Department of Revenue v. Countryside Village

667 P.2d 936, 205 Mont. 51, 1983 Mont. LEXIS 768
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1983
Docket82-479
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 667 P.2d 936 (Department of Revenue v. Countryside Village) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Revenue v. Countryside Village, 667 P.2d 936, 205 Mont. 51, 1983 Mont. LEXIS 768 (Mo. 1983).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Department of Revenue of the State of Montana (DOR) appeals from an order of the District Court, Eighth Judicial District, Cascade County, dismissing DOR’s petition for judicial review of an order of the State Tax Appeal [53]*53Board dated November 7, 1980.

By its order, the State Tax Appeal Board (STAB) had remanded the cause to the Department of Revenue, “for reappraisal of the commercial properties involved in a manner which does not violate the constitutional and statutory requirements for equalization or uniformity with other properties of the same legislative class.”

We reverse the order of dismissal by the District Court and return the matter to STAB for further proceedings.

The glut of 1978 tax protest cases, including the cases involved in this cause, now clogging STAB, DOR and some District Courts, arise from the use in 1978 by DOR of the Montana Appraisal Manual to appraise residential property improvements which reflected 1971 replacement costs, while it used the Marshall Valuation Service Manual in 1978 to appraise commercial property improvements which reflected 1976 replacement costs.

Both residential and commercial improvements are in the same legislative class for taxation purposes. Section 16-6-134, MCA. The protestors contend that the use of the disparate manuals has resulted in inequitable appraisals of property for taxation, the commercial properties being appraised at or near market value, while the residential properties are appraised substantially below market value.

It is DOR’s constitutional duty to appraise, assess and equalize the valuation of all property taxed in the state in the manner provided by law. Article 8, Section 3, 1972 Montana Constitution. It is the duty of all taxing jurisdictions in the state to use the assessed valuation of property as established by the state. Article 8, Section 4, Montana Constitution. All taxable property must be assessed at one-hundred percent of its market value (with certain exceptions) and the Department of Revenue may not adopt a lower or different standard of value from market value when making the official assessment. Section 15-8-111, MCA. “Market value” is the value at which property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, [54]*54neither being under any compulsion to buy or to sell and both having reasonable knowledge of relevant facts. Section 15-8-lll(2)(a), MCA.

We had a similar facet of this same problem before us in Department of Revenue v. State Tax Appeal Board, 1980, Mont., 613 P.2d 691, 37 St.Rep. 1063. In that case, the appeal arose from an order of the same District Court which had approved STAB’s blanket reduction of thirty-four percent on commercial improvement appraisals. We set aside STAB’s blanket reduction and remanded the cause for further proceedings before STAB.

After remand, STAB issued a notice of August 26, 1980 to the litigants involved in this cause, of a hearing to be held on October 1, 1980. The notice stated:

“The sole issue to be determined at this hearing is whether or not the Department of Revenue may lawfully use the 1972 Montana Appraisal Manual for the purpose of determining the value of residential improvements, and at the same time use the 1976 Marshall Valuation Service to determine the value of commercial improvements, when both residential and commercial improvements are presently in Class 4 under Section 15-6-134 MCA, 1979, and both were in Class 11 under Section 15-6-112, MCA, 1978, in 1978. You are referred to the decision of the Montana Supreme Court in Department of Revenue of the State of Montana v. State Tax Appeal Board, Countryside Village, Inc., et al., 37 St.Rep. 1063. The Montana Supreme Court in that case, at page 1067, adopted the criteria established by the Iowa Supreme Court for determination of unequal appraisals. The hearing will, therefore, be confined to the following evidence:

“ ‘(1) That there are several other properties within a reasonable area similar and comparable to his; (2) The amount of the assessments on these properties; (3) The actual value of the comparable properties; (4) The actual value of his property; (5) The assessment complained of; (6) That by a comparison his property is assessed at a higher proportion [55]*55of its actual value than the ratio existing between the assessed and actual valuations of the similar and comparable properties, thus creating discriminations.’ ”

On September 10, 1980, the notice given to the litigants in this case was expanded by a memorandum addressed to all parties having tax protests. The expanded list included some forty-five taxpayers, and approximately sixty-one tax protests. The memorandum stated:

“Each county will be heard separately, with the taxpayers presenting their case-in-chief first, and the Department of Revenue going second. Rebuttal will be permitted.”

The memorandum also requested that any objections to the procedures be filed with the State Tax Appeal Board immediately.

On October 1, 1980, the time set for the hearing, the chairperson of STAB announced that the purpose of the hearing on that date would be to determine if, “the Board might find on such hearing that the Department’s method is arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise unlawful,” quoting from our Countryside decision supra, 613 P.2d, at 695. Counsel for DOR did not specifically object to that method of procedure at the time, but did point out that STAB, at that time, had jurisdiction of “Countryside Village matter, PT-78-385; the Colonial Inn case, PT-78-641; East Broadway, Inc., PT-78-65; James T. and Carol Harrison, PT-78-73; and Jerome T. Loendorf, PT-78-77,” and that all the other cases were presently pending before District Courts. The chairperson announced that nonetheless the hearing would proceed with respect to all the cases with the jurisdictional question “something that may have to be settled later”.

The hearing then proceeded with the counsel representing various tax protestors from the various counties appearing. Proposed findings and conclusions were presented to STAB after the hearing, and on November 7, 1980 STAB made its findings, conclusion and order. It found that there was a disparity between the assessed values of residential and [56]*56commercial improvements in the various counties, differing from county to county, but that commercial property was consistently appraised in an amount substantially higher than residential property. DOR had introduced no evidence to justify the disparity and STAB therefore concluded that the appraisal method used by the Department of Revenue violates uniformity, equal protection and due process requirements of the Montana Constitution and statutes, and was, therefore arbitrary, capricious and unlawful. It then entered the following order:

“It is hereby ordered that the above matter be and it is remanded to the Department of Revenue for reappraisal of the commercial properties involved in a manner which does not violate the constitutional and statutory requirements for equalization or uniformity with other properties of the same legislative class. It is suggested that one method by which this may be accomplished is by use of the Marshall Valuation Service Manual which reflects 1971 replacement costs.”

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Department of Revenue v. Countryside Village
667 P.2d 936 (Montana Supreme Court, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
667 P.2d 936, 205 Mont. 51, 1983 Mont. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-revenue-v-countryside-village-mont-1983.