DocketNumber: File #53633
Judges: Hon, Cornell
Filed Date: 12/13/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The "Statement of Issue" attached to the "Stipulation of Fact" is: "The sole issue that the parties seek an adjudication of is whether or not a taxpayer who has paid his taxes after the filing of an application for relief with the Superior Court may recover from the municipality the excess of taxes he has paid."
The action is not one seeking a declaratory judgment, but *Page 468
if it were, in order that the court might justify answering the question posed, it would be compelled to ignore its abstract character. Stueck vs. Murphy Co.,
The difficulty is, that the situation delineated by the stipulation, when read in the light of the pleadings, does not permit the court to make a decision such as the parties desire, or, in fact, any on what may be sensed to be the merits of the real controversy.
For, the complaint alleges, in effect, that the plaintiff made return of all the taxable property owned by it on July 1, 1935. It then proceeds to state that: "Said assessors valued said merchandise at $175,000," and that "The amount of said assessment was manifestly excessive, etc." Apparently, the "said assessment" was that made on "said merchandise". There is nothing revealed in the complaint as to whether such merchandise constituted the whole of plaintiff's taxable property as it appeared in its return, or if it did not, what the total of plaintiff's list was.
The situation is further complicated by the circumstance that the stipulation of facts is silent as concerns any excessive assessment on plaintiff's "merchandise". It says: "The assessors valued said premises at One Hundred, Seventy five Thousand ($175,000) Dollars." There is nowhere in the pleadings any claim of an excessive assessment of realty owned by plaintiff. Accordingly, it would appear that while plaintiff contends that it was subjected to a manifestly excessive assessment because its "merchandise" was overvalued, the parties have by common consent chosen to ignore this, but agree that the "premises" owned by plaintiff were, nevertheless, excessively assessed.
The question whether the plaintiff is entitled to repayment in whole or in part of the taxes paid by it becomes academic *Page 469 only, since it appears neither from the pleadings nor the stipulated facts that the plaintiff has any cause of action, at all. This is so because the most that can be gleaned from the record is that the complaint is predicated upon an excessive assessment of one item, only, of plaintiff's tax list, whether that be "merchandise" or "premises". It is nowhere alleged that the total assessment of all of plaintiff's taxable properties is "manifestly excessive", or even excessive.
The statute under which, apparently, this action is brought(Cum. Supp. [1935] § 375c) provides a remedy against the payment of a tax in contradistinction to that provided by section374c of the Cumulative Supplement to the General Statutes(1935), which aims at rectifying a grievance based upon an excessive or disproportionate assessment, by appeal from a board of relief. Conn. Light Power Co. vs. Oxford,
Insofar as the record here discloses, plaintiff's claim is that a single item on its assessment list (whether that be "merchandise" or "premises") is claimed to be clearly overvalued. But, as noted supra, nothing appears to show that, notwithstanding, the assessment in its total may yet be one conforming to the statutory standard and hence, not "manifestly excessive" within the concept of the statute under which this action is brought. See