Brown v. Supervisor of Assessments

404 A.2d 1083, 43 Md. App. 153, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 352
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 6, 1979
Docket886, September Term, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 404 A.2d 1083 (Brown v. Supervisor of Assessments) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Supervisor of Assessments, 404 A.2d 1083, 43 Md. App. 153, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 352 (Md. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Moylan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants are owners of 32.34 acres of farmland in the Barnesville area of Montgomery County. They are appealing specifically the tax assessment for the year 1973 on a %-acre segment of that larger tract improved by a tenant house. The house was assessed at $10,200 and the %-acre curtilage surrounding it at $3,400. The Supervisor of Assessments for Montgomery County is the appellee.

The appellants entered a timely protest and appealed the assessment to the Maryland Tax Court. That court heard evidence and passed an order affirming the assessment. Contending that the decision of the Maryland Tax Court was arbitrary, capricious, confiscatory and otherwise illegal, the appellants appealed to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. Following argument in that court, Judge David L. Cahoon filed a Memorandum and Order on July 26, 1978, affirming the decision of the Maryland Tax Court. Upon this present appeal, the appellants raise two contentions:

1) That it was error for the appellee to assess the farm curtilage, improved by a tenant dwelling house on an unsubdivided farm property, at 50% of its alleged market value; and

2) That it was error for the appellee to ignore the Appraiser’s Manual for the State of Maryland and to use a non-uniform method of depreciating the house.

The appellants are trustees of the larger farm in question, having secured a tenant farmer to live in the house and to work the land following their father’s death in 1961. The land, used exclusively for agricultural purposes (other than the residence now in question), is improved only by a bank barn and by the tenant dwelling house. The house is situated on a Vfc-acre curtilage and is surrounded by a mowed lawn and trees.

Testimony before the examiner of the Maryland Tax Court established that the dwelling had been constructed before the *155 turn of the century, at least by 1890. The house has no basement, central heating or air conditioning; it does have a tin roof, frame exterior walls, plaster interior walls, pine floors, a 35-year-old bathroom equipped with an old-style tub on legs, electric heat and two porches. Water is supplied from a dug well. In addition, testimony established that there had been no changes in the neighborhood or community to alter the essentially agricultural nature of the area.

The county tax assessor separately assessed the homesite, allocating Vs acre for its support. Generally, zoning requirements mandate a two-acre support for the construction of new residential dwellings, but since 90% of the homesites in the area were developed on half-acre sites previous to the promulgation of Rural Agricultural (RA) zoning requirements, the practice established for assessment purposes in the area is to set aside one-half acre sites for residential use.

In determining the status of particular land as either residential or bona fide agricultural property so as to merit preferential tax treatment, the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation, pursuant to Md. Code Ann., Art. 81, § 19 (b), set forth certain relevant criteria in Regulation No. 9. These include, but are not limited to, applicable zoning ordinances; general character of the neighborhood; present and past use of the land; business activity of the owner on and off the subject property; principal domicile of owner and family; whether the farming operation is conducted by the owner or another for the owner, and if the latter, the terms of the arrangement; uses, other than the farming operation of the land; and the ratio of farm or agricultural use as against other uses of the subject property.

In light of these factors, the assessor determined that the V2 acre upon which the dwelling sits was being put to residential rather than agricultural use, thus precluding the application of the special agricultural land use assessment exemption provided by Art. 81, § 19 (b) of the Code. The %-acre homesite, at residential value, was assessed at $3,400, based on values of three comparable, non-agricultural Vis-acre homesites.

*156 Then, consistent with established practice, the dwelling was assessed on a cost reproduction, less depreciation, approach. Cost reproduction assessment is based on the structure’s dimensions and type, together with additional factors such as the existence of porches and heating systems, all integrated into the cost of the dwelling’s reconstruction in Montgomery County for the tax year 1973. The value thus calculated was $32,674.

The dwelling’s depreciation was calculated by an initial reduction in value of a basic rate of 35%, as set by the County Tax Commission Office, on observed depreciation of its condition. Testimony established that the structure’s age (i.e., predating 1920) was the determinative factor in the assessor’s use of this basic rate, as opposed to strict adherence to the practices set forth in the Appraisal Manual for Maryland Assessors, as mandated by Md Code Ann., Art. 81, § 19 (b), § 244. (Moreover, use of the manual for a dwelling of 70 years of age or more, of average construction type, such as the dwelling in question, would have established a rate of depreciation of about 52%.) In addition to the basic rate, the assessor deducted another 20% for “functional and economic obsolescence” for a total depreciation of 55%. These computations valued the house at $16,990. After further reduction of 40% for inflation, the dwelling’s assessment was valued at $10,200. By adding the assessment of the bank barn, the total assessment of improvements on the land was $10,900.

The assessor was confronted with a situation wherein, on one hand,- an agricultural community included homesites with “landscaped” lawns and trees, and, on the other hand, a piece of agricultural property included a homesite leased out to a tenant farmer who lived in the house and tilled the soil. The appellants sought to establish before the Tax Court that the property in question was strictly used for agricultural purposes, as was the land in the surrounding community. They further attempted to show that the dwelling supported by the Ms-acre homesite, set aside for residential use by the appellee, existed solely for the purpose of the continued maintenance and operation of the adjacent farmland.

*157 The appellants rely mainly on Warlick v. Supervisor of Assessments of Anne Arundel County, 272 Md. 540 (1974), in arguing that a homesite occupied by a tenant farmer hired to work the surrounding farmland should be considered agricultural property and thus deserves the exemption benefits granted farmland by the Legislature in Md. Code Ann., Art. 81, § 19 (b). In Warlick, the Court of Appeals affirmed the residential rate assessment of a one-acre tract of land on which Warlick built a house on his farm. In doing so, the Court offered appellants the basis for their cause by stating, “We do not reach the question whether accessory or auxiliary structures on a farm, occupied by farm employees need necessarily be assessed in a similar fashion.” 272 Md. at 544.

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

Related

Thames Point Assoc. v. Supervisor of Assessments of Baltimore City
509 A.2d 1207 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1986)
SUPERVISOR OF ASSESSMENTS OF CALVERT CTY. v. St. Leonard Shores Joint Ven.
486 A.2d 206 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1985)
Warselle Land Corp. v. Tewksbury Township
3 N.J. Tax 565 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1981)
Supervisor of Assessments v. Fitzgerald
431 A.2d 1381 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
404 A.2d 1083, 43 Md. App. 153, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-supervisor-of-assessments-mdctspecapp-1979.