Ann Arbor Township v. State Tax Commission
This text of 227 N.W.2d 784 (Ann Arbor Township v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
M. S. Coleman, J.
Plaintiffs appeal an order of the State Tax Commission (STC) regarding its equalization of property tax assessments in Washtenaw County. Adhering to the decision in Cooper Twp v State Tax Commission, 393 Mich 58; 222 NW2d 900 (1974), we vacate the STC order and remand to the Tax Tribunal for further proceedings.
Facts
On April 24, 1972, the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners equalized the value of real property in the county. 1 The Supervisor of Ypsilanti Township petitioned the STC for a review of this action 2 saying in part that it created "non-uniformity of the tax burden between classes of property and communities within the county”. The STC accepted the "appeal from the 1972 equalization of Washtenaw County” on May 8, 1972.
The STC surveyed property in Washtenaw County. This study resulted in preliminary findings increasing the equalized value of every county unit except Ypsilanti Township. A hearing was set for August 7, 1973. Representatives of the newly aggrieved cities and townships had an opportunity to present evidence regarding the equalization of Washtenaw County by the STC. The hearing was continued to September 17.
*685 The Commission’s final order was signed October 10, 1973. It briefly recited the chronology. It said the STC staff "reviewed the statements made by the supervisors at the hearings”. There was a "field check” made of some units "after which the report was prepared showing some revision of valuation in some of the units from the preliminary findings”. "After reviewing the whole file and the voluminous material” in its possession, the STC "adopted a resolution determining the equalized valuation of the several townships and cities of Washtenaw County”.
The Court of Appeals denied plaintiffs’ application for leave to appeal and their application for rehearing.
Discussion
I.
Cooper Twp concerned, as does the instant case, an appeal of equalization action taken by the county board of commissioners. The STC’s final order in Cooper Twp failed to meet the requirements of MCLA 209.102; MSA 7.632 3 and on remand we directed the STC to comply with this *686 provision. The order in this case is likewise flawed and requires a remedial remand.
The STC was also required by Cooper Twp to "conduct the equalization hearing under the relevant provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act, MCLA 24.271-24.287; MSA 3.560(171)-3.560(187)”. The form and substance of a "final decision or order of an agency in a contested case” are detailed by MCLA 24.285; MSA 3.560(185). 4 These requirements were not met in this case. 5
In Cooper Twp we remanded the matter to the newly created Tax Tribunal. MCLA 205.701-205.779; MSA 7.650(l)-7.650(79). Although we expressly gave "no consideration * * * to the practices and procedures of the Tax Tribunal” we did remand to that body "for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion”.
We cannot pass judgment on how the Tax Tribunal conducts its proceedings until we have such proceedings before us. However, MCLA 205.721; MSA 7.650(21) states that the Tribunal "is a quasi-judicial agency”. As such, we would expect it to *687 conform to procedures applicable to other such agencies.
II.
Plaintiffs have raised another question concerning equalization. Noting that the constitutional goal in taxation is uniformity, 6 plaintiffs argue that the STC subordinated that principle by denying the relevancy of evidence concerning the equalization results and practices in other counties.
In Allied Supermarkets, Inc v Detroit, 391 Mich 460; 216 NW2d 755 (1974), we said that the "process of equalization is designed to enhance the goal of uniformity”. That goal is achieved by both intra- 7 and inter- 8 county equalization, by uniformity within and between the counties. 9
*688 The STC’s final order in this case intended to achieve uniformity within Washtenaw County. However, its final order resulted in an increase in the state equalized valuation of Washtenaw County. 10 In attempting to achieve uniformity within counties, it must be remembered that uniformity should also be maintained between counties. In balancing the one scale the other should not be unbalanced.
Remand to the Tax Tribunal for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
See MCLA 211.34(1); MSA 7.52(1) and MCLA 209.5; MSA 7.605.
See MCLA 211.34(2); MSA 7.52(2).
This section requires in part:
"In appeals to the state tax commission, the decisions of the commission shall be upon a form prescribed by the commission which shall state the facts constituting the commission’s finding of true cash value, the proportion thereof at which assessments in the local assessing district are made, and which of the 3 commonly accepted valuation approaches were used in the determination of true cash value. The order shall be signed by the commissioners concurring therein. A commissioner may, in writing, dissent from any order so entered. If a party desires a stenographic record of an appeal hearing, said party must bear the expense of the stenographer and the transcript of the record. All decisions shall be filed in the office of the state tax commission and shall be mailed or delivered to a party or his legal representative.”
"A final decision or order of an agency in a contested case shall be made, within a reasonable period, in writing or stated in the record and shall include findings of fact and conclusions of law. Findings of fact shall be based exclusively on the evidence and on matters officially noticed. Findings of fact, if set forth in statutory language, shall be accompanied by a concise and explicit statement of the underlying facts supporting them.
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227 N.W.2d 784, 393 Mich. 682, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ann-arbor-township-v-state-tax-commission-mich-1975.