93 So. 826 | Ala. | 1922
Under our older statutes, in proceedings before the commissioners' court for the correction of errors in the assessment of property for taxation, and on appeals therefrom to the circuit court, the issue was as to the "fair market or real value thereof," and on that basis the valuation was fixed. Code 1907, § 2148.
In State v. Bienville Water Supply Co.,
Section 7 of the Revenue Act approved September 15, 1919 (Gen. Acts 1919, pp. 282, 287), provides that —
"All taxable property within this state shall be assessed for the purpose of taxation at sixty per cent. of its fair and reasonable cash value."
Section 1 of the act, subd. i., declares:
"The term 'value' means the fair and reasonable cash value of the taxable property, and shall be estimated at the price which the property would bring at a fair voluntary sale."
In popular parlance the word "cash" ordinarily means not merely money, but money in hand. The New Standard Dictionary defines it as:
"(1) Current money in hand or readily available, especially coin or government notes and bank notes actually in one's possession. (2) Money paid down; immediate payment."
And the same authority defines "cash sale" as:
"A sale for ready money, goods or stocks, for immediate delivery and payment, as distinguished from a sale on credit, or for future delivery."
In its ordinary use, as applied to business transactions, "cash" is the antonym of "credit," and so the courts have generally understood and defined it.
"The phrase 'actual cash value' is practically synonymous with 'fair cash value.' The actual cash value of the property is the price it will bring in a fair market, after fair and reasonable efforts have been made to find a purchaser who will give the highest price. The actual cash value, then, is the fair or reasonable cash price for which the property can be sold in the market." 1 Words and Phrases, 152, citing numerous cases, among them, Birmingham Fire Ins. Co. v. Pulver,
We can find no good reason for imputing to the words "cash value," as used in the present statutes, a meaning which is opposed to the common as well as the judicial understanding of them. That they import value in money presently paid we cannot doubt; and it may be observed that if such was the legislative intention in the ascertainment of "the fair market or real value" of property for tax assessment, as declared in State v. Bienville, etc., Co., supra, that intention is surely not changed by substitution of the words "fair and reasonable cash value," which aptly and directly express the meaning formerly imputed by interpretation only.
Undoubtedly, a sale on credit would, as observed in Mahone v. Williams,
In our opinion, it is the purpose of the law to establish a simple and stable criterion for the valuation of property for taxation, and that in requiring assessments to be made on the basis of a "fair and reasonable cash value" it was intended to exclude the uncertainty and injustice of valuations based on credit. We hold, therefore, that charge 3 was properly refused to the state. We might justify the refusal of charge 3 on account of its technical inaptitude, lack of clearness, and tendency to mislead, but have preferred to deal with it on its merits as understood and argued by counsel.
For the reasons above stated, we must also hold charge 6, given for defendant, is a correct statement of the law as to valuation.
Charge 2, given for defendant, states the rule correctly, and was properly given. United States v. Goodloe,
We have examined the evidence with due *33 care. It furnishes ample support for the verdict of the jury, and we are unable and unwilling to say that the verdict was contrary to either the law or the evidence in that degree which is necessary to justify its disturbance by this court on appeal.
We find no error in the rulings complained of and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and THOMAS, JJ., concur.