700 F.2d 126
CLINCHFIELD RAILROAD COMPANY; Durham & Southern Railway
Company; High Point, Thomasville & Denton Railroad Company;
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company; Norfolk, Franklin
& Danville Railway Company; Norfolk Southern Railway
Company; Norfolk & Western Railway Company; Seaboard Coast
Line Railroad Company; Southern Railway Company; and
Winston-Salem Southbound Railway Company, Appellees,
v.
Mark G. LYNCH, Secretary of Revenue of the State of North
Carolina; and Douglas R. Holbrook, Director, Ad Valorem,
Tax Division of the North Carolina Department of Revenue,
Mecklenburg County, Appellants.
and
Madison County, Defendant.
No. 82-1049.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Nov. 10, 1982.
Decided Feb. 3, 1983.
Hamlin L. Wade, Charlotte, N.C. (Ruff, Bond, Cobb, Wade & McNair, Charlotte, N.C., George W. Boylan, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Raleigh, N.C., on brief), for appellants.
Everett B. Gibson, Memphis, Tenn. (Gregory G. Fletcher, Laughlin, Halle, Clark & Gibson, Memphis, Tenn., Armistead J. Maupin, Charles B. Neely, Jr., Nancy S. Rendleman, Maupin, Taylor & Ellis, P.A., Raleigh, N.C., William C. Basney, Jacksonville, Fla., L.P. McLendon, Jr., Edward C. Winslow, III, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard, Greensboro, N.C., William C. Antoine, James W. McBride, Memphis, Tenn., on brief), for appellees.
Before WIDENER and MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judges, and GORDON, Senior District Judge.
MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:
It is a fact widely known, recognized by Congress, and not contested here by the parties that property taxation by the several states has, for many years, operated in a fashion inherently discriminatory against the railroads. In 1976, Congress set out to eliminate the discrimination, passing Sec. 306 of the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act, Pub.L. No. 94-210, 90 Stat. 54, now codified at 49 U.S.C. Sec. 11503. Section 306 makes clear that it is directed at practices both as to real property taxation and as to personal property taxation, and that remedies prescribed under the section are to be fashioned and applied so as to correct inequities in both categories.
However, Sec. 306 also accords priority for determination of the initial question of whether for any particular year there has in fact been discrimination in taxation to statistical studies called sales-assessment ratio studies developed with respect to real property. Concentration on statistics attributable to real property by recourse to sales-assessment ratio studies is explained by the fact that, through stamps on deeds covering recent transfers of real estate, it is often relatively simple to develop reliable figures to show whether real estate of railroads, as compared with or contrasted to real estate of other, especially non-public utility, taxpayers, has been equitably taxed.
Here the fact of discriminatory real estate taxation in North Carolina for the year 1980 is not questioned on appeal. A sales-assessment ratio study established that, taking Mecklenburg County by way of example, the real properties of other commercial and industrial taxpayers were assessed at 72 percent of actual value, while the railroads were taxed at essentially full value. The difference stems from the state's reassessment procedures. Railroad property, both real and personal, is reappraised annually by state authorities. N.C.Gen.Stat. Secs. 105-288 and 105- 338 through 105-341. Residential and other non-public utility real properties, on the other hand, are taxed in North Carolina on the basis of assessments revised no more frequently than once every eight years by local authorities. N.C.Gen.Stat. Secs. 105-285 and 105-286. The long delay between assessments presumably was introduced by statute to moderate the impact of inflation and no doubt also to minimize anticipated disgruntled cries of numerous taxpayers. The consequence, however, is clear: railroad assessments keep pace with the steady increases in true market value brought about by inflation, whereas the assessments for most commercial and industrial taxpayers do not.
