Baechtold v. Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals

804 A.2d 713, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 697
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 6, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 804 A.2d 713 (Baechtold v. Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baechtold v. Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals, 804 A.2d 713, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 697 (Pa. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge SMITH-RIBNER.

Robert L. Baechtold and Thelma H. Baechtold (Appellants) appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County that denied Appellants’ appeal from a decision of the Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals (Board). The questions presented by Appellants for the Court’s review are whether the State Tax Equalization Board (STEB) procedures set forth in Section 16.1 of the Act of June 27, 1947, P.L. 1046, 1 72 P.S. § 4656.16a (hereinafter STEB Act), are the exclusive means for a property owner to challenge a tax assessment on uniformity grounds and whether lack of uniformity may be established by evidence that shows a disparity between the assessment for the taxpayer’s property and the assessment of other properties in the neighborhood.

This appeal involves a uniformity challenge to the 2001 tax assessment of Appellants’ residential premises (Property) situated in the Lake Naomi Development of Tobyhanna Township in Monroe County (County). Such uniformity challenges are based upon the guarantee of Article 8, *715 Section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution that: “All taxes shall be uniform, upon the same class of subjects, within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws.” To comply with this constitutional guarantee, two factors are used to assess property for taxation: (1) the fair market value of the property and (2) a ratio or percentage that is applied to the fair market value to yield the assessed value. Hromisin v. Board of Assessment Appeals of Luzerne County, 719 A.2d 815 (Pa.Cmwlth.1998).

Appellants and the County agree that the fair market value of the Property is $430,502. Therefore, the only issue in dispute is the second factor. The County applied a 25 percent ratio to the fair market value of the property yielding an assessed value of $107,630. This ratio was predetermined and is within the range established by the STEB, which is statutorily required to establish common level ratios for each county. 2 Appellants contend that applying a 25 percent ratio to the Property results in an assessed value that is disparately high in comparison with their neighbors. The Board denied Appellants’ appeal from the County’s assessment, and Appellants appealed to the trial court. Before the trial court, the County presented the assessment card for the Property, four photographs of the Property, a copy of the County’s tax map with the Property indicated, a copy of the Board’s decision, a statement of the 1999 common level ratio and the 2000 tentative common level ratio established by the STEB. The County also asserted that its predetermined ratio of assessed value to fair market value is 25 percent. The County established its prima facie case without challenge from Appellants.

In opening, Appellants stated that they did not challenge the fair market value as established by Thomas Hill, the County’s chief tax assessor. Appellants explained that their challenge was strictly based on the constitutional requirement of uniformity, and they presented their case through examination of Hill. In preparation for the case, Hill had developed a table of Lake Naomi development properties comparable to the Property that had been sold recently in arms’ length transactions. By adding stipulated data of assessments to Hill’s table of comparable properties, Appellants sought to demonstrate that their assessment of $107,630 was 1.5 to 2 times greater than the assessed values of the properties that Hill had chosen as comparable. 3 Appellants relied upon In re *716 Brooks Building, 391 Pa. 94, 137 A.2d 273 (1958), and Deitch Company v. Board of Property Assessment, 417 Pa. 213, 209 A.2d 397 (1965), to argue that the assessment was unconstitutionally disparate from the assessments of neighborhood properties.

Although commenting that Appellants had presented a thorough statistical analysis, the trial court found their case flawed because they relied exclusively on information gathered from the Lake Naomi development and not from the entire County. The court noted that Brooks Building and Deitch Co. were decided before the General Assembly assigned to STEB the statutory duty to establish a common level ratio for each county. The court relied upon Hromisin to conclude that a uniformity challenge may no longer be premised on data obtained from only a neighborhood rather than the entire county. The court also noted that Appellants had failed to avail themselves of their right to appeal the decision of the STEB that set the common level ratio for the County. Because there was no dispute as to the fair market value of the Property and because the County’s assessment of the property was within the range permitted by the STEB, the court concluded that Appellant’s uniformity challenge was without merit.

Considerable case history surrounds the issue of using evidence of the assessed values of neighborhood properties to establish a uniformity challenge. In 1958, the Supreme Court held in Brooks Building that a taxpayer may prove lack of uniformity by “evidence of the market value of his property and of similar properties of the same nature in the neighborhood and by proving the assessments of each of those properties and the ratio of assessed value to actual or market value.” Id., 391 Pa. at 101, 137 A.2d at 276. The Supreme Court rejected the taxing authority’s argument that the taxpayer should be required to prove that a uniform ratio of assessed value to actual value has been applied generally throughout the entire district. Quoting In re Harleigh Realty Company, 299 Pa. 385, 149 A. 653 (1930), the Supreme Court explained that requiring a taxpayer to produce testimony of the value of other properties throughout the district would be so burdensome and expensive as to amount to a denial of justice.

Seven years later in Deitch Co., the Supreme Court clarified that the controlling inquiry in a uniformity challenge is the common level ratio applied in the entire taxing district. The court cited In re Rick, 402 Pa. 209, 167 A.2d 261 (1961) (per curiam), as having “made it clear that a taxpayer is not entitled to the lowest ratio of assessed value to market value to which he could point in the taxing district if such lowest ratio does not reflect the common assessment level which prevails in the district as a whole.” Deitch Co., 417 Pa. at 219, 209 A.2d at 401. The court held that where the evidence establishes that assessors have applied a fixed ratio of assessed to market value throughout the taxing district, that ratio is the common level ratio. Where no fixed ratio has been uniformly applied and the ratios vary widely, then the average of such ratios across the taxing district is the common level ratio.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re: Appeal of Haven at Atwater Village LLC
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2022
Smith v. Carbon County Board of Assessment Appeals
8 Pa. D. & C.5th 492 (Carbon County Court of Common Pleas, 2009)
Finter v. Wayne County Board of Assessment Appeals
889 A.2d 678 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2005)
Vees v. Carbon County Board of Assessment Appeals
867 A.2d 742 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
804 A.2d 713, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baechtold-v-monroe-county-board-of-assessment-appeals-pacommwct-2002.