24 N.W.2d 592 | Wis. | 1946
The defendant did not appear before the board of review and the trial court so found. The trial court found that the defendant was not prevented from so appearing or from making any presentation or disclosure of his personal property in 1943, by any omission of duty on the part of the assessor, town of Amnicon, or on the part of such board of review. Upon the trial, it was the contention of the defendant that the assessor had promised an agent of the defendant that he, the assessor, would notify the agent of the time of the meeting of the board of review and that such notice was not given.
It is the further contention of the defendant that such machinery as was left in the plaintiff town after the usable, highway *323 equipment was moved to another job was obsolete highway equipment, unusable and junk or farm machinery; that the equipment other than that which was junk and obsolete was not taxable in the town of Amnicon but at the residence of the plaintiff in Superior because it had no fixed location and was only temporarily in the town of Amnicon awaiting transportation to the next job.
Upon recross-examination, the defendant testified:
All that property on defendant's Exhibit I, that's listed on that sheet there was in the town of Amnicon on May 1, 1943, and part of the highway equipment listed on that sheet was assessed by the city of Superior, and part of it assessed by the town of Amnicon. That part the town of Amnicon assessed is included in the total amount assessed by the town of Amnicon.
From the testimony of the defendant it appears that there were twenty items assessed, fourteen of which were assessed also in Superior. The defendant claimed that the six items not assessed in Superior were junk, obsolete and of no value. It did not appear that the items claimed by the defendant to be junk and obsolete were a part of the equipment which was being moved from place to place during the year 1943, at least some of it had been on the farm at the town of Amnicon for more than a year. The trial court held that —
"The defendant is precluded from questioning either the amount or the value of the personal property assessed against him by plaintiff town."
The facts of this case bring it squarely within Herzfeld-PhillipsonCo. v. Milwaukee (1922),
Sec.
It is conceded that the defendant did not appear before the board of review in the town of Amnicon. The defendant attempts to excuse his failure to appear on the ground that the assessor told one of the defendant's employees that he would notify the defendant when the board of review met.
Sec.
It nowhere appears that it was any part of the official duty of the assessor to notify persons against whom assessments are made of the time of meeting of the board of review. The defendant therefore was not prevented from appearing before the board of review "by omission of duty on the part of the assessor or of such board." The defendant having made no appearance before the board of review, and not being excused from making the disclosure and presentation required by the statute he cannot be heard to question the assessment or avoid the tax on that ground.
The defendant seeks to escape liability on the ground that the tax should be set aside on equitable grounds. We are unaware of any provision in the law which authorizes this or any other court to disregard a statute on the ground that its operation produces an inequitable result. If the statute is valid, it is the duty of the court to apply it in accordance with its terms. This contention was presented to the court in the case of Herzfeld-Phillipson Co. v. Milwaukee, supra, *325 and rejected. While the statute is perhaps, as has been previously said, a drastic one in that it places upon the taxpayer the burden of ascertaining the time of meeting of the board of review and appearing before it as a condition of attacking the validity of the assessment of personal property, that is a matter for the legislature and not for the court.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.