The question presented by the state on appeal is whether, concentrating for simplicity's sake on the situation in Mecklenburg County, the district court erred when it ordered that all railroad property--both real and personal--was to be assessed at no greater than 72 percent of its true market value. The district court, in short, applied the 72 percent factor developed for real estate not only to real estate but to personal property as well. The state contends that there is no discrimination among taxpayers with regard to personal property because the personal property of all taxpayers, public utilities and non-utilities alike, is reappraised annually at virtually full market value. Consequently, argues the state, the railroads enjoy an undue windfall under the district court's order which lowers the assessment ratio on their personalty from 100 percent to 72 percent. The overall percentage figure for real property and personal property combined, under the state's theory, should almost inevitably work out to greater than 72 percent.
The essential problem faced by the district court was quite simple: the record was devoid of any information as to what portions of the railroads holdings were, respectively, real property and personal property. The narrow question we must answer is whether, when confronted with such a void in proof, the district court may correct a perceived discrimination as to the real property and, in so doing, order a reduction in assessments which necessarily must embrace personal property as well.
The answer to our question requires a consideration of where the burden of proof fell once discrimination, even though shown only as to real estate, had been established. We are satisfied that once North Carolina was shown to have practiced discrimination with regard to real property under its statute which applies a single undifferentiated assessment to both real property and personal property, the state assumed the burden of establishing facts sufficient both to warrant a different conclusion with respect to personal property and to enable the district court to fashion a decree that would not frustrate efforts to alleviate the discrimination already proven as to real property.
That conclusion accords fully with the letter of Sec. 306. Under Sec. 306(2)(d), "the burden of proof with respect to the determination of assessed value and true market value shall be that declared by the applicable State law." Under North Carolina law, the Property Tax Commission is obligated to order a reduction in the assessment of a railroad's property once the railroad establishes an "inequitable difference" between its assessment and that of taxpayers whose property is assessed locally by county authorities. N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec. 105-342(c)(5).
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700 F.2d 126
CLINCHFIELD RAILROAD COMPANY; Durham & Southern Railway
Company; High Point, Thomasville & Denton Railroad Company;
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company; Norfolk, Franklin
& Danville Railway Company; Norfolk Southern Railway
Company; Norfolk & Western Railway Company; Seaboard Coast
Line Railroad Company; Southern Railway Company; and
Winston-Salem Southbound Railway Company, Appellees,
v.
Mark G. LYNCH, Secretary of Revenue of the State of North
Carolina; and Douglas R. Holbrook, Director, Ad Valorem,
Tax Division of the North Carolina Department of Revenue,
Mecklenburg County, Appellants.
and
Madison County, Defendant.
No. 82-1049.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Nov. 10, 1982.
Decided Feb. 3, 1983.
Hamlin L. Wade, Charlotte, N.C. (Ruff, Bond, Cobb, Wade & McNair, Charlotte, N.C., George W. Boylan, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Raleigh, N.C., on brief), for appellants.
Everett B. Gibson, Memphis, Tenn. (Gregory G. Fletcher, Laughlin, Halle, Clark & Gibson, Memphis, Tenn., Armistead J. Maupin, Charles B. Neely, Jr., Nancy S. Rendleman, Maupin, Taylor & Ellis, P.A., Raleigh, N.C., William C. Basney, Jacksonville, Fla., L.P. McLendon, Jr., Edward C. Winslow, III, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard, Greensboro, N.C., William C. Antoine, James W. McBride, Memphis, Tenn., on brief), for appellees.
Before WIDENER and MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judges, and GORDON, Senior District Judge.
MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:
It is a fact widely known, recognized by Congress, and not contested here by the parties that property taxation by the several states has, for many years, operated in a fashion inherently discriminatory against the railroads. In 1976, Congress set out to eliminate the discrimination, passing Sec. 306 of the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act, Pub.L. No. 94-210, 90 Stat. 54, now codified at 49 U.S.C. Sec. 11503. Section 306 makes clear that it is directed at practices both as to real property taxation and as to personal property taxation, and that remedies prescribed under the section are to be fashioned and applied so as to correct inequities in both categories.
