BT Property, LLC v. Luzerne County Assessor's Office

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 21, 2024
Docket827 C.D. 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of BT Property, LLC v. Luzerne County Assessor's Office (BT Property, LLC v. Luzerne County Assessor's Office) 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
BT Property, LLC v. Luzerne County Assessor's Office, (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

BT Property, LLC, : Appellant : : v. : No. 827 C.D. 2022 : Luzerne County Assessor’s Office, : Pittston Area School District, : Pittston Township, and : Luzerne County : Argued: June 4, 2024

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE MATTHEW S. WOLF, Judge HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE WOLF FILED: August 21, 2024

BT Property, LLC (BT) appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County (trial court) entered on June 22, 2022, sustaining Preliminary Objections filed by the Luzerne County Assessor’s Office (Assessor’s Office), the Pittston Area School District, Pittston Township and Luzerne County (County) (collectively, Defendants) and dismissing BT’s “Complaint in Mandamus to Compel the Reversal of Real Estate Tax Assessment Increases for Tax Years 2009-2020 and the Voiding of Supplemental Real Estate Tax Bills for Those Tax Years” (Mandamus Complaint). For the reasons that follow, we reverse. BACKGROUND The facts surrounding this action are not in dispute. BT is the owner of an industrial property located in Pittston Township, Luzerne County (Property). In 2007, the Property had an assessed value of $138,250.00. In that same year, BT filed a tax assessment appeal with the Luzerne County Board of Assessment Appeals (Board) for the 2008 tax year. The Board denied the tax assessment appeal and the Property retained the assessed value of $138,250.00. BT filed a “Real Estate Tax Assessment Appeal” of the Board’s decision with the trial court at Case No. 2007- 13551. Reproduced Record (R.R.) 3a-4a. In 2008, while BT’s tax assessment appeal was still pending, the County conducted a county-wide tax reassessment. On July 1, 2008, the Board sent a “Notice of Change of Assessment and Change of Pre-Determined Ratio” to BT which set the “2008 Base Year Market Value” and “Assessed Value (2008 Market x 100%)” for the Property at a “Total” value of $1,481,300.00. R.R. 103a. BT did not file an appeal of the assessed value and the Assessor’s Office updated its database to reflect the $1,481,300.00 value to be utilized for the 2009 tax year. Meanwhile, on February 25, 2009, the trial court entered an order in Case No. 2007- 13551, reflecting a stipulated settlement between the parties wherein they agreed that the Property shall be assessed at $74,100.00 for tax year 2008. Id. at 101a. In response to the February 25, 2009 order, the Assessor’s Office mistakenly changed the Property’s assessed value from $1,481,300.00 (per the 2008 county-wide tax reassessment) to $74,100.00 (per the court-ordered settlement amount for year 2008 only) for the tax year 2009.1 On April 3, 2009, the Assessor’s Office mailed BT a notice titled “Change Per Court Order” (2009 Notice) advising

1 The County refers to this action as an “encoding error,” while BT characterizes it as a “clerical error.” Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 4a.

2 BT of the new assessed value of $74,100.00. R.R. 105a. From 2009 through 2020, the Assessor’s Office issued BT tax bills using the $74,100.00 assessment figure. The Assessor’s Office did not discover the error until on or around April 23, 2021. Id. at 5a. On that date, the Assessor’s Office mailed BT another notice, again titled “Change Per Court Order” (2021 Notice), advising BT that the Property’s “future tax billing basis” will be $1,481,300.00, effective as of January 1, 2021, for “County/Munic[ipal taxes]” and as of July 1, 2021 “for School [taxes.]” Id. at 107a. The 2021 Notice also stated: “This notice may or may not result in the generation of a supplemental bill being issued on May 1 or September 1 of this year or next year.” Id. It did not provide any indication that the Assessor’s Office would apply the $1,481,300.00 assessment value retroactively to years 2009-2020. Nevertheless, on May 28, 2021, the County mailed BT “County/Municipal and School Supplemental” tax bills (supplemental tax bills) for the years 2009 through 2020. R.R. 73a-97a. The supplemental tax bills were calculated using the difference between the assessed values of the Property ($1,481,300.00 − $74,100.00 = $1,407,200.00) multiplied by the millage for each corresponding year, for each taxing body. Id. The supplemental tax bills did not include any penalty or interest on their face, but rather provided time periods during which the bills could be paid at a discount, at face value, or at penalty. Id. BT filed its Mandamus Complaint on November 18, 2021. R.R. 63a- 71a. The Mandamus Complaint alleges that the Assessor’s Office exceeded its authority in retroactively increasing the assessments for the 2009-2020 tax years and directing the supplemental tax bills to be issued. Id. at 68a. BT maintains that the Assessor’s Office erroneously relied on the trial court’s February 25, 2009 order in Case No. 2007-13551 as a basis to retroactively increase BT’s past assessments,

3 despite that order only pertained to the 2008 tax year. Id. Citing Section 8816 of the Consolidated County Assessment Law (Assessment Law), 53 Pa.C.S. §8816,2 BT argues that upon the discovery of a clerical error, the Assessor’s Office is only empowered to make current year assessment increases but has no authority to make retroactive increases for past tax years. Because the Assessor’s Office refuses to retract the supplemental tax bills, BT maintains it has no other adequate remedy at law and asked the trial court to enter “a judgement [sic] in mandamus against [] Defendants striking the 2009-2020 retroactive assessment increase and corresponding supplemental tax bill[s] on [BT’s] real property.” R.R. 69a-70a. The County filed Preliminary Objections (in which the remaining Defendants joined) demurring to BT’s Mandamus Complaint and alleging BT failed to exhaust statutory remedies. See Pa.R.Civ.P. 1028(a)(4), (7). On the demurrer, Defendants alleged that Section 8816 of the Assessment Law is inapplicable to the instant matter. They argued that Section 8816 applies only to the correction of clerical errors in the assessment of a property. R.R. 50a (emphasis in original). They insisted that there was no such error here, as the Property was correctly assessed at

2 Section 8816, titled “Clerical and mathematical errors,” provides:

(a) Correction.--If, through mathematical or clerical error, an assessment is higher than it should have been and taxes are paid on such incorrect assessment, the county assessment office, upon discovery of the error and correction of the assessment, shall so inform the appropriate taxing district or districts, which shall make a refund to the taxpayer or taxpayers for the period of the error or six years, whichever is less, from the date of application for refund or discovery of the error by the board. Reassessment, with or without application by the owner, as a decision of judgment based on the method of assessment, shall not constitute an error under this section.

(b) Increases.--Nothing in this section shall be construed as prohibiting an assessment office from increasing an assessment for the current taxable year upon the discovery of a clerical or mathematical error.

4 $1,481,300.00 since tax year 2009. Defendants posited that “[t]he only error, if any, was in the subsequent notices sent to BT due to an encoding error” and inferred that BT could have sought a hearing before the Board pursuant to Section 8845 of the Assessment Law but failed to do so.3 Id. Defendants submit that the County has no duty to retract the supplemental tax bills, and thus, mandamus cannot lie. Id. As to exhaustion of statutory remedies, Defendants argued that following the 2008 county-wide reassessment, BT’s Property was accurately assessed at $1,481,300.00 for the 2009 tax year and that a proper Notice of Reassessment was mailed to BT on July 1, 2008.

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BT Property, LLC v. Luzerne County Assessor's Office, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bt-property-llc-v-luzerne-county-assessors-office-pacommwct-2024.