Cott v. Board of Review of City of Ames

442 N.W.2d 78, 1989 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 174, 1989 WL 63553
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 14, 1989
Docket88-454
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 442 N.W.2d 78 (Cott v. Board of Review of City of Ames) 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
Cott v. Board of Review of City of Ames, 442 N.W.2d 78, 1989 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 174, 1989 WL 63553 (iowa 1989).

Opinion

SCHULTZ, Justice.

The dominant issue on this appeal is whether the city assessor and the city Board of Review (the Board) erred in classifying the taxpayer’s property as residential for the year 1987, immediately after the district court’s September 1986 ruling which held that the property was agricultural rather than residential. The 1986 district court ruling was consistent with the decree rendered on an earlier appeal from the 1981 assessment. Both parties agree that the use of the property remained the same, but the Board of Review and assessor claim that the previous adjudications do not control the classification of the property for subsequent years. We agree with the district court and the court of appeals that the classification of the property should have remained agricultural. However, we also believe that the decree must be modified and further hearing held to finally determine the proper amount of plaintiff’s assessment.

This case revolves around the ongoing dispute between a property owner and the city of Ames assessor’s office over the assessment classification of a piece of land. In 1977, plaintiff Martha Cott and her late husband, Arthur Cott, purchased a 10.13-acre property on the western limits of Ames. The original residence was razed and the current home was constructed. The entire property had previously been classified as agricultural, with the residence assessed at residential rates. However, in 1981, after the new residence was built, the assessor changed the classification for the entire tract of land to residential. This assessment was appealed, resulting in a consent ruling which determined that the 0.5-acre homestead should remain residential and the 9.63-acre remainder of the tract would be classified as agricultural. Later, by a stipulated nunc pro tunc order, the court incorporated into the 1981 decree a clarification that there was no intent to divide Cott’s land into separate parcels.

In 1984, Cott’s son Randy built a residence on this agricultural tract. Later, a one-acre parcel of the land was deeded to him. This construction caused the assessor to again reclassify the 9.63-acre tract as residential for the 1985 assessment. This decision also was appealed to the district court, resulting in a 1986 decree that the one-acre homestead of the son remain as residential land but the 8.63 acres be classified as agricultural.

The ruling determined that this land was used in good faith as agricultural land as defined in rule 730-71.3(3). The court found that a 0.5- to .75-acre area was brome grass and that a 0.5-acre area was used for commercially growing raspberries. The remainder of the plot contained additional areas of woodland, wasteland and pastureland held in conjunction with the

*80 agricultural portion of the real estate pursuant to 730 Iowa Administrative Code rule 71.3(3) 1

This second ruling, holding the proper classification of the 8.63 acres of the land was agricultural, did not deter the assessor. In 1987, he again classified the entire tract as residential. In an affidavit offered to resist summary judgment, the assessor justified the change by referring to the nunc pro tunc order which combined the entire property to one single taxation parcel and opining the entire parcel’s primary use was residential. Plaintiff initiated the present action to challenge this latest assessment classification and was granted summary judgment. The summary judgment ruling let the original 0.5-acre homestead remain as residential and overruled the assessor’s reclassification of the 8.63-acre balance of the tract as residential. The Board appealed this grant of summary judgment. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court, and we granted further review.

Appeals of the Board of Review’s actions may be taken to the district court which shall hear the appeal in equity and determine anew all questions arising before the Board relating to the liability of the property to assessment. Iowa Code § 441.39 (1987). Our review is de novo. Power v. Regis, 220 N.W.2d 587, 589 (Iowa 1974).

The Board initially attacks the trial court’s decree in treating the property as two tracts, one residential and the other agricultural. As a general rule, we agree that tracts of real estate should not be divided for assessment purposes. We recently indicated that Iowa has adopted the “single tract” assessment concept which pervades the process of listing real property for assessment in the state. Sevde v. Board of Review, 434 N.W.2d 878, 879-80 (Iowa 1989). We specified that our statutory language empowers the assessor to combine property tracts for assessment purposes but that no similar authority is granted to divide a single tract of land. Id. at 880 (citing Iowa Code § 428.7 (1987)).

The legislature has laid out the following scheme for the listing and assessment of agricultural property:

[T]he assessors shall report the aggregate taxable values and the number of dwellings located on agricultural land_ [T]he agricultural dwellings located on agricultural land shall be valued at their market value ... and agricultural dwellings shall be valued as rural residential property and shall be assessed at the same percentage of actual value as is all other residential property.

Iowa Code § 441.21(7). The separate dwelling valuation concept in this section dovetails with section 384.1 (1987) of the Taxes and Funds portion of Chapter 384— City Finance. Section 384.1 sets the tax limits for various classes of property and provides:

Improvements and personal property located on [agricultural land within the city limits] and not used for agricultural or horticultural purposes and all residential dwellings shall be subject to the same rate of tax levied by the city on all other taxable property within the city.

(Emphasis added.) Additional language in section 384.1 provides a limitation on the tax levied by the city on tracts of land and improvements thereon used for agricultural or horticultural purposes.

As applied to land classified as agricultural, we interpret these sections to require the assessor to arrive at two appraisals, one for the land and the other for the residential dwelling. We believe that the legislature is striving to treat all dwelling owners equally, whether their home is located in a rural area, on residential city property or on agricultural city property. While the legislature does not prescribe the clerical mechanics, it obviously intended this process be accomplished without dividing the land into separate parcels for listing purposes.

In the case before us, the assessor relies upon the single tract assessment concept to justify a reclassification of the land. This action is contrary to the previous judi *81

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Bluebook (online)
442 N.W.2d 78, 1989 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 174, 1989 WL 63553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cott-v-board-of-review-of-city-of-ames-iowa-1989.