. Such an agreement is purely a private matter between the parties to the lease, and gives the lessor a claim upon the lessee for all taxes which he is required to pay on account of the leased land. (Brown, Assessor, vs. Smith, No. 726, Interm. Div.)
The defendant’s position is that if we regard the first taxes paid by the plaintiff as the taxes upon the landlord’s interest in the land, as they were clearly intended to be, there is nothing to prevent a further assessment against the tenant, the plaintiff, for his interest in the same land under his lease. He should have made a return of his leasehold interest — as he actually did
We have, therefore, to consider whether this Court has jurisdiction over the cause. It has been the practice of Courts to refuse to investigate complaints based upon the charge of over assessment, as appeals from such assessments to the Tax Appeal Courts are provided by statute, except in cases of a failure to make any return within the time required by the statute.
But the plaintiff claims that inasmuch as the taxes already paid upon the land are assessed upon its full value, as if no lease existed, which appears to be admitted by the defendant, there is no value remaining which may be assessed as the tenant’s interest, and that the assessment, being therefore made upon an erroneous principle, is illegal.
It is doubtless a correct principle of law, that the reversion and the leasehold interests of real estate held under lease are together worth only the unincumbered value of the land. There may be, in certain circumstances, exceptions to this rule, but it must be generally regarded as giving the true status of the mutual relations of such interests.
In the matter before us the reversion was assessed to the full value which had been fixed by the Tax Appeal Court as the assessable value of such lands in the district, which assessment the plaintiff submitted to. This consumed the whole value of the land in question and left no surplus value to be assessed on account of leasehold interests there. But the Deputy Assessor did assess such interest and for a large amount, i. e., $14.89 an acre for both cane land and bush land. As we do not know the comparative areas of the cane land and bush land, we cannot say whether this assessment was more or less than the assessment on the reversion, which was $20 an acre for cane land and one dollar an acre for bush land, but it is safe to say that the leasehold interest was assessed close up to the assessment on the reversion. This was clearly wrong, and by it the Govern
It is not for us to review the judgment of the Assessor in estimating values, but we may interfere where the assessment is illegal, and we think the one submitted to us is so for the reasons we have given, and in brief, not so much because the assessment upon the leasehold interest was excessive, as because it was made at all, after the value of the land had been fully assessed against the reversion.
The fact that the plaintiff made no returns of its leasehold interest is no bar to this suit, the assessment complained of being illegal. Phelps vs. Thurston, 47 Conn., 485; State vs. Ross, 23 N. J. L., 521; State vs Quaife, Id., 89, and State vs. Metz, 31 N. J. L., 365.
It will be seen that in the foregoing opinion we have substantially answered the questions submitted so far as they are applicable to this cause, and we need not refer to them further.
Let judgment be entered for the plaintiff for $191.13, with interest from December 14th, 1887, the date of the payment of the taxes under protest.