Opinion
No. 26014. Department One.
December 14, 1936.
CARRIERS (2) — WHO ARE COMMON CARRIERS — LOGGING RAILROADS. A toll logging railroad, under Rem. Rev. Stat., § 8395 et seq., is not a common carrier where its sole purpose was to haul forest products of its owner to tidewater as a necessary incident of logging.
TAXATION (71-1, 97) — LEVY AND ASSESSMENT — MODE OF ASSESSMENT — TOLL LOGGING ROADS — REVIEW BY COURTS. The tax commission, in taxing a toll logging railroad as a common carrier, proceeds on a fundamentally wrong basis, which the courts will correct, if it results in an over-valuation greatly disproportionate to valuations of property of like character in the same district.
SAME (61-1) — MODE OF LEVY AND ASSESSMENT IN GENERAL — VALUATION — DIFFERENT ASSESSMENT AGENCIES. The fact that two taxing agencies, the tax commission and the county assessors, are called upon to fix valuations under certain circumstances of properties of like character in the same taxing district, does not justify one agency in fixing valuations grossly disproportionate to values fixed by the other.
See 67 A.L.R. 588.
Appeal from a judgment of the superior court for Grays Harbor county, Campbell, J., entered September 5, 1935, upon findings in favor of the plaintiffs, in consolidated actions to recover taxes paid under protest, tried to the court. Affirmed.
Paul O. Manley, E.W. Mathewson, R.G. Sharpe, and E.W. Anderson, for appellants.
Karl R. Bendetson, for respondents.
For some time prior to 1929, Saginaw Logging Company owned and operated a logging road between Brooklyn, in Pacific county, and Vesta, in Grays Harbor county, where it connected with a branch line of the Oregon-Washington Railroad Navigation Company. Desiring to extend its logging road from Vesta to Preachers Slough, in Grays Harbor county, it caused to be organized Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company as a toll logging railroad under chapter 82, Laws of 1905, p. 161 (Rem. Rev. Stat., § 8395 [P.C. § 4692] et seq.). All shares of stock of the latter (except qualifying shares held by directors) were owned by the former.
In 1929, the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company commenced construction of its line. By the end of 1930, it had completed construction of 3.61 miles of main line between Preachers Slough and Bridges, with 2.09 miles of sidings at those points. It had also practically completed construction of the grade, bridges and trestles between Bridges and Vesta — a distance of about ten miles. This grade paralleled the line of the Oregon-Washington Railroad Navigation Company.
Sometime during the year 1930, the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company acquired trackage rights over the line of the Oregon-Washington Railroad Navigation Company between Bridges and Vesta. It also acquired trackage rights over the line of its parent company (Saginaw Logging Company) between Vesta and Brooklyn. As a result of the acquisition of these trackage rights, the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company abandoned construction of its own line. In the meantime, it had acquired a machine shop in Pacific county and had purchased the following equipment: One second-hand ninety-four ton locomotive, a tender, 102 log flat cars, and two second-hand cabooses. These, the abandoned grade between Bridges and Vesta, the machine shop, and the 5.88 miles of main line and sidetracks between Bridges and Preachers Slough, were the only physical properties owned by the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company. The initial cost of these properties, as shown by the company's annual report to the tax commission for the year 1930, was approximately $365,000.
Acting on the theory that the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company was a common carrier, the tax commission fixed the valuation of its properties as a system, just as in the case of other common carriers. In so doing, the initial cost of the properties was used as a base. It appears that, ordinarily, in fixing a system valuation, the commission takes into consideration reproduction cost less depreciation, earnings, and the value of stocks and bonds when sold on the market. Taking all these factors into consideration, the commission arrives at the fair market value of the system.
In the case of the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company, there were no bonds or stock on the market, and, since earnings were negligible, the value was fixed, as admitted by one of appellants' witnesses, practically on the first factor alone — reproduction cost less depreciation. The actual value of the system, as finally equalized under this method, for the year 1932, was $148,000 — $78,000 allocated to realty, and $70,000 to personalty. The Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company paid taxes, levied for that year, under protest, and brought this action to establish what it conceived to be the fair valuation of the property and to recover the amount of taxes paid in excess of such as might be due under the value it alleged should be established.
