Daniels v. Board of Review of Monona County

52 N.W.2d 1, 243 Iowa 405, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 415
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 4, 1952
Docket47979
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 52 N.W.2d 1 (Daniels v. Board of Review of Monona County) 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
Daniels v. Board of Review of Monona County, 52 N.W.2d 1, 243 Iowa 405, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 415 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

Mulroney, J.

Ten appeals from the 1949 tax assessments in Monona County resulted in the County Board of Review confirming the assessments of the assessor in each case. The taxpayers appealed to the district court and the ten separate appeals were consolidated for trial. The district court reduced the assessments in nine cases and the Board of Review appeals in those eases; the taxpayers in those cases cross-appeal asserting some legal defenses but in the main claiming the reductions were insufficient. In the remaining ease the appeal is by the taxpayer.

The record shows that in the year 1948 the board of supervisors hired an appraisal firm, Wilkins & Associates, to make an appraisal of the property in the county. The appraisers used a *408 card system and after the appraisers entered their data and one-hundred per cent appraisal on the card they gave it to the assessor. The assessor took sixty per cent of the appraisal as it appeared on the cards in making up the assessment. The assessor worked along with Wilkins & Associates in starting off the ap-praisement in Monona County. He discussed with them the manner and method of making the'appraisals. He looked over .buildings and farms with them and observed the methods they were using in making their valuations, and talked with them at various times and discussed the valuations they were making on buildings and farms at the time they were making them.

. The appraisal firm did not complete its work until the month of July 1949. The County Board of Review met for the purpose of considering objections after the assessor completed the assessments in August, and the board completed its work on September 2, 1949.

I. The taxpayers contend the assessments were void because: (1) the assessor did not personally fix the values to any of the properties (2) the assessor failed to affix his oath to the assessment' rolls, and (3) the assessments were not completed until midsummer of 1949 and the Board of Review continued in session beyond June 1.

The trial court rightly held against the taxpayers on these contentions. Chapter 240, section 20, Acts of the Fifty-second General Assembly, specifically authorizes the county board of supervisors “to employ appraisers or other technical or expert help to assist in the valuation of property.” The record shows the assessor accepted the appraisal firm’s valuation in the cases here involved. Acceptance of the appraiser’s valuation by the assessor would not mean the assessor violated section 441.10, Code, 1950, providing he must “personally affix values to all property assessed by him.” The requirement that the assessor affix his oath to the assessment roll is directory only where the assessment is appealed to the Board of Review. First National Bank v. City of Council Bluffs, 182 Iowa 107, 161 N.W. 706. The delay in the assessment past May 1 and in the work of the Board of Review past June 1 was because the appraisal firm did not complete the appraisals on time. The statutes fixing the dates on *409 which the assessor and board shall complete their work (sections 441.24 and 442.1, Code, 1950) are directory. ' The delay was not such as to invalidate the assessments.

II. The taxpayers argue there is no presumption in favor of the assessment because the assessor merely accepted the valuations fixed by a professional appraiser, citing such cases as Iowa Building Corp. v. Zirbel, 237 Iowa 242, 21 N.W.2d 576; In re Appeal of Bankers Life Co. v. Zirbel, 239 Iowa 275, 31 N.W.2d 368; Clark v. Lucas County Board of Review, 242 Iowa 80, 44 N.W.2d 748, and Haubrich v. Johnson, 242 Iowa 1236, 50 N.W.2d 19.

Section 441.13, Code, 1950, specifically provides that “the burden of proof shall be upon any complainant attacking such valuation [of the assessor] as excessive, inadequate, or inequitable.” In all of the cases cited above, where the assessors merely accepted the professional appraisers’ valuations, we held the appealing taxpayers had- the statutory burden of proof to establish their contentions that the valuations were excessive or inequitable. There is but little difference in saying the assessment is presumptively correct and saying the taxpayer, has the burden of proving it is not. This is especially true because in the cited cases we have adhered to the rule that the appealing taxpayer’s burden is to establish that the assessment as made by the assessor and confirmed by the board was so wholly out of line as to give rise to an inference that the assessing officers did not properly discharge their duties. Clark v. Lucas County Board of Review, 242 Iowa 80, 44 N.W.2d 748. Any possible procedural advantage which the taxpayers her.e might gain by reason of the fact the assessor accepted the professional appraiser’s valuations vanishes entirely when the assessments were all confirmed by the Board of Review. The record here shows the board did not merely accept the professional appraiser’s valuation. The chairman and two other members of the board testified they checked each protest; that they had personal knowledge of the property or if they did not they made a personal examination of the property ; they compared the protested assessments with, the surrounding farm land and they all testified the assessments were equitable and not in excess of actual value.

*410 The taxpayers make some point of the fact that their attorney was not accorded a full hearing before all of the members of the board on each protest. The record shows the board had about 30,000 separate assessments before it. Evidently there were many appeals to the board. Plaintiffs’ counsel filed, in all, eighty-nine written appeals. In order to complete its work individual members would hear an objecting taxpayer or his atr torney. But the members testified all objections were considered by all members of the board. The procedure before the Board of Review is quite informal. As we said in Ferguson & Son v. Board of Review of Town of Rolfe, 119 Iowa 338, 340, 93 N.W. 352, “the statute [section 442.6, Code, 1950] does not require that the board of review shall proceed as a court * * The complaint can be oral or written. Section 442.5, Code, 1950; Haubrich v. Johnson, supra.

The confirmation of the assessments by the Board of Review, under the record here presented, means the assessments did arrive in the district court with a presumption of correctness. In the recent case of Clark v. Lucas County Board of Review, 242 Iowa 80, 97, 44 N.W.2d 748, 758, where the valuation was also made by Wilkins & Associates, we held: “The board of review having confirmed the assessment, the presumption is that the value so fixed by the board is correct, just, and équitable, and, until the contrary appears, that it performed its duties as required by law.” (Citing cases.)

III.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.W.2d 1, 243 Iowa 405, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-board-of-review-of-monona-county-iowa-1952.