Board of County Commisioners v. City of Muskogee

1991 OK 115, 820 P.2d 797, 62 O.B.A.J. 3429, 1991 Okla. LEXIS 124, 1991 WL 226528
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 5, 1991
Docket72761, 72748
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1991 OK 115 (Board of County Commisioners v. City of Muskogee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of County Commisioners v. City of Muskogee, 1991 OK 115, 820 P.2d 797, 62 O.B.A.J. 3429, 1991 Okla. LEXIS 124, 1991 WL 226528 (Okla. 1991).

Opinions

OPALA, Chief Justice.

Three questions are tendered in appeal No. 72,761: [1] Does the statute-mandated program of revaluation of taxable county property1 impose a duty on a recipient municipality of ad valorem tax revenues to pay its share of the revaluation cost? Should this question be answered in the affirmative, then [2] Does the county excise board also have a statute-imposed obligation to make ad valorem millage for payment of these costs available to a municipality? and [3] Do the provisions of 68 O.S.1981 § 2481.4,2 when applied to a municipality, contravene our constitutional or statutory law? We answer the first question in the affirmative, and the last two in the negative.

The question tendered in appeal No. 72,-748 is whether the terms of § 2481.4, which [801]*801make the recipient entities of ad valorem tax revenues responsible for paying the property revaluation program’s cost, violate any provisions of Art. 10 §§ 9,3 194 and 205 and Art. 5 §§ 466 and 59,7 Okl. Const. Our answer to this question is in the negative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

A.

Cause No. 72,761 — The Claim For Costs Against The City

In compliance with the statutory regime, Muskogee County proceeded in 1983 with a comprehensive program to revaluate all property within the county. The Board of County Commissioners [Commissioners] billed the City for its proportionate share of the revaluation costs for the 1983-84 fiscal year. The county excise board approved the City’s payment of this expense from its excess revenues in the 1983-84 sinking fund budget. When the following year the excise board approved a request to levy millage for the City’s 1984-85 sinking fund budget to pay the City’s share of revaluation costs, some utility-taxpayers challenged the action by suit. The Court of Appeals held the levy contravened the terms of Art. 10 § 28, Okl. Const.,8 which restrict the sinking fund use to payment of interest coupons, bonds and judgments. See Matter of Protests of Southwestern Bell.9 Faced with this decision, the excise board ceased making appropriations of ad valorem tax millage to the City’s sinking fund budget for the revaluation expenses, although the City continued to be billed for its share of the program costs. The controversy now before us was occasioned by the City’s refusal to pay its proportionate share of the revaluation program for three fiscal years — 1984-85 through 1986-87.

The Commissioners sought mandamus10 compelling the City to meet its statute-imposed obligation to pay the revaluation costs for the three fiscal years in contest.11 [802]*802The City countered that (a) the excise board failed to allocate any funds to the City’s budget for payment of these costs and (b) any legal requirement to pay for the program from revenue independently generated either from city taxes or from the City’s sinking fund violates certain provisions of state fundamental law.

B.

Cause No. 72,748 — The Claim For Costs Against The School Board

The Commissioners also pressed a mandamus claim against the Board of Education of Muskogee Public Schools, District 1-20 [School Board] to compel payment of the 1986-87 fiscal-year revaluation costs.12 The School Board, which had paid its share for the fiscal years 1983-84 through 1985-86, denied liability for the 1986-87 fiscal year. Its position was that (a) the excise board failed to allocate any funds to the School Board budget to defray this expense and (b) any legal requirement to use for the revaluation program funds specifically budgeted “for educational purposes” is constitutionally impermissible.

During the fiscal years in contest the county assessor prepared a special budget for the revaluation costs, which the excise board assessed against the City and School Board in proportion to those entities' share in the total ad valorem tax revenue. Neither the City’s general fund nor its sinking fund contained a separate appropriation for payment of revaluation cost. The City submitted only its sinking fund budget to the excise board for review and approval of a share of the millage rates available for sinking funds.13 The School Board’s estimated budget, like that of the City, contained no separate or identifiable appropriation for its share of revaluation costs.

Upon consolidation of the two mandamus proceedings for a single trial, the district court ordered that mandamus issue against the School Board but not against the City. The ruling rests on the legal conclusion that (a) the statute-imposed revaluation program is constitutional and (b) the revaluation program does not constitute a “state purpose”. The City was found not liable for its assessed share of the costs based on the judge’s view that (a) § 2481.414 contemplates the revaluation cost would be paid by ad valorem tax revenues themselves, (b) the City’s general fund received no specific millage appropriation for this purpose and (c) the City’s use of the sinking fund millage to finance the revaluation program would be constitutionally impermissible. From this order the School Board and the Commissioners brought separate appeals, which stand consolidated for disposition by a single opinion.

II

THE AD VALOREM TAX REVALUATION PROGRAM

The enactment of ad valorem tax revaluation program introduced a comprehensive [803]*803statewide regime for all taxable properties within every county of the State.15 Section 2481.116 commands that revaluation process be carried out on a continuous basis and be conducted at least once each five years. All county assessors are given the responsibility to ensure that all property is revaluated. They are required to submit a special budget for the revaluation cost to the county excise board, which must review and approve the special budget.17 The excise board must then apportion the cost among the diverse recipients of ad valorem tax revenues.18 The apportionment is to be based upon the ratio that each recipient’s total tax proceeds (collected from its mill rates levied for the preceding year) bear to the total proceeds of all the recipients’ levied mill rates.19 Every ad valorem millage recipient is required to pay its proportionate share of revaluation costs.20

III

MANDAMUS

Mandamus, an extraordinary legal remedy,21 is governed by the terms of 12 O.S.1981 §§ 1451 and 1452.22 Before a writ may issue there must be found (1) a clear legal right in the petitioner, (2) the respondent’s refusal to perform a plain non-discretionary legal duty and (3) the writ’s appropriateness as a legal remedy and the inadequacy of other relief.23

IV

THE CITY HAS A STATUTE-IMPOSED DUTY TO PAY ITS SHARE OF THE REVALUATION COSTS

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Board of County Commisioners v. City of Muskogee
1991 OK 115 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1991 OK 115, 820 P.2d 797, 62 O.B.A.J. 3429, 1991 Okla. LEXIS 124, 1991 WL 226528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-county-commisioners-v-city-of-muskogee-okla-1991.