Ellis v. County of Calaveras

245 Cal. App. 4th 64, 16 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2099, 199 Cal. Rptr. 3d 368, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 145
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 25, 2016
DocketC078705
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 245 Cal. App. 4th 64 (Ellis v. County of Calaveras) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. County of Calaveras, 245 Cal. App. 4th 64, 16 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2099, 199 Cal. Rptr. 3d 368, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 145 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

*67 Opinion

BUTZ, Acting P. J.

— Plaintiff and appellant Jon Virgil Ellis appeals from a judgment of dismissal following the trial court’s order sustaining the demurrer of County of Calaveras (the County), the assessment appeals board for the County of Calaveras (the AAB), the assessor for the County of Calaveras (the assessor), and the auditor-controller for the County of Calaveras (the auditor-controller) to Ellis’s petition and complaint relating to property taxes assessed against his real property. We will affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Ellis owned real property in Calaveras County on which he was constructing a large detached garage. In 2009, he was assessed property taxes based on an appraised value of the garage set by the assessor at $140,000 (90 percent of the estimated total cost of construction of $156,800). Ellis sought a reduction of the assessment from the AAB. Following an evidentiary hearing in July 2010, the AAB reduced the value of the garage to $117,600, based on a finding that construction was only 75 percent complete. In February 2011, Ellis contested that finding by seeking writ relief from the trial court, but the parties reached a settlement before the trial court ruled on the merits. 1

The parties’ settlement agreement, dated July 2011, provided that “the assessed value of the [garage] for property tax purposes for the 2009 lien date [was] $25,000” and that the structure was “75 [percent] complete as of the 2009 lien date.” The settlement also required the AAB to rescind its findings of fact, to issue new findings of fact consistent with the settlement agreement, to authorize the assessor to correct the tax roll, and to authorize the auditor-controller to issue a tax refund to Ellis. The AAB’s new findings stated that “[f]or the 2009 lien date only, the valuation [of the incomplete construction] for the 2009 Tax Roll shall be $25,000. Such [construction] shall be deemed 75 [percent] complete as of the 2009 lien date . . . .”

In 2010, Ellis was assessed property taxes based on the partially constructed garage having a “ ‘base year value’ ” in 2010 of $117,600. In light of this assessment, in December 2011, after he had received a property tax assessment as of the 2011 lien date, Ellis moved in the trial court writ proceedings mentioned above for enforcement of the settlement agreement. Namely, he sought an order from the trial court directing county officials to “correct” the tax roll for the 2010 and 2011 lien dates to reflect the *68 agreed-upon 2009 lien date value of $25,000, plus the statutorily required inflation factor, and to refund the excess tax Ellis had paid for the 2010 tax year. The County and the AAB opposed the motion, arguing the agreed-upon value was applicable only in the 2009 tax year. The trial court denied Ellis’s motion, concluding the agreement and counsel’s declarations “d[id] not support a finding the parties agreed to use the 2009 valuation [of $25,000] prospectively thereafter.”

When his attempts to enforce the settlement agreement failed, Ellis filed an application with the AAB to reduce the assessment for his 2010 property taxes. He designated the application, which was filed November 29, 2012, as a claim for a tax refund, and he indicated his challenge was premised on the base year value being incorrect and there having been no new construction as of the 2010 lien date. By the time Ellis filed his application, construction of the garage had been deemed complete and a supplemental assessment had been issued. He also received a regular assessment as of the 2012 lien date.

In My 2013, the AAB heard Ellis’s appeal of his 2010 tax assessment. The assessor argued that neither the agreed-upon amount nor the amount entered for the 2010 tax roll were “ ‘base year value[s],’ ” and that Ellis’s appeal was time-barred because it was not filed on or before November 30, 2010. Ellis argued the $25,000 agreed-upon amount was the “ ‘base year value,’ ” that it had to be applied in subsequent years until more construction was completed, and that his appeal was timely filed within four years of the base value being entered on the tax roll. The AAB determined Ellis’s appeal was not timely filed, and that it therefore lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal.

In March 2014, Ellis petitioned the trial court seeking a traditional or administrative writ of mandate, refund of his property taxes, and declaratory relief. In his subsequently amended petition and complaint, Ellis claimed the AAB’s decision was arbitrary, in excess of its discretion, and violated the law because the AAB erroneously concluded that neither the $25,000 amount nor the $117,600 amount was the “base year value” for the incomplete garage; the AAB did not address his contention that there was no time limit to his appeal; and the decision is based on erroneous assumptions and misguided applications of law. Ellis specifically sought orders from the trial court determining and declaring that the settlement amount was a base year value to be applied in subsequent years absent completion of additional construction, and that the 2010 assessment was also a base year value which could be challenged within four years and that could be corrected at any time; directing the AAB to rescind its findings of fact in Ellis’s appeal of the 2010 tax assessment; directing the assessor to enter corrected values on the tax roll as of the 2010 lien date; directing the auditor to issue a refund of property taxes for the 2010 and subsequent tax years; and declaring that Ellis is entitled to damages and attorney fees.

*69 The County, the AAB, the assessor, and the auditor-controller demurred to Ellis’s petition and complaint, contending Ellis failed to state a cause of action because he had an adequate remedy at law; his action is barred by the prohibition against writ relief codified in Revenue and Taxation Code section 4807; 2 he alleged facts that would bar his recovery; his action is time-barred; he had not exhausted his administrative remedies; his claim was barred by res judicata or collateral estoppel; and the assessor and auditor-controller were not properly joined as parties pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 430.10, subdivision (d). Ellis opposed the demurrer.

The trial court ruled that, though dubbed a petition for mandamus and complaint, the entire pleading was actually a petition for writ of mandamus “to have the 2009 tax year settlement amount established as the base year value for all future tax years.” The trial court further ruled that “as the 2012 deemed completion was used to establish the base tax year, this in turn started the running of the four year statute of limitations to file an appeal with the [AAB] or challenge this determination pursuant to Revenue [and] Taxation Code Section 80[, subdivision] (a)(3).” Thus, the trial court found that Ellis had not exhausted his administrative remedies, and that he had an adequate remedy at law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 Cal. App. 4th 64, 16 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2099, 199 Cal. Rptr. 3d 368, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-county-of-calaveras-calctapp-2016.