In 1933, the equalized value of the property, as fixed on the tax commission's method of system valuation, was $110,000 — $40,000 allocated to realty and $70,000 to personalty. Saginaw Logging Company, having taken over the properties of the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company, paid, under protest, taxes levied on the personal property on the basis of such valuation, and brought action to establish what it conceived to be the fair valuation of the personal property, and to recover the amount paid in excess of the amount due on the basis of such fair valuation as it claimed should be established.
The two actions were consolidated for trial. Judgment was entered substantially in accordance with the prayers of the complaints. Grays Harbor and Pacific counties appeal from the judgment so entered.
[1] The court made findings of fact, the following of which we think are conclusivey established by the evidence: That the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company is an ordinary logging railroad "like other ordinary logging railroads in Grays Harbor and Pacific counties;" that its sole object and purpose were to haul forest products of its owner to tidewater "as a necessary incident of logging and having no further object, use or purpose as a railroad upon cessation of logging by its owner."
Under these facts, the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company was not a common carrier. State ex rel. Silver Lake R. L. Co. v. Public Service Commission, 117 Wn. 453, 201 P. 765, 203 P. 3.
[2] The tax commission, in fixing the valuation of the company's property on the theory that it was a common carrier, proceeded on a fundamentally wrong basis. This, in itself, is not sufficient to justify the intervention of the courts at the instance of the taxpayer. But if the result of such procedure is an over-valuation which is palpably exorbitant and greatly disproportionate to valuations of property of like character in the same taxing district, the court will intervene and revalue the property. Templeton v. Pierce County, 25 Wn. 377, 65 P. 553; Hillman's Snohomish County Land R. Co. v. Snohomish County, 87 Wn. 58, 151 P. 96; First Thought Gold Mines v. Stevens County, 91 Wn. 437, 157 P. 1080; Finch v. Grays Harbor County, 121 Wn. 486, 209 P. 833, 26 A.L.R. 644. The gist of the rule is stated in the case of First Thought Gold Mines v. Stevens County, supra, as follows:
"It is the established law in this state that courts will grant relief from a grossly inequitable and palpably excessive over-valuation of real property for taxation as constructively fraudulent, even though the assessing officers may have proceeded in good faith, and this without regard to the action of the board of equalization."
[3] The appellants did not even attempt to justify, in the light of the rules laid down in these cases, the valuations placed upon the properties by the tax commission. Appellants did attempt, by computation, to justify the tax commission's valuations on the basis of "net railway operating income." But the computations are not at all convincing that valuations so arrived at represent the fair market value of the properties. On the other hand, the respondents demonstrated by their evidence that the challenged valuations were grossly excessive and utterly disproportionate to valuations placed upon properties of like character in Grays Harbor and Pacific counties.
The trial court found that the fair valuation of the real property of the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company in 1932 was $34,760, and of its personal property $41,990. For the year 1933, it found the value of the personal property to be $37,386. It further found: "That said fair actual values as aforesaid are the values placed upon like property similarly situated and are based upon the market values of said property." This finding is based upon undisputed evidence.
We understand appellants to ask us to infer that there was no inequality in the valuations placed upon respondents' properties and the valuations placed upon other properties of like character in Grays Harbor and Pacific counties, because respondents' properties were in the jurisdiction of the tax commission and the other properties were in the jurisdiction of the county assessors. In support of this proposition, appellants quote from Henderson v. Pierce County, 37 Wn. 201, 79 P. 617, as follows:
"The evidence here shows not only a gross overvaluation of the respondent's property, but it shows a gross overvaluation, we think, when compared with other property of like kind within the assessor's jurisdiction."
We do not think the language, either in terms or in context, warrants the interpretation appellants ask us to place upon it. The fact that two different taxing agencies of the state are called upon to fix valuations, under certain circumstances, of properties of like character in the same taxing district, does not justify one agency in fixing valuations grossly disproportionate to valuations fixed by the other. To hold otherwise would be subversive of the fundamental theory of equality in taxation.
Judgment affirmed.
MILLARD, C.J., MAIN, STEINERT, and GERAGHTY, JJ., concur.