Court Opinion

ID: 3659682
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:11:41.987063+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:30.144055
License: Public Domain

The plaintiffs, R. K. Murdock and N. P. Watt, in June, 1902, returned $10,080 worth of cotton as solvent credit, and at the same time deducted their indebtedness, amounting to $10,080, therefrom, the said $10,080 being the money used by them in the purchase of the cotton returned for taxation.                                 (125)
His Honor, Judge Bryan, instructed the jury upon the evidence to answer the issue "No," and gave judgment for plaintiffs for $95.61, the amount of the tax which plaintiffs had paid.  In this we think there was error.
1. We are of opinion that the evidence failed to bring the transaction within the terms of Laws 1901, ch. 7, sec. 33. All the evidence, including that of the plaintiffs themselves, tended to prove that the cotton was not "in the hands of a commission merchant or agent, in or out of the State," but was in the plaintiffs' own hands and possession and under their control and keeping; that on 1 June, 1902, it was in their warehouse in Statesville, to which they had the keys.  Therefore, "the value of the cotton in the hands of a commission merchant," under the facts of this case, could not very well be assessed as a solvent credit, and therefore the action of the board was legal.
2. The Superior Court had no jurisdiction to render the judgment set out in the record. It is true, the case on appeal calls this proceeding a civil action, but the record discloses that it is not, as is shown by the following extract:  "The appellant board declined to accept the return as made by appellees, and ordered the clerk of its board to make out a receipt of the taxes in conformity to corrected tax return, from which order the appellees appealed to the Superior Court in term.
"The following is the order of said board: `Ordered that the clerk of this board make out tax receipt against Watt  Murdock for $10,080, as a corrected receipt for return of 1902.'
"At the meeting of the bgard of commissioners in August, the following appears of record:  `The question of taxes against    (126) Watt  Murdock; upon the motion to reconsider, motion overruled, from which defendants give notice of appeal.'  Notice of appeal waived in open session."
It appears from the judgment of the Superior Court that the ad valorem
tax of $95.61 assessed upon the cotton was paid by plaintiffs, and the court renders judgment in their favor against defendants for *Page 92 
that sum.  Although the point was not made, we feel it our duty to notice the defect of jurisdiction in the Superior Court to render the judgment. There is no statute with which we are acquainted, and none has been called to our attention, which gives the Superior Court jurisdiction to entertain such an appeal or proceeding as this, or to render a judgment in it against the defendants for the amount of the tax paid. If the plaintiffs paid this tax in obedience to the order of the board of commissioners under protest, the proper remedy to test the legality of the tax is by an action brought in a court of a justice of the peace to recover the amount paid.  Then the Superior Court would have appellate jurisdiction.  The proceeding is irregular.  Let the judgment of the Superior Court be reversed and this proceeding
Dismissed.
(127)