TAXATION AND REVENUE SYSTEMS—VIRGINIA.
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OFFICERS.
The officers most directly concerned with taxation
are:
(1) Commissioners of the revenue, one to six in each county,
elected for a term of four years; also one in each city ap
pointed by the hustings or circuit courts for a term of four
years expiring in 1913, thereafter to be elected for a term of
four yeara Where there is more than one commissioner in a
county they are assigned to districts. These officers have
general supervision of all taxes and licenses, with the ex
ception of corporation and franchise taxes and those under the
oyster laws.
(2) State, county, and city treasurers, who collect and re
ceive taxes and licenses.
(3) Assessors, specially appointed by the circuit, corpora
tion, and hustings’ court of the counties and cities, every fifth
year, to assess real estate, generally one for each district in
which there is a commissioner of the revenue.
(4) County board of supervisors, elected every four years,
one from each magisterial district; levies taxes for county
purposes and has general supervision over the revenues of the
county.
(5) The state auditor of public accounts.
(6) State corporation commission, composed of three mem
bers appointed by the governor for a term of six years; this
is the board of assessment for railroads and other corpora
tions.
State Revenues.
Prefatory note.—There is a special classification of taxes
provided for in the revenue laws of Virginia. That classifica
tion has not been adopted in the following analysis, because
it seemed to be somewhat desirable to present the tax sys
tem in the same form as that for the other states. But
as the classification used in the laws may throw some light
upon the working of the system, and specially upon the rela
tion of the different parts one to the other, an abstract of it
is here presented:
1. Taxes on lands and lots, ground rents, and rent charge.
2. Taxable subjects:
Schedule A.—Male inhabitants, white and colored, poll tax.
Schedule B.—Personal estate (in goods and chattels), in
cluding toll bridges, turnpikes, and ferries, except steam fer
ries, owned and operated by a corporation.
Schedule C.—Choses in action, moneys, credits, and capital
stocka
Schedule D.—Incomes.
3. On business and other subjects, to wit, on wills and ad
ministrations, on deeds, on suits, on seals, on banks and trust
and security companies, on insurance companies, on railroad
and canal companies, on water or heat, light and power com
panies, on sleeping and dining car and similar companies, on
express companies, on steamboat companies, and on telegraph
and telephone companies.
4. Licenses:
Schedule A.—Merchants, etc. (See more complete list under
licenses in the general analysis below.)
A. GENERAL PROPERTY TAXES.
1. Base—
a. The property included and exempt.—All real
estate and improvements, and all personal estate situ
ated within the commonwealth, and the moneys and
credits of persons residing therein wherever situated,
except as specially exempted, are to be taxed.
(1) and (2) Real and personal property are not specially
defined for purposes of taxation, but taxable classes are enu
merated in great detail.
(3) Exemptions in addition to public property are: Bonds
of the state issued since 1SS2; road and bridge bonds, locally;
churches and parsonages; cemeteries, public and private, not
conducted for profit; property of educational institutions, hos
pitals, nunneries, and orphan and other asylums; property of
the Virginia Historical Society, the Young Men’s Christian
Association and similar religious associations, the Association
for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities, the Confederate
Memorial Literary Society, and the Mount Vernon Ladies’
Association; free libraries; property devoted to charitable and
benevolent purposes, when not run for profit; grain, tobacco,
and other agricultural productions in the hands of the pro
ducer.
Shares of stock in companies all of whose capital is taxed
by the state and shares of companies which pay a franchise
tax in the state, are exempt from taxation.
b. Assessment.—There is but one assessment for the
purpose of state and county taxation, and in cities and
towns the assessment for municipal taxation is to be
the same as that for the state.
The general assessment of lands throughout the
state is made every five years. Assessors are ap
pointed especially for this purpose in the counties and
cities of the state and are required forthwith to assess
the fair market value of each tract and lot of land and
the improvements thereon and to note whether the
owner is white or colored.
The annual land book or list of the taxable real
estate is made by the commissioners of the revenue in
the several counties, cities, and districts, who ascertain
to whom the real estate is chargeable with taxes as of
February 1 of each year. The value of lands and lots
as ascertained by the assessor is not to be changed ex
cept on account of improvements. Each commissioner
takes with him the last land book and requires every
person charged to swear to the correctness of the entry
of his land and to state transfers and omissions, which
information is verified by the records. Abstracts of
grants, lists of deeds and lands devised, and judgments
for partition or recovery of lands, are supplied the
commissioner by clerks of court and registers of the
land office. Tracts of land in counties and town lots
are taxed separately. The commissioner is to assess
the value or the increase in value of any building or
inclosure of the value of $100 and upward not already
assessed and is to reduce the valuation for similar de
crease in value. Where the owner of the land also
owns the timber thereon the commissioner may deduct
for any decrease in the value of the woodland due to
the cutting of trees to a value of $200 or over.
Personal property is assessed annually as of Feb
ruary 1 by the commissioners of the revenue in the sev
eral counties, districts, and cities. Every person must