Clark v. Lucas County Board of Review

44 N.W.2d 748, 242 Iowa 80, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 387
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 14, 1950
Docket47693
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 44 N.W.2d 748 (Clark v. Lucas County Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Lucas County Board of Review, 44 N.W.2d 748, 242 Iowa 80, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 387 (iowa 1950).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

Plaintiffs owned the Hotel Charitone building and ground in Chariton, Iowa, on January 1, 1949, as of which date the Lucas County assessor fixed the one hundred per cent, or actual, value of the building at $48,310, and of the ground at $9100, and the sixty per cent, or assessed value, of each, respectively, at $28,986 and $5460, or a total assessed value of $34,446. Plaintiffs filed a written petition to the board of review alleging that the assessment was “illegal, excessive, discriminatory, erroneous, inequitable and confiscatory”, and asked that it be reduced to $22,000 “or such other amount as is not in excess of sixty per cent of the actual value of said real estate as of January 1, 1949.” In the petition they alleged that the actual value of the building was $30,000 and that of the land $7000. Therein they listed certain “other like property” in Chariton and the assessment of each, among which were the Copeland store and office, the Nichols store and apartment, the Bates Hotel, the National Bank & Trust Company, the Chariton Leader Publishing Company, and the Larimer lots. The board of review having denied the petition and confirmed the assessment, plaintiffs appealed to the district court.

The 1949 assessment roll describes the Charitone Hotel property as the south half (S%) and the east fifty-two feet of the *84 north half (N1/^) of Lot 7 in Block 8 of the original town of Chariton. The business district is built largely around a public square, which faces a cardinal direction on each side. Branden Avenue extends along the north side of the square and Grand Avenue extends along the east side of the square and intersects Branden Avenue at a right angle. The hotel property is in the southwest corner of Block 8 at the northeast corner of the intersection of Branden and Grand Avenues and corners with the northeast corner of the public square. We insert here a roughly sketched plat showing the location of the hotel and some of the properties with which plaintiffs compare it.

*85 The hotel ground is the L-shaped rectangle marked with the dotted or broken lines. Commencing at the northwest corner, the ground fronts west on Grand Avenue for 41 feet, thence extends east for a depth of 165 feet along and north of Branden Avenue, thence north along the alley 82y2 feet, thence west' 52 feet, thence south 41 feet, and west 113 feet to the place of beginning.

The hotel building consists of two structures. The older part, a two-story brick building, was built in 1913 for a store building on the ground floor. This building is on that part of the ground which forms the lower part or base of the L, if it were upright — it is the east 52' x 82of the hotel ground. The two-story building does not occupy all of this east portion of the ground. It has a south front 40 feet wide on Branden Avenue, and extends north along the alley for 67 feet. During all the time pertinent the ground floor has been occupied by two stores, and the second floor has been used for hotel rooms.

The hotel proper, which was built in 1923, is on that part of the ground which is 41' x 125' lying directly west of the two-story building on which the new building abuts. The latter building is of brick and has a full basement and four stories above, except for a width of 7% feet along a part of the north side, which is but one story. The building fronts west on Grand Avenue, on which side there are three large plate-glass windows with the upper halves semicircular, and three or more similar windows on the south side on Branden Avenue. These windows are all on the ground floor. The entrance to the lobby, the entrance to the café, and the outside entrance to the barber shop in the basement are all on the south side of the building. One of the exhibits certified to this court is a picture of the hotel taken with the camera facing northeast, giving a full view of the west and south sides of the hotel. The photograph, which appellee said flattered the hotel a little, shows quite an imposing structure of pleasing appearance, and apparently in good condition externally.

Pursuant to an order of the State Tax Commission of Iowa directing the city of Chariton to make a revaluation and reassessment of all real and personal property within the city, it *86 employed for this purpose E. T. Wilkins and Associates, appraisers and consultants, of Cleveland, Ohio. These men undertook this work about August 1, 1947, and completed it, and their revaluations and reassessments were adopted as the official assessment for the year 1947, apparently as provided by what is now section 442.2 of the 1950 Code. In doing this work Mr. Wilkins and his associates prepared a durable pasteboard card designated a “Real Estate Tax List” for each piece of taxable real estate, containing the dimensions of the ground area of each, a plat of each building, showing its dimensions and specific and minute details as to every item of construction, with a report as to front-foot values, with various factors bearing on replacement cost and physical and actual values, physical and functional depreciation of the improvements, and the state of repair and physical condition of each building. These cards and a typewritten loose-leaf book of sixty-five pages containing information with respect to their theories of valuation and methods of appraisal, with cost data as to labor and material in various types of construction, were all left in the office of the county auditor for reference.

Plaintiffs introduced as exhibits the Wilkins “tax list” for the Charitone Hotel, and the “tax lists” for eight other so-called comparable properties above-noted. No one challenges the accuracy or the correctness of the data shown on these cards, excepting some items of valuation and depreciation with respect to the plaintiffs’ property. Exhibit D-2, the loose-leaf book of data and information, was introduced by the defendants. Plaintiffs also introduced the 1949 assessment rolls for the plaintiffs’ property, and for each of the comparable properties.

The district court in its opinion comments at some length on the evidence. It disagreed with the actual value of the land itself and the assessment thereof as returned by the assessor and confirmed by the board of review, by reducing the amount of the actual value from $9100 to $6800. It also reduced the actual value of the buildings as returned by the assessor and a's confirmed by the board of review from $48,310 to $41,800.

In concluding its opinion the court stated :

“The court therefore finds as a fact that the value of the land and building as fixed by the assessor is excessive and in *87 equitable and out of proportion when considered with the other real estate in Chariton used for commercial purposes.”

Decree was rendered and entered in. accord with the opinion, and it was adjudged and ordered that the total assessment be reduced from $34,446 to $29,160.

I. Defendants (in this court) challenge the soundness of each reduction, and charge the district court with error in each, which requires a reversal. We will discuss first the reduction of the actual value of the building.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W.2d 748, 242 Iowa 80, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-lucas-county-board-of-review-iowa-1950.