Congregational Home of District of Columbia v. District of Columbia

202 F.2d 808, 92 U.S. App. D.C. 73, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3310
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 1953
Docket11459
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 202 F.2d 808 (Congregational Home of District of Columbia v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Congregational Home of District of Columbia v. District of Columbia, 202 F.2d 808, 92 U.S. App. D.C. 73, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3310 (D.C. Cir. 1953).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

The Congregational Home of the District of Columbia, a non-profit corporation, owns certain improved real estate used as a home for aged and infirm persons. Its property has for years been included in the annual assessment of real estate subject to taxation and has never been held to be exempt. An application for exemption filed with the Commissioners of the District of Columbia in 1943 was denied by them in 1945. A second application lodged with the Commissioners July 8, 1948, after the petitioner’s realty had been assessed for the *809 then current fiscal year (July 1, 1948, to June 30, 1949), led to this litigation.

Relying on the pendency of its application for exemption, the petitioner did not pay the taxes based on the 1948-49 assessment. Nor did it pay the taxes levied on the assessments of its property for the succeeding three fiscal years, because its petition for exemption was still pending when those assessments were made. The Commissioners did not act on the application until November 14, 1951, when they denied it. Notice of the denial was mailed to the petitioner December 6, 1951. Thereupon the Congregational Home paid under protest the taxes based on the assessments for the four fiscal years ended June 30, 1949, to 1952, both inclusive, and on March 3, 1952, filed with the Board of Tax Appeals for the District of Columbia [now the District of Columbia Tax Court] a petition for the cancellation of the taxes so paid, and for appropriate refund. An amended petition was filed with the Board on March 27, 1952. The petitioner contended its property was exempt from such taxes under § 47-80la(h), D.C.Code (1940), 1 and under our decision in Catholic Home v. District of Columbia, 1947, 82 U.S.App.D.C. 195, 161 F.2d 901.

The Code permits an appeal by an institutional owner from the assessment of real estate which it believes to be exempt provided the appeal is taken within ninety days after the owner receives notice of the assessment; and a statement of taxes due mailed to the owner constitutes such notice. 2 The Board of Tax Appeals held the Congregational Home’s appeal was not filed within the time prescribed by the statute and, for that reason, dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. We are asked to review the Board’s action.

Taxes for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1949, necessarily were based upon the annual assessment made just before the year began on July 1, 1948. In the same manner, taxes for the succeeding three fiscal years here involved were based on the assessments made just before the years began on July 1, 1950, 1951 and 1952.

It is conceded that on or about September first of each of the years 1948 to 1951, both inclusive, a statement of taxes due for the then current fiscal year was mailed to the Congregational Home. It thus received notice at that time each year that its property had been assessed, and so, absent any contravening consideration, the statutory period of appeal with respect to each annual assessment began to run with the mailing of the statement. It is therefore clear that the petitioner’s single appeal as to all four assessments, filed March 3, 1952, was much too late to give the Board jurisdiction, unless some supervening cause or factor had extended that far the time for appealing from each of the four assessments.

The Congregational Home says its appeal was timely, despite the fact that it received notice of each annual assessment. *810 The ninety-day period did not run from the mailing of the tax statements, it asserts, because its application to the Commissioners for exemption from taxation was pending and undecided when the September tax statements were mailed. When it received a statement of taxes for 1948-9, which was mailed on or about September 1,1948, the petitioner inquired of the Assessor's to its status and was informed that no steps to collect the taxes would be taken while the application for exemption was pending, and that therefore the taxes need not be paid immediately. This assurance was repeated more than once during the years of pendency.

Finally, the Assessor advised the Congregational Home by letter dated December 6, 1951, of the denial of its claim. He enclosed tax statements for the four years and demanded payment, but said waiver of accrued penalties would be recommended if the taxes were paid before January 6, 1952. The letter mailed December 6, 1951, is to be regarded as the notice of the assessments for the four years, says the petitioner, and therefore its appeal to the Board of Tax Appeals, filed March 3, 1952,. was in time, being within ninety days after the letter was mailed.

We need not now decide whether the pendency of the application for exemption suspended the running of the ninety-day limitation on petitioner’s right to appeal from each separate assessment, and extended the appeal period to a date ninety days-after the Assessor mailed the letter on December 6, 1951. That question will not be reached unless it be first determined that the Commissioners have the- power to grant exemption from taxation after assessment; for if they lack that authority, the application to them and its long pendency could not prevent the statute from, running against the petitioner ninety days after each annual tax statement was mailed, and the Board of Tax Appeals was correct in dismissing for lack of jurisdiction.

The process of assessing real estate for taxation, and the duties and powers of various officials with respect thereto, are carefully set forth in Title 47 of the D.C. Code (1940). Broadly speaking, assessment results from two steps: (a) determining what parcels of real estate are subject to taxation, and (b) determining the equalized valuations of taxable real estate to which the tax rate, later determined, is to be applied.

Those who have duties with respect to assessment are the Assessor, the Deputy Assessor, a Board of Assistant Assessors composed of “six discreet persons” appointed by the Commissioners of the District, and the Commissioners themselves. First, the Commissioners furnish to the Board of Assistant Assessors a list of all the real property in the District of Columbia and the names of the several owners thereof, so far as known. § 704. Then the three members of the Board of Assistant Assessors designated for the “assessment of real estate”, j 605, determine, “from actual view and from the best sources of information in [their] reach,” the value of each tract or lot, § 705, and “annually on or before the 1st Monday of January make out and deliver to the assessor of the District of Columbia a return in tabular form * * of the amount, description, and value of the real property subject to be listed for taxation * * § 706. (Emphasis supplied.)

Since the Commissioners furnish to the Board of Assistant Assessors a list of all the parcels of real estate in the District, and since that Board is required later to deliver to the Assessor a list showing the description and value of the real property subject to be listed for taxation,

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Bluebook (online)
202 F.2d 808, 92 U.S. App. D.C. 73, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/congregational-home-of-district-of-columbia-v-district-of-columbia-cadc-1953.