A.F. Moore & Associates, Inc. v. Pappas

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 28, 2023
Docket1:18-cv-04888
StatusUnknown

This text of A.F. Moore & Associates, Inc. v. Pappas (A.F. Moore & Associates, Inc. v. Pappas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.F. Moore & Associates, Inc. v. Pappas, (N.D. Ill. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

A.F. MOORE & ASSOCIATES, INC., ) et al. ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) No. 18 C 4888 ) MARIA PAPPAS, Cook County ) Judge John J. Tharp, Jr. Treasurer, FRITZ KAEGI, Cook County ) Magistrate Judge Sheila Finnegan Assessor, and the COUNTY OF COOK ) ) Defendants. )

ORDER Plaintiffs are taxpayers who have sued Cook County and its Treasurer and Assessor (“Defendants”) over the assessment and collection of taxes upon their commercial and industrial properties (“subject properties”). Defendants sought discovery regarding the fair market value of the subject properties. In opposition, Plaintiffs filed a motion for a protective order to bar all such discovery (Doc. 214). After reviewing the parties’ memoranda (Docs. 214, 225, 235), the Court heard oral argument (Doc. 252, at 6-51). Later, this Court denied the motion for reasons summarized on the record (Doc. 265, at 4-6), but said a written order with more detailed analysis would follow, and now issues that order. BACKGROUND A. Overview Plaintiffs assert that the fair market value (FMV) of the subject properties is no longer relevant given their filing of a Second Amended Complaint (SAC) that dropped prior Count VI. That count had alleged that the estimates of FMV of the subject properties used in calculating taxes (what Plaintiffs call the “official market values”) were too high. As a result of the overvaluation, the assessed values were inflated and the properties were effectively taxed at a rate (“assessment level”) exceeding the lawful rate. In the SAC, however, Plaintiffs “do not contest” these valuations and the correctness of the resulting assessed values, assessment levels, and taxes. They still seek tax refunds but

only on their alternative theory: while the taxes on the subject properties were correct, the majority of similarly-situated properties were undervalued and so taxed at a lower and unlawful assessment level in contrast to the higher and legally-required level applied to their properties. Hence, Plaintiffs seek refunds based on an alleged denial of equal protection and uniformity. In their motion, Plaintiffs argue that market value “discovery should be barred because, under the Second Amended Complaint and Defendants’ answers and affirmative defenses, no contest or issue is raised concerning the official market values established by the Assessor and other County officials for the subject properties.

Therefore, discovery related to some alternative to the official market values is irrelevant to any party’s claim or defense and is wholly disproportionate to the needs of the case.” (Doc. 214, at 1). Defendants disagree, asserting that the FMV of the subject properties remains relevant to Plaintiffs’ alleged damages and the merits of the equal protection claims since “each property’s certified assessed value [is] at issue” and this “is comprised of two elements: the property’s fair market value and the assessment level applied to the property’s class.” (Doc. 225, at 1). Defendants reason that these elements are “intertwined” and cannot be “untangle[d]” in the claims that remain. (Id. at 5). They also observe that the sales ratio studies of Plaintiffs’ experts “rely on fair market value data from hundreds of other properties to purportedly show … other taxpayers enjoyed a lower level of assessment.” (Id.). Defendants conclude “[i]t is likely that the market value evidence … will establish that plaintiffs in fact enjoyed the same level of assessment applied to all other taxpayers in their class and were not treated less favorably, thus

defeating plaintiffs’ equal protection claim.” (Id.). During the September 30, 2022 hearing, the Court denied Plaintiffs’ motion for a protective order barring all FMV discovery of the subject properties, stating: We are in the discovery stage of this case. The key issues are in my view novel, the stakes are quite high for both sides, and reasonable minds could differ -- and they do here -- on whether the market value of the plaintiffs’ subject properties is relevant or not. My written opinion will explain why. Under these circumstances, I decline to impose a protective order barring all market value discovery. I cannot predict at this stage of the litigation that there is no need for the discovery because Judge Tharp will undoubtedly rule -- I can’t say that he will undoubtedly rule in plaintiffs’ favor and find that the evidence that defendants seek to offer and argue from -- evidence that they believe to be critical to their ability to defend the case and attack the claimed damages -- is irrelevant and inadmissible. So unless Judge Tharp decides to make an early determination on the admissibility or inadmissibility of market value evidence, you know, unless he declares such evidence to be inadmissible, that market value discovery will need to proceed.

I know from past hearings that given the volume of the market value evidence and how much time it will consume for all parties that the plaintiffs intend to ask Judge Tharp to take up this relevancy issue now rather than later. So at the end of this hearing, we’ll talk about a timetable for the filing of any objections to my order after you receive it, that is, the written order with more detailed findings. I am going to allow plaintiffs to defer at least for the time being responding to the market value discovery.

And I also want to say before turning to other discovery motions before me that my ruling on Motion 214 on the plaintiffs’ protective order is only denying plaintiffs the ability to foreclose across the board all market value discovery based on the claim that it’s irrelevant. It’s not a ruling on any specific market value discovery request that may have been asserted to which plaintiffs may have made objections[.] (Doc. 265, at 4-5). In the docket entry, a schedule was set for the filing and briefing of objections to the denial of the motion following the issuance of the more detailed written order. (Doc. 259). FMV discovery has been deferred since that time. B. Procedural History After certain tax assessments on the subject properties were unsuccessfully appealed to the Assessor, Plaintiffs filed appeals with the Board of Review (the “BOR”) for all assessments, arguing that the market values used by the Assessor were too high.1 Since the challenges covered multiple years for most of the properties, a total of 23 assessments were at issue. In more than half of these, the BOR decided to change the

assessment downward but only slightly. (Doc. 252, at 14-15). Plaintiffs then paid the required taxes but exercised their rights to further challenge them and seek refunds by filing tax objection complaints in the Circuit Court of Cook County in 2009. In 2018, Plaintiffs filed this action, arguing that Illinois’ procedural rules for challenging property taxes prevented them from proving their federal constitutional claims in state court. On April 30, 2019, Judge Kocoras granted Defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the grounds that Plaintiffs’ claims were barred by the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341, and for other reasons. (Doc. 59). Plaintiffs successfully appealed to the Seventh Circuit which ruled that the Tax Injunction Act and comity doctrine did not bar federal jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ equal protection and due

process challenges to Illinois’ system for seeking real estate tax refunds. Defendants’ petitions for rehearing and petition for a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court were

1 See e.g., Doc. 225-7 which includes the BOR’s decision on Prime Group Realty’s 2006 appeal along with the appraisal and other evidence and briefs submitted by Prime Group in support of the appeal. denied. A.F.

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A.F. Moore & Associates, Inc. v. Pappas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/af-moore-associates-inc-v-pappas-ilnd-2023.