Cooper Township v. State Tax Commission

222 N.W.2d 900, 393 Mich. 58, 1974 Mich. LEXIS 213
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1974
Docket12 December Term 1973, Docket No. 53,722
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 222 N.W.2d 900 (Cooper Township v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper Township v. State Tax Commission, 222 N.W.2d 900, 393 Mich. 58, 1974 Mich. LEXIS 213 (Mich. 1974).

Opinion

Swainson, J.

In 1971 the Cooper Township Supervisor prepared the Township’s 1971 assessment roll at what he considered 50% of true cash value as required by law. The Township Board of Review thereafter inspected the assessment roll, made adjustments, and certified to the Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioners that the assessment roll stood at 50% of true cash value.

The Cooper Township assessment figures were then reviewed by the Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioners as required by MCLA 211.34; MSA 7.52. On review, the Board of Commissioners accepted the report of the Kalamazoo County Equalization Director which concluded that the Cooper Township assessment was made at a ratio of only 42.27% of true cash value and therefore, should be increased in value.

Cooper Township (Township) filed a petition for review of the Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioner’s decision with the State Tax Commission (Commission). The Commission, by letter, informed the Township that its petition for review was being denied because "the supervisor did not at the time of filing the appeal have evidence of discrimination against the township in the adoption of the equalization report.” See, MCLA 211.34; *61 MSA 7.52. The Township then appealed to the Court of Appeals which subsequently denied leave. This Court on December 22, 1971, granted leave and summarily remanded the case to the Commission for a full hearing on the merits. Cooper Twp v State Tax Commission, 386 Mich 777 (1971).

After this Court remanded the matter for a hearing on the merits, the Commission assembled a staff of appraisers and assigned them to Kalamazoo County to conduct a full equalization study. The Township, in a letter dated January 7, 1972, requested that it be allowed to copy all "work sheets, forms, materials, and documents which are to be used in such reinvestigation or generated as a result of the same as said documents are prepared.” The Commission denied the Township permission to copy the staff papers as they were prepared, but in a letter of January 27, 1972 did agree to allow "the supervisor of Cooper Township [to] examine the appraisals of the State Tax Commission in the Tax Commission office and any copies of the appraisals that he desires will be reproduced and provided at a cost of l(ty per page.”

On April 4, 1972, the Commission informed the Township that it had completed its study of Kalamazoo County and would make available "the detailed appraisal record cards of any of the properties * * * as you request.” On May 11, the Township attorney went to the Commission’s office, copied the available appraisal forms and requested to copy any additional papers used in the study. In response to this request the Commission replied by letter on May 16, 1972:

"Dear Mr. Reed:
"On the occasion of your visit to the Tax Commission office on Thursday, May 11, 1972, I informed you that *62 on occasion, appraisals by the State Tax Commission staff contain additional work papers in those instances where the property is of such complexity that the ordinary appraisal card is not sufficient to contain all of the information.
"As a result of your request for additional work papers, if any, we examined the files in the matter of the appraisals in Cooper Township made as a result of the equalization study for 1971, copies of which appraisals were furnished to you, and find no instances where any additional sheets or work papers to be attached because none of the appraisals in Cooper Township were of such complexity as to require any.”

The equalization hearing began on June 21, 1972. As the hearing opened, the Township renewed its prior written request that the hearing be conducted by an impartial hearing officer and in accordance with the procedures of the Administrative Procedures Act. This motion was denied by the Commission chairman acting in the capacity of the presiding officer at the hearing. The parties then began their presentation of evidence.

During the course of the hearing, it became apparent that the Commission’s staff appraisers were relying on working papers that had not been produced for the prior inspection of the Township’s attorney. The Township attorney objected, demanding the right to inspect any working papers used by the Commission staff in the preparation of their appraisals. At this point, the Commission Chairman interjected:

"The Chairman: Mr. Reed, I concur you were supposed to be furnished with all the work papers to be considered by the Commission, in my understanding. That is what I was told. These were not in the files as a part of the Commission’s viewing of Cooper Township. Am I correct?
"The Chairman: Understand the position of the Com *63 mission. The Commission is a separate entity from the Tax Commission staff. The files that come before the Commission as part of the consideration were the files I brought with me yesterday and which you viewed and went through. Some of them I see had more notes in them than others. This is true at any time we have any kind of appeal files or appraisal files.
"If there are other papers, which seems to be the case in Cooper Township, or field man notes, whether they are legible or not I can’t tell you, but these should be furnished you then if that is the case. Maybe sometimes they do things one way and sometimes the other. I don’t know how the men operate on this. This is not my area of telling them what to do because I do not tell them how to handle their job.
"If there are other papers you will be furnished with them.”

After this seeming misunderstanding was resolved, the hearing resumed with the Township receiving the staff notes requested.

At a later point in the hearing, however, the issue of disclosure again emerged. During the cross-examination of Commission staff appraiser, Arthur V. Stephan, the following colloquy developed:

"Q. To what are you referring? Are those your field notes?
"A. Right.
"Q. Did we obtain copies of those?
"A. To my knowledge, no.
"Mr. Bauckham [Attorney for Cooper Township]: I would request respectfully that we be furnished those copies.
"The Chairman: Request is hereby denied. They do not come before the Commission for consideration. That request is denied. You have been given everything that comes before the Commission. This is the man’s notes when he does the appraisal.
*64 "The Chairman: I am saying your request is denied on these type of notes. These are the type of notes that I say you do not need to get, because they are not a part of any consideration here. This is a judgmental factor, how he arrived at the value.”

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Bluebook (online)
222 N.W.2d 900, 393 Mich. 58, 1974 Mich. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-township-v-state-tax-commission-mich-1974.