TAXATION AND REVENUE SYSTEMS—ALABAMA.
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associations; property of literary and scientific institutions; libra
ries of ministers of the gospel; all libraries not professional, and re
ligious books kept for sale by ministers of the gospel and colporteurs;
deaf-mutes, insane and blind persons, and their property to the ex
tent of $1,000; all family portraits; household furniture to $150;
1 yoke of oxen; 1 cart or wagon; 2 cows and calves; 20 head of hogs; 10
head of sheep; all poultry; all cotton and agricultural crops grown in
the preceding year, and all manufactured articles remaining in the
hands of producer or manufacturer; provisions and seed; all wear
ing apparel; all looms and spinning wheels kept for use of family;
$25 worth of farming tools or mechanic’s tools; 1 sewing machine to
each family, when taxable property does not exceed $250; all money
on deposit in banks.
Property used in the manufacture of calcium cyanide is exempt
for 10 years after beginning construction of such plant. Pig iron is
exempt for 12 months from time of production.
All property used and devoted exclusively to the manufacture of
patented devices for the protection of human life, is exempt for a
period of 10 years from 1907. The patented rights and stock of such
corporations are also exempt for said period.
To encourage cotton and woolen factories, it was enacted in 1893
that the county or city authorities might grant them exemption for
five years; in 1901 shipbuilding plants were given the same bounty,
and it was further provided that cotton factories established since
1897 investing $50,000 therein prior to 1907 should be exempt
from all taxes for 10 years, and shipbuilding plants investing
$500,000 within five years from 1901 were also exempted from all
taxes for 10 years.
To encourage the development of the unused water powers of the
state, all property, business, and franchises necessary for the produc
tion and distribution of hydroelectric power is exempt for 10 years
after the beginning of the construction of any such plant.
b. Assessment.—There is but one assessment list for
state and county purposes. The assessment is based
upon the actual cash value of the property assessed
and is made by the county assessor on the basis of
sworn statements furnished by the taxpayers. The
assessment of all property is made annually and refers
to the 1st day of October; it is made up between that
date and the 1st of February with a “supplementary”
assessment up to the first Monday in May. Property
brought into the state after the 1st of October, unless
bought with money already assessed, is taxable.
Property is to be valued at its actual cash value. When
possible, the assessor is to interrogate the taxpayer
personally. The penalty for failure to make a return
to the assessor is, in the case of private persons, 10 per
cent added to the assessment made by the assessor;
in the case of railroad, telegraph, and long-distance
telephone companies, and corporations whose gross
receipts are taxable as property, the penalty is 50 per
cent increase. Besides entering the valuation, the
assessor is required to enter separately in the assess
ment book the amount of state, county, and special
taxes on the aggregate of real and personal property.
The assessor turns over the assessment book to the
judge of probate, who makes the abstract for the
state auditor and the county collector. If the as
sessor discovers property that has escaped taxation in
any assessment within five years previous, he assesses
the back taxes against that property and for this
receives a special commission. No assessment shall be
changed to a greater or less amount for the succeeding
year, unless there shall be a change in the condition of
improvements on the property.
Other provisions in regard to assessment are:
In valuing real estate the location, whether vacant or lying idle
or occupied and in use, and, if occupied and in use, the rent derived
therefrom, is to be taken into consideration.
Railroad, telegraph, and long-distance telephone companies are
assessed on all property, not strictly localized, by the state board of
assessors, and the assessment so made is apportioned to each county
on the basis of mileage in such county.
The valuation of railroad property not local in character made by
the state board of assessors is based ‘ ‘exclusively upon the considera
tion of what a clear fee-simple title thereto would sell for under the
conditions under which that character of property is usually sold.”
The value of the franchise or intangible property of railroad,
street railroad, and car companies, telegraph and telephone com
panies, gas, electric light, heat, and power companies, wharf, canal,
station, or terminal companies, and other companies operating a
public utility is computed from annual statements filed with the
state tax commission which form the basis of the assessment. From
the true cash value of the company’s entire property, ascertained
by taking the aggregate market or true value of all its shares of
stock and adding thereto the market or true value of its entire
indebtedness secured by any mortgage, lien, or other charge upon
its property, there is deducted the assessed value of the entire
tangible, real and personal, property of such company, and the
remainder of the true value is fixed by the state tax commission
as the true value for taxation of the franchises or intangible
property owned by such company.
The individual shareholders of any corporation paying ad valorem
taxes are not required to list its shares for taxation or to pay ad valo
rem taxes on such shares.
Whenever associations, etc., having no capital stock, engage in
business in the state, the capital and property are treated as capital
stock, and subject to taxation.
Shares of stock in corporations, other than railroad, telegraph,
long-distance telephone, express and sleeping car companies, build
ing and loan associations, and banks, are assessed at market value,
and, if the aggregate value of the shares exceeds the aggregate value
of the real and personal property of the corporation assessed, are
liable to taxation on such excess. The corporation pays for the
stockholder^ the tax on such excess.
Shares of stock in banks are assessed to the stockholders at a fair
and reasonable cash value, less the assessed value of real estate
taxed to the bank. The bank pays the taxes for the stockholders.
Any unincorporated bank shall be assessed at a fair and reasonable
cash value.
c. Equalization.—There is no equalization, strictly
interpreted, of any part of the assessment in Alabama,
but the court of county commissioners sits as a board
of review and hears and adjudicates all objections to
the assessment, treating them as regular cases on the
docket to be tried in the name of the state of Alabama
as plaintiff and the taxpayer as defendant. An appeal
from its decision may be taken to the circuit court.
There is no state board of equalization and no equal
ization, so called, between counties. But the super
vision of assessments by the tax commission is intended
to produce equality.
2. Rate—
The constitution of 1875 limited the rate which
might be levied for state purposes to 75 cents on each
SI00 of assessed valuation; that of 1901 reduced the