The controversy in this case relates to the valuation placed on real estate owned by Edward V. Lucas and his wife for taxation purposes and a claim of partial exemption of the property from liability to local taxation to the extent of $10,000 of the cost of thе property which was paid with money received from the government of the United States by and for the use of Edward V. Lucas, a disabled veteran. Each of the claims was rejected by appellee and the district court. Appellants have continued the contest by this appeal.
Edward V. Lucas, referred to herein as appellant, a veteran of World War I, suffered a service-connected disability resulting in the amputation of his legs. He acquired and is the owner of Lot 4 in Tegtmeier’s Second" Addition in Douglas County. In 1954 he constructed a house thereon which was speсially adapted for his" use because of the nature of his disability. The' house ..has ramps, instead of stairs, wide hallways and doors to permit easy passage of a wheel chair, special *317 bathroom fixtures, and a double door in the bedroom of appellant to afford him direct аnd easy exit from the house in the event emergency withdrawal therefrom should be required. The house was constructed according to plans and drawings approved by and the .regulations of the Veterans Administration. This agency furnished appellant $10,000 which was required to be .and it was applied to the payment of that amount of the cost of the house constructed. The remittance of the grant of $10,000 made by the United States was payable to appellant and transmitted to and received by the Veterans Administration office in Omaha. Appellant endorsed the draft in blank in thаt office and the Veterans Administration applied the proceeds of it to the payment of that amount of the cost of the house.
The evidence offered by appellants as to the value of the property was as. follows: Edward V. Lucas said the lot cost $3,750. The cost of constructing the house thereon was $21,000. The total cost of the whole property was $24,750. Repairs necessary because of faulty construction would, in his opinion, cost $2,000. His opinion was that the fair market value of the property was $20,000. He did not know the valuation for taxation of other residence properties in the neighborhood. There was no other evidence offered by appellants on this subject.
The county assessor of Douglas County testified that in his opinion the basic value of the lot was. $2,080; that the basic value of the improvements thereon was $15,900; аnd that the basic value of the whole property was $17,980. The county assessor did not inspect the property but he had the report made by the tax appraisal board of the county. The county board of equalization sustained and adopted the basic value of the proрerty as determined and fixed by the assessor and fixed the ratio of basic value to actual value at 70 percent.
The county assessor of Douglas County had held *318 that office since 1939. For the year 1956 he assessed the basic value of the lot of appellant at $2,080 and the basic value of the improvements on it at $15,900. The ■assеssor did not inspect the property. He based his ■assessment upon his many years of experience in assessing property in that county and upon information gathered and reported to him by the tax appraisal board of the previous year. He testified that the valuation of the property of appellant compared favorably with valuations of comparable property in this area of the county. Appellants insist that the basic valuation of the property involved is excessive. They say that a basic-valuation of $17,980, as fixed by the assessor, adopted by the board of equalization, and adjudicated by the-district court, requires an actual value of the property of $25,685 because the basic value is 70 percent of the-actual value. They also- protest that there was no-evidence produced -by apрellee to sustain an actual value-in that amount. Appellants misconceive the party upon whom was cast the burden. They do not assert or attempt to establish that the assessed value of the property involved was not fairly and properly equalized when considered with thе assessment of all other similar property. The only evidence offered by appellants was that of Edward V. Lucas and he stated that he had no information of the valuation placed on other comparable property in the neighborhood of his property. He testifiеd only that his opinion of the fair market value of his property was $20,000.
The burden was. on the property owner to establish the assessment was excessive. If the county assessor-accepted the valuation of this property as determined -and reported by the tax appraisаl board, the presumption that he properly assessed the property would not exist but the burden would nevertheless be o-n the property owner to establish that the assessment was excessive. This court declared in Gamboni v. County of Otoe,
The evidence on behalf of appellants is not sufficient to satisfy the burden cast upon them in this case. In LeDioyt v. County of Keith,
The immunity of the property involved to local taxation to the extent of a value of $10,000 is claimed by virtue of an Act of Congress. The Act of Congress of August 12, 1935, Title 38, U. S. C. A., section 454a, contains thе following: “Payments of benefits due or to become due shall not be assignable, and such payments made to, or on account of, a beneficiary under any of the laws relating to veterans shall be exempt from *320 taxation, shall be exempt from the claims of creditors, and shall not be liable to attachment, levy, or seizure by or under any legal or equitable process whatever, either before or after receipt by the beneficiary. Such provisions shall not attach to claims of the United States arising under such laws nor shall the exemption herein containеd as to taxation extend to' any property purchased in part or wholly out of such payments.”
The payment of benefits in the sum of $10,000 above mentioned was made to appellant under a law of the United States relating to> veterans within the terms of the Act of Congress described in the рart thereof set out above. The proceeds of the grant were immediately upon receipt of them by appellant invested in the real estate owned by him and concerned herein. The exemption from taxation erected by the act applies only to “payments of benefits due or to become due.” The real estate in which the benefits were invested by appellant does not qualify under the terms and limitations of the immunity granted by the act. Property in which benefits to veterans have been invested is excluded from this exemption.
Carrier v. Bryant,
Lawrence v. Shaw,
Trotter v. Tennessee,
The clear intent of the applicable Act of Congress is that payment of benefits due or to become due shall be exempt from taxation before or after receipt thereof by the veteran so long as they are not invested by him *323 but that the immunity from taxation does not extend to property purchased in whole or in part with the proceeds of the benefits granted him by the government. The exemption is limited to the one situation when payments of benefits are due or to become due. The payment of the gihnt made to appellant involved herein had departed from that situation and immunity from taxation of the proceeds of the grant was dissipated when investment of the proceeds was made by the beneficiary.
The Legislature of 1955 passed what is sometimes referred to as the basic value law. Laws 1955, c. 289, § 1, p. 918; § 77-112, R. S. Supp., 1955. Its invalidity is attempted to be established by appellants on constitutional grounds by a discussion in their brief. An issue of unconstitutionality of the act may not be made in this appeal because it was not made an issue before trial in the district court. The first mention of the subject in the record is an assertion in the motion for a new trial filed by appellants. The assignments of error made by them omit any reference to invalidity of the statute. The argument of appellants that the statute is invalid lacks foundation and must be disregarded in the consideration and decision of this appeal. Johnson v. Richards,
The judgment should be and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
