Citadel Development Co. v. Board of Assessment Appeals

828 A.2d 1057, 574 Pa. 84, 2003 Pa. LEXIS 1270
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 22, 2003
Docket30 WAP 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 828 A.2d 1057 (Citadel Development Co. v. Board of Assessment Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citadel Development Co. v. Board of Assessment Appeals, 828 A.2d 1057, 574 Pa. 84, 2003 Pa. LEXIS 1270 (Pa. 2003).

Opinions

[86]*86 OPINION

Justice EAKIN.

Citadel Development Company, a real estate developer that built residential dwellings in a deteriorating area of Erie, challenges the property tax assessments for its dwellings. Citadel contends the appellees reduced applicable tax exemptions by applying a method not included in the Improvement of Deteriorating Real Property or Areas Tax Exemption Act (IDRPA), 72 P.S. § 4711-101, et seq., and local ordinances.

Section 4711-302(a) of the IDRPA provides:

(a) Each local taxing authority may, by ordinance or resolution, exempt from all real property taxation the assessed valuation of any residential construction built in a deteriorating area from and after the effective date of this article in the amounts and in accordance with the schedule and limitations hereinafter provided.

72 P.S. § 4711-302(a).

Section 4711 — 303(a)(1),(b) of the IDRPA provides:

(a) A local taxing authority granting a tax exemption pursuant to the provisions of this article may provide for tax exemption on the assessment attributable to the actual cost of construction of the new dwelling unit in accordance with one of the following schedules:
(1) For the first, second and third year for which said newly-constructed dwelling unit or units would otherwise be taxable, one hundred per cent of the eligible assessment shall be exempted; after the third year the exemption shall terminate;
(b) The exemption from taxes shall be limited to the assessment valuation attributable to the cost of construction of the new dwelling unit not in excess of the uniform maximum cost per dwelling unit specified by the municipal governing body. The exemption shall commence in the tax year immediately following the year in which the building permit [87]*87is issued. No tax exemption shall be granted under the provisions of this article for the construction of any dwelling unit in excess of the uniform maximum cost specified by the municipal governing body.

72 P.S. § 4711-303(a)(l),(b).

Erie County adopted Ordinance 59 implementing the exemptions allowed by IDRPA in 1980. Previously the City of Erie implemented the same in Ordinance 60-1478, November 15, 1978; the Erie School District did so by Resolution of July 17, 1979. The ordinances and resolution contain identical language. Ordinance 59 provides:

There is hereby exempted from all property taxation, the assessed valuation of improvements to deteriorated commercial and residential properties and the assessed valuation of new residential construction, in accordance with the provisions and limitations hereinafter provided.

Erie County Ordinance No. 59,1980, § 2.

The maximum exemption permitted for new residential construction under Ordinance 59 is limited:

(a) 2. New Residential Construction: To that portion of the additional assessment attributed to the actual cost of construction, but not in excess of the maximum cost per dwelling unit as specified in sub-section (b) of this section.
(b) The maximum cost per dwelling unit eligible for exemption shall be ... $15,936.00 per dwelling unit on the assessment attributable to the actual cost of improvements constructed during 1978 and .. . $50,000.00 per dwelling unit on the assessment attributable to the actual cost of new construction constructed after the effective date of this Ordinance. Maximum cost for improvements constructed during each year thereafter shall be the maximum cost for the preceding year multiplied by the ratio of the United States Bureau of the Census new one-family houses price index for the current year to such index for the preceding year. The date of the construction shall be the date of issuance of the [88]*88building permit, improvement record or other required notification of construction. No tax exemption shall be granted under the provisions of this article for any improvements to any dwelling unit in excess of the maximum cost specified above. This limitation shall not apply to non-residential, industrial, commercial or other business properties which are eligible for exemption under this Ordinance.

Erie County Ordinance No. 59,1980, § 3(a)(2),(b).

The schedule for real estate taxes to be exempted shall be as follows:

% * *
2. New Residential Construction: For the first three (3) years during which the improvement becomes assessable, 100% of the eligible assessment shall be exempted.

Erie County Ordinance No. 59,1980, § 4(a)(2).

When properties in Erie County are assessed, the common level ratio (CLR) is utilized; the CLR is the ratio of assessed value to current market value as determined by the State Tax Equalization Board (STEB). See 72 P.S. § 5342.1. It is a device by which a taxing authority equalizes assessments from different years to a base year, i.e., the year of the most recent countywide reassessment. See id. Adjusting the cost of construction to base year dollars ensures assessments are applied equally to construction that happened years apart.

Citadel claims the taxing body here applied the CLR to the IDRPA exemption, reducing it in violation of the Ordinance; Citadel argues that use of the CLR to reduce the exemption ignored the language of the IDRPA and Ordinance 59, which explicitly state the exemption applies to 100% of the eligible assessment for the first three years in which the new construction would otherwise be taxable. See 72 P.S. § 4711-303(a)(1); Ordinance 59, § 4(a)(2).

The trial court held Citadel was correct, and the method used to calculate the exemption was contrary to Ordinance 59. In its Second Amended Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order, the trial court stated:

[89]*89Neither the enabling statute nor the ordinance permits use of the common level ratio in calculating the exemption. The common level ratio was established in 1982, after these ordinances were adopted, and none of the ordinances were amended to incorporate use of the common level ratio. Use of the common level ratio in calculating the exemption is contrary to the enabling statute and the ordinance.

Trial Court Second Amended Findings of Fact, 7/9/99, at 16-17. The trial court also held the IDRPA exemption applied to improvements only, not the underlying land. The trial court calculated the exemptions on these properties, and found the improvements were entirely exempt from real estate taxes in 1996 and 1997.

The County appealed to the Commonwealth Court, which vacated the trial court’s ruling on the method of calculating the IDRPA exemption and remanded for recalculation using the CLR. The Commonwealth Court reasoned it was proper to apply the CLR because the assessed value would otherwise be zero unless construction exceeds $400,000, stating:

[T]he County’s method of calculating the amount by applying the STEB ratio to the exempt cost of construction was the proper method.

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Related

Crawford Central School District v. Commonwealth
888 A.2d 616 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2005)
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Citadel Development Co. v. Board of Assessment Appeals
828 A.2d 1057 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
828 A.2d 1057, 574 Pa. 84, 2003 Pa. LEXIS 1270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citadel-development-co-v-board-of-assessment-appeals-pa-2003.