Crane v. Newark School District No. 33

799 S.W.2d 536, 303 Ark. 650, 1990 Ark. LEXIS 545
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 19, 1990
Docket89-354
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 799 S.W.2d 536 (Crane v. Newark School District No. 33) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crane v. Newark School District No. 33, 799 S.W.2d 536, 303 Ark. 650, 1990 Ark. LEXIS 545 (Ark. 1990).

Opinion

David Newbern, Justice.

This is a property tax case requiring interpretation of Ark. Const, art. 16, § 14, and implementing legislation. The action was brought by the appellee, Newark School District No. 33 of Independence County (Newark), against appellant Larry Crane, Director of the Assessment Coordination Division (ACD), which is a division of the Arkansas Public Service Commission. Also named as defendants were appellants Margaret Boothby and George Kimmer, County Clerk and Tax Collector, respectively, of Independence County. Newark claimed that Boothby and Kimmer, pursuant to the directions of ACD, had assessed and collected personal property taxes, on other than property belonging to utilities and common carriers, in amounts improperly low in its district in 1988. The chancellor found the formula used by Boothby and Kimmer at the instance of ACD was contrary to applicable statutes and to the Constitution. She enjoined the appellants from using the ACD formula and ordered a 1988 assessment on the basis of a formula required by the statutes implementing Amendment 59. The decision was correct.

Massive reassessment of property occurred in Arkansas pursuant to our decision in Arkansas Public Service Comm. v. Pulaski County Bd. of Equalization, 266 Ark. 64, 582 S.W.2d 942 (1979), which required real and personal property to be taxed on an equal basis. Amendment 59 was a response to that decision. The amendment was intended to effect equalization on a gradual basis by holding the revenue from taxation of personal property relatively static as taxes on real estate increased. Clark v. Union Pacific R.R., 294 Ark. 586, 745 S.W.2d 600 (1988). See also Wright v. Storey, 298 Ark. 508, 769 S.W.2d 16 (1989). Act 848 of 1981, codified as Ark. Code Ann. § § 26-26-401 through 26-26-409 (1987), was passed to implement Amendment 59.

The portion of Amendment 59 now codified as Ark. Const, art. 16, § 14, sets up a “base year” defined as “the year in which a county completes reassessment and equalization of taxable real and personal property . . . and extends the rolled back millage rates for the first time . . .for collection in the following year.” Newark’s reassessment occurred in 1983. The assessment on personalty in 1982 yielded $262,354.00. Based upon assessed personalty of $5,830,080, the tax rate was thus 45 mills. ($262,354 divided by $5,830,080 equals .045.) The chancellor found as a matter of fact that the 45 mill rate had been approved by the electorate.

The statutory scheme of implementation of the amendment is that the revenue figure of the base year will remain “frozen,” § 26-26-405(a), as the assessment base increases and the tax rate decreases. There is support for the statutory freeze of revenues in the amendment. For example, in a proviso which could easily be interpreted as applying to the entire amendment there is the following:

Provided, however, that the amount of revenues derived from taxable personal property assessed in the taxing unit for the base year, other than personal property taxes to be paid by public utilities and regulated carriers . . . shall be computed at the millage necessary to produce the same dollar amount of revenues derived during the current year in which the base year adjustment or rollback of millage is computed, and the millage necessary to produce the same dollar amount of revenues received from personal property taxes received by the taxing unit, for the base year shall be reduced annually as the assessed value of taxable personal property increases until the amount of revenues received from personal property taxes, computed on the basis of the current year millage rates will produce an amount of revenues from taxable personal property equal to or greater than received during the base year, and thereafter the millage rates for computing personal property taxes shall be the millage rates levied for the current year. [Ark. Const, art. 16, § 14.]

To accomplish this freezing of revenues and reduction in rate of taxation on personalty, the general assembly created a formula for annual computation of the reduced interim tax rate until equalization. To use the formula, the following data, specified in the statute, are required:

1. Base year revenues _
2. Previous year assessment base _
3. New assessment base _
4. Current millage by tax source _

The formula provided in the statute is as follows:

Previous Assessment divided by New Assessment = Growth Factor
Base Base
Growth Factor times Current Millage = Interim Millage (rounded)
Interim Millage times New Assessment = Revenue
Base

For example, Newark’s new assessment base for 1983 was $6,775,115. Its previous (base year) assessment base was $5,830,080. The latter figure divided by the former yields a growth factor of .8606. The current millage, .045, multiplied by the growth factor .8606 yields an interim millage of .0389 or 38.9 mills. The new assessment base, $6,775,115, multiplied by the interim millage, .0389, yields revenue of $263,551. That figure is no more than 10% above the previous year revenues, thus the provisions of the statute are satisfied. See Hot Springs School Dist. No. 6 v. Wells, 281 Ark. 303, 663 S.W.2d 733 (1984).

We must note here the discrepancy between item 2. in the statutory data list, “Previous year assessment base,” and the term used in the formula, “Previous assessment base.” The chancellor concluded that the term used in the formula referred to the base year assessment base rather than that which was obtained in the year previous to the year under consideration. We do not know the basis of her choice, but it makes no difference, significant for our purposes, in the result she reached.

Both the constitutional amendment and the statute contemplate that equalization of rates of taxation on realty and personalty will occur because there will be an increase in personal property in any taxing unit from year to year but the amount of realty will remain the same. To hold the amount of revenue received from taxation of personal property at the same level, or within 10 % of it, in spite of personal property tax base increases, the rate of taxation is to be decreased as in the example given. At the point when the rate of taxation on personalty is reduced to that on real property, equalization will have been achieved.

While the assumption that the amount of assessable real estate in a taxing unit will remain the same is acceptable, unfortunately the assumption that the amount of personalty in the unit will increase is not acceptable. It has been demonstrated in Newark that the amount of personalty, and thus the assessable tax base on that species of property, may be reduced in any particular year.

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799 S.W.2d 536, 303 Ark. 650, 1990 Ark. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-v-newark-school-district-no-33-ark-1990.