However, Sec. 306 also accords priority for determination of the initial question of whether for any particular year there has in fact been discrimination in taxation to statistical studies called sales-assessment ratio studies developed with respect to real property. Concentration on statistics attributable to real property by recourse to sales-assessment ratio studies is explained by the fact that, through stamps on deeds covering recent transfers of real estate, it is often relatively simple to develop reliable figures to show whether real estate of railroads, as compared with or contrasted to real estate of other, especially non-public utility, taxpayers, has been equitably taxed.
Here the fact of discriminatory real estate taxation in North Carolina for the year 1980 is not questioned on appeal. A sales-assessment ratio study established that, taking Mecklenburg County by way of example, the real properties of other commercial and industrial taxpayers were assessed at 72 percent of actual value, while the railroads were taxed at essentially full value. The difference stems from the state's reassessment procedures. Railroad property, both real and personal, is reappraised annually by state authorities. N.C.Gen.Stat. Secs. 105-288 and 105- 338 through 105-341. Residential and other non-public utility real properties, on the other hand, are taxed in North Carolina on the basis of assessments revised no more frequently than once every eight years by local authorities. N.C.Gen.Stat. Secs. 105-285 and 105-286. The long delay between assessments presumably was introduced by statute to moderate the impact of inflation and no doubt also to minimize anticipated disgruntled cries of numerous taxpayers. The consequence, however, is clear: railroad assessments keep pace with the steady increases in true market value brought about by inflation, whereas the assessments for most commercial and industrial taxpayers do not.
The question presented by the state on appeal is whether, concentrating for simplicity's sake on the situation in Mecklenburg County, the district court erred when it ordered that all railroad property--both real and personal--was to be assessed at no greater than 72 percent of its true market value. The district court, in short, applied the 72 percent factor developed for real estate not only to real estate but to personal property as well. The state contends that there is no discrimination among taxpayers with regard to personal property because the personal property of all taxpayers, public utilities and non-utilities alike, is reappraised annually at virtually full market value. Consequently, argues the state, the railroads enjoy an undue windfall under the district court's order which lowers the assessment ratio on their personalty from 100 percent to 72 percent. The overall percentage figure for real property and personal property combined, under the state's theory, should almost inevitably work out to greater than 72 percent.
The essential problem faced by the district court was quite simple: the record was devoid of any information as to what portions of the railroads holdings were, respectively, real property and personal property. The narrow question we must answer is whether, when confronted with such a void in proof, the district court may correct a perceived discrimination as to the real property and, in so doing, order a reduction in assessments which necessarily must embrace personal property as well.
The answer to our question requires a consideration of where the burden of proof fell once discrimination, even though shown only as to real estate, had been established. We are satisfied that once North Carolina was shown to have practiced discrimination with regard to real property under its statute which applies a single undifferentiated assessment to both real property and personal property, the state assumed the burden of establishing facts sufficient both to warrant a different conclusion with respect to personal property and to enable the district court to fashion a decree that would not frustrate efforts to alleviate the discrimination already proven as to real property.
That conclusion accords fully with the letter of Sec. 306. Under Sec. 306(2)(d), "the burden of proof with respect to the determination of assessed value and true market value shall be that declared by the applicable State law." Under North Carolina law, the Property Tax Commission is obligated to order a reduction in the assessment of a railroad's property once the railroad establishes an "inequitable difference" between its assessment and that of taxpayers whose property is assessed locally by county authorities. N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec. 105-342(c)(5). Proof of that "inequitable difference" (defined, for state equalization purposes, as a difference of 15 percent, Sec. 105-342(c)(4)), rebuts the presumption of correctness which an appraisal enjoys, e.g., In re Appeal of Amp, Inc., 287 N.C. 547, 215 S.E.2d 752 (1975), and can be supplied, under Sec. 105-342(c)(5), by the selfsame sales-assessment ratio study favored by Sec. 306(2)(e). We conclude that, by proving discrimination as to real property, the railroads established an "inequitable difference" for purposes of Sec. 306 and, thus, that any further burden in the case before us was the state's to bear.
