Erroll G. Williams, Assessor of Orleans Parish v. Louisiana Tax Commision and Val C. Cupit

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 28, 2023
Docket2023-CA-0079
StatusPublished

This text of Erroll G. Williams, Assessor of Orleans Parish v. Louisiana Tax Commision and Val C. Cupit (Erroll G. Williams, Assessor of Orleans Parish v. Louisiana Tax Commision and Val C. Cupit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erroll G. Williams, Assessor of Orleans Parish v. Louisiana Tax Commision and Val C. Cupit, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

ERROLL G. WILLIAMS, * NO. 2023-CA-0079 ASSESSOR OF ORLEANS PARISH * COURT OF APPEAL VERSUS * FOURTH CIRCUIT LOUISIANA TAX * COMMISSION AND VAL C. STATE OF LOUISIANA CUPIT *******

APPEAL FROM CIVIL DISTRICT COURT, ORLEANS PARISH NO. 2021-03092, DIVISION “M” Honorable Paulette R. Irons, Judge ****** Judge Daniel L. Dysart ****** (Court composed of Judge Daniel L. Dysart, Judge Paula A. Brown, Judge Karen K. Herman)

Suzanne Haik Terrell Mitchell Hasenkampf HANGARTNER RYDBERG & TERRELL, LLC 701 Poydras Street Suite 310 New Orleans, LA 70139

COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

Franklin “Drew” Hoffmann Jordan S. Varnado FAIRCLOTH MELTON SOBEK & BASH, LLC 9026 Jefferson Highway Suite 200 Baton Rouge, LA 70809

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, The Louisiana Tax Commission Charles Emile Bruneau, Jr. ATTORNEY AT LAW 6979 Argonne Blvd. New Orleans, LA 70124-4026

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, Val C. Cupit

AFFIRMED

NOVEMBER 28, 2023 DLD This appeal involves a dispute regarding an assessment of property by the PAB KKH Orleans Parish Assessor, Erroll Williams. The subject property is a vacant lot

located in the Lakeview neighborhood of New Orleans on General Diaz Street.

The taxpayer who owns the lot, Val C. Cupit, also owns and lives in the house on

the property next door. Her house and the house on the subject property were both

destroyed in Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Ms. Cupit chose to rebuild her home but

her neighbor did not. Ms. Cupit bought the adjacent lot in 2016 after the dwelling

formerly located there was demolished by the previous owner.

For the tax year 2020, the Assessor valued the subject property at $152,500,

an increase from the $109,800 assessment of the previous year. Ms. Cupit

(hereinafter referred to as “the taxpayer”) protested the valuation to the Orleans

Parish Board of Review (“the Board of Review”). The Board of Review upheld

the Assessor’s valuation and the taxpayer then protested the valuation to the

Louisiana Tax Commission (“the Commission”), requesting that the valuation be

lowered to $110,000. Following an administrative trial, the Commission found

that the subject property had been inequitably assessed as compared with similarly

situated comparable properties, reasoning that “a fair and equitable assessment

1 must take into account the varying conditions of Lakeview’s streets and the fact

that the subject property consists of merely greenspace.” The Commission also

noted that “the Assessor offered no explanation or justification for his

valuation/assessment of the subject property.” The Commission reduced the

valuation of the property to $110,000. Judicial review of that ruling was not

sought.

For the tax year 2021, the Assessor again valued the property at $152,500.

The taxpayer protested to the Board of Review, which reduced the valuation to

$110,000 in accordance with the Commission’s valuation from the previous year.

The Assessor filed a protest with the Commission challenging the Board of

Review’s reduction. Following an administrative hearing, the Commission

affirmed the decision of the Board of Review in favor of the taxpayer.

In the Commission’s reasons for so ruling, it noted that evidence presented

by the taxpayer included testimony that the subject lot essentially acts as a

retention pond and is used as greenspace only, which differed from surrounding

comparable properties that are residential. Testimony was also presented on behalf

of the taxpayer to establish that the vacant lot is surrounded by streets that are in

very poor condition. The Commission also considered evidence presented by the

Assessor in support of his position that no reduction in value is warranted given the

size of the subject land and the overall market of similarly situated properties. The

Commission also considered evidence of an independent appraisal by a staff

appraiser for the Commission, which appraisal determined a higher fair market

value than that determined by the Assessor. After evaluating the credibility of the

witnesses, along with testimony, documents and exhibits presented at the hearing,

the Commission adopted and reaffirmed its reasoning for its decision for the tax

2 year 2020, and noted that the evidence and testimony presented by the taxpayer

supported a significantly lower value than that determined by the Assessor.

The Assessor filed a request for rehearing of the Commission’s ruling. In

denying this request, the Commission stated that the Assessor failed to submit

sufficient evidence to contradict the Commission’s determination and ruling for the

2020 tax year. In response to the Assessor’s argument that the Commission’s

ruling is “clearly contrary to the legal mandate to assess properties uniformly,” the

Commission noted that “[n]either the Louisiana Constitution nor Revised Statutes

mandate that all land, regardless of location, size, use, and the like, be valued at a

‘uniform’ price per square foot with[in] a neighborhood or any other geographic

area.” While stating that Assessors are constitutionally required to assess property

at fair market value, the Commission noted that not all land is equal in value. The

Commission stated that because it is charged with reviewing the correctness of the

subject assessment, it is not bound by the Assessor’s determination of a “uniform”

price per square foot of land within a certain neighborhood or any other geographic

area.

Following the denial of the Assessor’s request for rehearing, the Assessor

filed a petition for judicial review in Civil District Court challenging the

Commission’s decision. At the conclusion of the hearing on the petition for

judicial review, the trial court ruled in favor of the Commission and stated the

following reasons for her ruling:

I think that the appellant [Assessor] has failed to demonstrate that the Tax Commission was arbitrary or capricious in its decision. I think that the appellant [failed] to present the Commission with acceptable evidence and also failed to adjust the valuation based on the different stakes of each lot and their surroundings. I am not here to rehear this case. I am supposed to look at what was presented. I think that the Tax Commission’s decision is affirmed.

3 By judgment dated October 21, 2022, the trial court affirmed the decision of

the Commission and dismissed the Assessor’s petition with prejudice. This appeal

by the Assessor followed.

On appeal, the Assessor sets forth four assignments of error:

1) The trial court erred by concluding that La. R.S. 47:2323 [listing criteria for determining fair market value of property] does not apply to the Commission;

2) The trial court erred in its application of the Administrative Procedures Act in limiting its review of the administrative record to an arbitrary and capricious standard;

3) The trial court erred in its review of the administrative record in concluding the Assessor failed to demonstrate that the Commission was arbitrary or capricious in its decision; and

4) The trial court erred in its review of the administrative record in concluding that the Assessor failed to present the Commission with acceptable evidence supporting his original valuation.

The Assessor summarizes the issues presented for review in this appeal as

follows:

1) Whether the Commission may reduce an assessment for equitable purposes rather than a determination of fair market value;

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Erroll G. Williams, Assessor of Orleans Parish v. Louisiana Tax Commision and Val C. Cupit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erroll-g-williams-assessor-of-orleans-parish-v-louisiana-tax-commision-lactapp-2023.