64 P. 646 | Or. | 1901
delivered the opinion.
J. A. James, Assessor of Coos County for the year 1893, assessed the property of the plaintiff, consisting of a large amount of real estate, including a sawmill, buildings and improvements, and considerable personal property, comprising a steamer, rolling stock of a railroad, logs, lumber, money, notes, and accounts, at the sum. of $463,791. This assessment was reduced by the board of equalization and the county court to $332,978. The tax having been levied, and the roll, together with a proper
The testimony adduced at the trial tended strongly to show that the assessor acted arbitrarily and capriciously, and without the exercise of his honest judgment, in fixing the valuations of plaintiff’s property. Indeed, this may be conceded. It is further shown that the plaintiff appeared before the county board of equalization when it met on the fourth Monday in September, 1893, and applied for a reduction of its assessment. The hearing was continued to an adjourned session of the board held in October, at which time the plaintiff produced a large amount of testimony relative to values as it pertained to its property, which was taken down in shorthand, subsequently extended, and offered and admitted in evidence herein. What took place during the time of these proceedings and at such as were held later is related by D. L. Watson, who was then county judge, and by virtue of his office was a member of the board of equalization. He says : ‘ ‘ On the sixteenth day of October we met as a board of equalization, and proceeded to hear claims for reductions of taxes, and to equalize tax assessments for that year, until, I think, the twenty-second or twenty-third of October, during which time we took a great deal of testimony of different parties. The plaintiff was present by its secretary, H. E. Shine, and its general manager, — I think Mr. Smith was there, — and by its attorney, John A. Gray. They furnished the board with what they claimed to be a statement of valuations that should be placed upon its property. The testimony offered was principally for the purpose and with the view of reducing it to about what they claimed it should be assessed at. The board did not agree. There was the clerk ; on matters of reducing the assessments he stood in with the
D. E. Stitt, one of the county commissioners, and J. J. Stanley, County Clerk and ex officio member of the Board of Equalization, also testified that they exercised their honest judgment in equalizing the assessment of the plaintiff’s property with that of other property holders in the county. This is, in substance, all the evidence in the record bearing upon the conduct of the members of the board of equalization and the county court relative to the equalization of plaintiff’s assessment. The remaining testimony, including that which was taken before the board of equalization, consists principally of the opinions of individual witnesses touching the relative valuations of plaintiff’s as compared with that placed by the assessor upon other property. There was testimony
The principal question involved in the controversy arises from the contention of the defendants that plaintiff has neither by its pleadings nor by the proofs adduced at the trial made a case entitling it to the relief demanded. The alleged fraud of the assessor in valuing the property of the plaintiff arbitrarily and capriciously, and without the exercise of his fair and honest judgment, constitutes the gravamen of the complaint. There is no attempt to charge that either the board of equalization, or the county court, or any member thereof, while in the discharge of their functions as equalizing boards, acted arbitrarily, capriciously, or dishonestly, or did not conscientiously exercise their sincere and candid judgment in the premises, or that the ultimate and final assessment was not the result of the exercise of honest judgment fairly applied. Nor does the evidence tend to show, even in the slightest particular, such a condition; so that we are left to determine whether the fraudulent acts of the assessor can alone destroy the validity of the tax assessed against the plaintiff. The board of equalization, composed of the county judge, clerk, and assessor, is authorized by statute to make proper corrections whenever property is assessed under or beyond its actual value : Hill’s Ann. Laws, §§ 2778, 2779. This board is required to continue its sittings from day to day until the examination and correction of the assessment shall be completed, but, if such examination be not completed within the week in which
It was said in State v. Central Pac. R. R. Co. 21 Nev. 172, 178 (26 Pac. 225, 1109), Mr. Justice Bigelow speaking for the court, in response to a petition for rehearing : “A fraudulent overvaluation of property attempted by the assessor can do no harm if it is corrected by the board. If the board bring their honest judgment to bear upon the matter, and determine that the property has not been overvalued, this determination is conclusive that the assessor’s attempted fraud has done the defendant no damage.” There is no attempt, as we have seen, to charge fraud or caprice against any member of the board of equalization or of the county court, nor is there any proof implicating them in the least; while, upon the other hand, it is abundantly shown that all of the officers comprising these tribunals acted from honest impulses and convictions of right, and that the assessment, as finally completed, was the outgrowth of such discharge of duty.
Reversed.