The state asserts that it has, in any event, met its burden because certain statistics for Mecklenburg County respecting personal property assessments were developed which, it was stipulated, would be applicable for a number of other North Carolina counties. Those statistics reflected value ratios of assessment for personal property at or near 100 percent.
Even accepting that to be the case, North Carolina failed to set forth the evidence needed to carry the second half of its burden. Even if we assume that the record sufficed to permit a finding that all personal property, whoever the owner, was assessed at 100 percent of market value and that railroad personalty has not been treated in a discriminatory fashion, nevertheless there was literally no evidence in the record to show a breakdown by percentage for the railroads, appellees here, of the respective worths of their real and personal property holdings. Without that crucial evidence, the district court was incapable of determining that proportion representing real property to which the 72 percent figure should be applied and that proportion to which a higher ratio developed for personal property should be applied. The district court, as a consequence, was bound to alleviate the conclusively proven real property discrimination just as it did; the state failed to adduce evidence which would have allowed a meaningful alternative remedy to be fashioned.
In the course of preparation for trial, the state submitted a request for the production of documents under Rule 34 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, asking from the railroads the very breakdowns which are lacking as between real property, on the one hand, and personal property, on the other. The railroads replied that the breakdowns were not available and therefore could not be produced. Whatever suspicion may attach to that answer when viewed by an appellate court, the fact is inescapable that the state of North Carolina merely accepted that answer and made no efforts to compel a response or otherwise to supply a crucial deficiency in its proof.
Consequently, in the posture of the case as it stands before us, it is uncontradicted that the breakdown as to how much of the railroad holdings were personal property, on the one hand, and real property, on the other, was unattainable or in any event had not been obtained and is altogether absent from the record.
On the basis of that failure of proof, and realizing that the decision applies only with respect to a single year, 1980, we affirm the decision of the district court granting summary judgment. To the extent that the opinion of the district judge suggests that reliance should, under Sec. 306(2)(e), be placed solely upon percentages derived from sales-assessment ratio studies of real estate to the exclusion of a similar inquiry into personal property by way of appraisal studies and expert testimony, we do not approve what the district judge had to say. The statute makes clear that personal property, as well as real estate, is to be dealt with in the course of achieving equality and thereby eliminating discrimination. We affirm the result reached in the district court on the quite different ground that the proof of the state failed as to the necessary data relevant to personal property. We do not accept the proposition that only proof as to real estate discrepancies was to be obtained, and then applied indiscriminately to both personal property and real property owned or used by the railroads. However, the difference in attitude as to the scope of the statute does not mandate a result contrary to the one reached by the district judge.
While it does not affect in any way our decision, an observation is merited that the result would be unfortunate were we to agree with the state's contention that the burden to produce the relevant figures as to personal property lies with the taxpayer. The information, assuming it can be obtained despite the negative answer to the document request undisputed in this case, would in all probability be quite costly to assemble. It undoubtedly was also costly to some degree to provide the information with respect to the real property which established, in the first place, the existence of discriminatory treatment.
It will not encourage the state to clean its Augean taxing stable unless some burden is placed on it to show that the discrimination is lesser or non-existent for personal property, once a pattern of discrimination stands revealed for real estate assessment. The state should not be able simply to continue to apply its tax statute, year after year, although its application unquestionably and indisputably has been shown for a prior year to be discriminatory for reasons which will not have changed. That would be exceedingly unfair to the railroads, if they, after having had to incur substantial expense in a subsequent year to achieve with respect to real estate the fair treatment to which they are manifestly entitled, must additionally assume the burden as to personal property all over again as well. On the state's view of things, the railroads would still, each successive year, have to accumulate information about personal property expensive to obtain.
Bearing in mind the remedial purposes of the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976, it is sensible that the burden of proof has been allocated to the state. It also is sensible that the state's legislators be afforded an incentive to effect revisions necessary to eradicate the inherently discriminatory practices evidently imbedded in the present version of their state's law.
AFFIRMED.