Dierks Forests v. Shell

403 S.W.2d 83, 240 Ark. 966, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1434
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 30, 1966
Docket5-3907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 403 S.W.2d 83 (Dierks Forests v. Shell) 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
Dierks Forests v. Shell, 403 S.W.2d 83, 240 Ark. 966, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1434 (Ark. 1966).

Opinion

George Eosb Smith, Justice.

This is a suit by the appellant, Dierks Forests, Inc., to enjoin the Saline County assessor, clerk,, and collector from assessing, levying, and collecting Dierks’s 1965 real estate taxes upon the basis of an assessed value higher than that fixed by Dierks itself when it filed its 1965 assessment of its land in the county. The question is whether Dierks’s own assessment was lawfully raised in time for the increased values to be used in the extension and collection of the 1965 taxes, payable in 1966. The chancellor, without reaching that substantive question, found that Dierks had neglected to pursue its remedy at law and that the increased assessment had therefore become final.

The controlling facts are not in dispute. On January 4,1965, the county assessor and several local taxing-units filed a request that the county court appoint professional appraisers to reappraise all taxable property in the county, pursuant to Act 351 of 1949. Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 84-468 through 84-474 (Eepl. 1960). The county court approved the proposal. On February 9 the Universal Land & Appraisal Company was employed to make the reappraisement. Universal agreed to complete its reappraisement by September 1 (subject to a daily penalty of $100 for delay) and to defend its work against complaints made within three years. In appraising the various tracts Universal was to use cards to be supplied by the county.

Dierks owned more than 700 parcels in Saline county, comprising 82,692.77 acres. On April 7 Dierks voluntarily assessed its lands at a total value of $496,180.00.

Universal had not finished its work on July 1—the date on which the county assessor must complete his assessments of real property. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-415. On July 30 the Assessment Coordination Department, an agency of the Public Service Commission, notified the assessor of Saline county that the county’s ratio of assessed value to market value was below the state-wide standard fixed by the Department. Needless to say, the Department’s comments were directed to the assessments already on the books and not to Universal’s reappraisement, which was still in progress.

On August 5 the county assessor informed Dierks by telephone that the professional appraisers had completed their work as far as Dierks was concerned. At the assessor’s suggestion Dierks sent a work party to Saline county to examine Universal’s cards and to talk with its appraiser. It was eventually determined—apparently sometime in September—that the total Dierks assessment had been raised from $496,180.00 to $800,-730.00, an increase of $304,550.00. No written notice of an increase was ever given by the assessor, nor did Dierks file a petition for review with the county equalization board. On September 10 Dierks’s president met with the equalization board to make what he refers to as an informal protest against the increase. The board refused to consider a reduction, stating that its members would stand upon Universal’s reappraisal. It is evident that the board did not then have detailed information about Universal’s evaluation of the 700-odd tracts owned by Dierks.

Meanwhile the county assessor was making up his assessment books by copying the valuations from Universal’s cards. That work was not entirely complete by October 22, when the assessor filed his uncertified book of rural real property assessments with the county clerk. By then the present suit had already been filed, on October 2.

Broadly speaking, the parties’ opposing contentions are simple. Dierks insists that the attempt to raise its assessment came too late and would, if upheld, involve a denial of due process of law in that Dierks would have lost its right to a judicial review of the assessment. The county officials contend that even though the letter of the law was not obeyed there was such a substantial compliance that Dierks could and should have exhausted its remedy at law by appealing to the equalization hoard and then to the county court.

In our opinion the governing statutes provide an unmistakable answer to the question presented. To explain our conclusion, however, we must describe in some detail the two statutory methods by which assessed values may he raised. For convenience we may call the two methods (a) the tract-by-tract procedure and (5) the across-the-board procedure.

First, the tract-hy-tract procedure. For many years this has been the usual method by which assessed values have been determined. Under this procedure the landowner may, though he is not required to, voluntarily assess his property between the first Monday in January and April 10. Section 84-414. Dierks followed that course, filing its assessment on April 7.

Whether or not a landowner assesses his property the county assessor must assess all real estate between the first Monday in January and July 1. Section 84-415. If the assessor raises the landowner’s own assessment he must give written notice to the landowner and inform him that he may appeal to the equalization hoard not later than the third Monday in August. Section 84-437. Here the assessor neither assessed Dierks’s property by July 1 nor gave Dierks written notice that its assessment had been increased.

Not later than the third Monday in August the landowner may petition the equalization hoard for a review of the assessment. Section 84-708. The board’s regular session begins on August 1 and runs to September 1, hut to finish its work the board may remain in session until October 1. Section 84-706. An aggrieved landowner may file his appeal to the county court not later than the second Monday in October. Section 84-708.

The opportunity to appeal to the equalization board and thence to the courts is an essential part of the tract- • by-tract procedure. Under the federal constitution the property owner is entitled at some point to notice and an opportunity to be heard on the fairness of his assessment, as compared with the assessment of other property. McGregor v. Hogan, 263 U. S. 234 (1923); Londoner v. Denver, 210 U. S. 373 (1908). Our law complies with the constitution by affording the landowner the necessary opportunity for a judicial review.

Second, the across-the-board procedure. This is not an annual routine method of assessing property. It is an exceptional step authorized by Act 153 of 1955. (Several sections of Act 153 were temporary and are published in the compiler’s note to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-477).

Act 153 established a uniform state-wide system for the assessment of real and personal property. The system was intended to achieve an equal distribution of the tax burden, so that property in some counties would not be discriminated against by being assessed at a higher percentage of market value than property in other counties. Under Act 153 the Public Service Commission was directed to prepare manuals setting out a uniform system for. the assessment of property. County assessors were required to obey the directions issued by the Public Service Commission. .

Act 153 took effect on March 7, 1955. It was plainly essential to a uniform state-wide assessment procedure that the plan be put into effect in all the counties.

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403 S.W.2d 83, 240 Ark. 966, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dierks-forests-v-shell-ark-1966.