Capital Properties, Inc. v. Nonnemacher, Pc/00-5286 (2001)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 5, 2001
DocketC.A. No. PC/00-5286
StatusPublished

This text of Capital Properties, Inc. v. Nonnemacher, Pc/00-5286 (2001) (Capital Properties, Inc. v. Nonnemacher, Pc/00-5286 (2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Properties, Inc. v. Nonnemacher, Pc/00-5286 (2001), (R.I. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION
Before this Court is the Summary Judgment Motion of Plaintiff, Capital Properties, Inc. The Plaintiff requests that this Court declare illegal and expunge an alleged tax assessment conducted of a parcel of its property referred to as "Parcel 2." Jurisdiction is pursuant to General Laws of Rhode Island 1956 § 44-5-26, § 44-5-27, and § 9-30-1.

Facts/Travel of the Case
The facts and history of this case are quite extensive. Capital Properties Inc. ("CPI") first sought redress in this Court against the State and City for related matters to this lawsuit in 1992. At that time, CPI alleged that the State and City had not adequately compensated it for the portion of its land it condemned through eminent domain during the moving of the Moshassuck and Woonasquatucket Rivers. This Court held that CPI was due approximately $400,000 more than it had been paid. (Capital Properties, Inc. v. State of Rhode Island Department of Transportation, C.A. No. PM88-1654) Upon appeal, the Supreme Court found that the trial justice had applied the wrong standard in determining the fair market value of the condemned property. The Supreme Court reversed and remanded the matter back to the Superior Court for a new trial using the "comparable sales" standard of determining fair market value. (Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island Department of Transportation No. 92-273-Appeal) On remand in 1997, this Court held that by using the "comparable sales" standard, CPI was due an approximate $6 million dollars more than that which had been paid by the State and City, plus interest and costs. (Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island Department of Transportation C.A. No. 88-1654) The State appealed this award and argued for the first time on appeal that a dispute as to the contractual obligations of the State and Plaintiff and the State and the City prevented the payment of the judgment. The Supreme Court, acknowledging that they could not review what was never before the trial justice, denied and dismissed the appeal without prejudice to any party's seeking to enforce any contractual obligations that may be implicated by the enforcement of the judgment. (Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island Department of Transportation. No. 97-329-Appeal) A Motion for Writ of Mandamus compelling final judgment was granted ((Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island Department of Transportation No. PC 88-1654) and not surprisingly, appealed. The State again argued that its post-judgment defenses should be heard. The Supreme Court deferred further consideration of the appeal pending resolution of these remaining issues, and remanded the case with the order that it be consolidated with all other unresolved claims between the parties. (Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island Department of Transportation No. 98-394-Appeal)

One of these other unresolved claims between the parties involved a claim for unpaid taxes. After this Court's remand decision in 1997 (Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island Department of Transportation. C.A. No. 88-1654), which found for the Plaintiff in excess of $6 million dollars, the Plaintiff received tax bills from the City indicating that its property has been reassessed at $110 per square foot, the fair market value determination of Plaintiffs property in the 1997 decision. The City also imposed back taxes based upon the reassessment for the years 1991-1995. By doing so, the City put the Plaintiff in the position of owing the City a very large sum of money. So large was this sum that, shortly thereafter, the Plaintiff received from the City a notice for sale at public auction of its property for the nonpayment of these back taxes and accrued interest. Plaintiff timely appealed these assessments to the Board of Tax Assessment Review and commenced action in the Superior Court seeking an injunction on the sale of the property and alleging the reassessment and imposition of back taxes was illegal and unconstitutional.

This action was decided in 1999 along with the other consolidated actions in Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island et al. (Nos. C.A. 98-6254, C.A. 88-1654, C.A. 98-2525, C.A. 97-4199, C.A. 98-5202) The Court found, inter alia, that the City essentially revalued CPI's property solely based upon the $110 per square foot condemnation value determined by the Court in C.A. No. 88-1654. The City retroactively applied the valuation for the years 1991-1995 and assessed back taxes and accrued interest. These assessment values were carried forward to the real property assessment as of December 31, 1997. The Court found the property in question was not "omitted" or "erroneously assessed" as provided for in § 44-5-23. Consequently, the Court held that the tax assessments made by the City against CPI were selective, arbitrary, and illegal. The Court stated, "[b]ecause revaluations must be carried out in an acceptable and orderly manner, selective assessments are generally held unlawful as discriminatory against the complaining taxpayer...." (Id. at 11) The Court ordered the City to expunge all real property tax assessments and reassessments based upon the $110.00 per square foot market value as determined in the condemnation proceeding and permanently enjoined the City from collecting taxes and accrued interest based upon this valuation method. The Supreme Court affirmed and adopted the lower court's decision with modifications not relevant to this action. (Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island et al., No. 99-324-Appeal) Thereafter, in 2000, this Court granted Plaintiffs Motion for Attorneys Fees and Denied the City's Cross-Motion to Vacate Judgment. (Capital Properties. Inc. v. State of Rhode Island et al., Nos. C.A. 97-4199, C.A. 98-5202, C.A. 99-4974, C.A. 98-6254).

The disputes between the City and the Plaintiff over this property nonetheless continue. The present lawsuit arises out of the City's acts with regard to "Parcel 2" of Plaintiff's property following the 1999 Court decision which expunged the illegal assessment of December 31, 1996 and directed the City to return the value of Plaintiffs property to the pre-1997 rate. Following the decision, the City expunged the illegal reassessment of December 31, 1996 and reduced the assessment for "Parcel 2" for the years in question from $110 to $30 per square foot, or from $10,035,100 to $2,736,800. (Plaintiffs Memorandum at 2) At the end of the 1999 year, the City increased the value of Plaintiffs "Parcel 2" from the pre-1997 rate of $30 per square foot to $75 per square foot. It then applied this valuation to the 1997-1999 tax years. The Plaintiff received no notice, other than a tax bill it received in 2000, that the value for "Parcel 2" was being changed from $30 per square foot to $75 per square foot. When the City refused the Plaintiffs request to issue a corrected bill, the Plaintiff once again sought redress in this Court by commencing the present action. Oral argument was heard on this summary judgment motion on May 25, 2001.

The Parties' Arguments
The Plaintiff alleges the City has once again illegally assessed "Parcel 2." It argues that before a municipality may reassess a piece of real estate it is required to follow certain steps. These steps are part of a statutory scheme and they ensure that any assessment is constitutional. The steps that precede an assessment include those outlined in R.I.G.L. § 44-5-1 et seq.

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Bluebook (online)
Capital Properties, Inc. v. Nonnemacher, Pc/00-5286 (2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-properties-inc-v-nonnemacher-pc00-5286-2001-risuperct-2001.