Farmers Grain Dealers Ass'n v. Sather

267 N.W.2d 58, 1978 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1053
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 28, 1978
Docket58808
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 267 N.W.2d 58 (Farmers Grain Dealers Ass'n v. Sather) 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
Farmers Grain Dealers Ass'n v. Sather, 267 N.W.2d 58, 1978 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1053 (iowa 1978).

Opinion

REES, Justice.

This property tax appeal involves valuation of plaintiff’s terminal grain elevator at Avon Lake for property tax purposes for the tax year 1971. After evidentiary trial the trial court held the valuation placed on the property as of January 1, 1971, by the assessor was correct and should be approved. We reverse.

The plaintiff filed its petition on June 29, 1971, and asserted therein the Polk County assessor had placed an assessed value on the elevator of $1,030,240, which was later reduced by the Board of Review to $877,295. In its original petition, plaintiff asserted the true value of the elevator was $1,008,-000, so the assessed value should be $272,-160. Defendants filed answer, and on September 6, 1974, plaintiff amended its petition alleging the assessed value to be $877,-395, but that the fair market value was $635,000, and the assessed value should therefore be $171,450.

There is no essential factual dispute in this case. The plaintiff is the owner of a 6,664,000-bushel grain elevator in Polk County near the town of Avon Lake. It is the largest grain elevator in Iowa; the next largest, to which reference is made in the record, had a 2,446,000-bushel capacity, and according to the testimony of witnesses, had been closed for some considerable period of time before it was sold.

Two appraisers called by plaintiff as expert witnesses placed valuations on the property. Both of the plaintiff’s valuation witnesses were residents of Nebraska, and only one of them testified he had had experience in appraising properties in Iowa. After it was developed in the testimony that the witnesses had not personally bought or sold property in Polk County, the defendants objected to their testimony as incompetent, but the record does not disclose any ruling by the court on such objection.

One of the witnesses testified the market value of the elevator was $1,000,000, and the other testified the market value was $634,760, both opinions being based on sales of comparable elevators some of which were not in Iowa. One of the value witnesses calculated the value of plaintiff’s elevator at $621,565, based on cost less depreciation.

The assessor made no attempt to employ the market value approach because he was unable to find comparable sales in Polk County, and calculated the value of the elevator at replacement less depreciation. One principal point of difference between the assessor’s calculation and the values placed on the property by the expert witnesses for the plaintiff, was based on the fact one valuation witness allowed 74 percent depreciation because the elevator, according to his testimony, was “grossly oversized”, whereas the assessor allowed only 15 percent for obsolescence. Another witness for plaintiff, who had been engaged in the elevator business for a number of years, *60 testified the ideal size for an elevator under present economic conditions and government grain regulations, would be one with a capacity of approximately 1,500,000 bushels.

The court found that plaintiff had failed to establish the court had jurisdiction and had also failed to produce competent evidence to show the assessment by the defendant Board was excessive or inequitable, and granted judgment to defendants. This appeal ensued.

The plaintiff states the following issues for review which it contends necessitate a reversal of trial court:

(1) That trial court erred in concluding the plaintiff “failed to sustain the burden of proof that the court had jurisdiction of the controversy, and for that reason the court would be powerless to grant relief in this proceeding”.

(2) That the court erred in its findings and conclusion the plaintiff had failed to produce competent evidence to show the assessment of the property involved in the case was either excessive or inequitable.

I. With respect to plaintiff’s first issue stated for review, it contends the trial court erred in finding the plaintiff had not proved facts necessary to vest the trial court with jurisdiction to hear the appeal of the tax assessment. The defendants’ claim in this regard centers around the evidence or lack of evidence concerning plaintiff’s written protest to the Board of Review and the notice to the Board of Review of the appeal to the district court.

Written protest to the Board of Review of an assessment is required under § 441.37, The Code, 1971. Notice to the Board of Review is necessary to give the district court jurisdiction to hear an appeal of a decision of the review board under § 441.39, The Code, 1971. We note a copy of the written protest and the notice of appeal to the Board, along with proof of service thereon, was attached to the original petition filed in the Polk County court.

The court file of the Polk County district court case which is before us reflects that the requisite jurisdictional notice of appeal was duly served upon the Board of Review of Polk County, Iowa, by serving Everett Sather, chairman of the Board. In its answer, defendants admitted that Sather was chairman of the Board, and that the Board adjourned on June 10, 1971. The return of service of the notice appears to be dated June 29, 1971, and was, therefore, served within the required 20 days after adjournment of the Board. There is, therefore, no merit to defendants’ contention that the plaintiff omitted to prove it perfected an appeal within 20 days after the Board had adjourned and failed to prove it had filed a proper and timely notice of appeal.

The defendants further contend the plaintiff failed to prove the action taken on its protest by the Board of Review. Plaintiff’s exhibit # 2, the assessor’s card record, reflects the action taken by the Board on the taxpayer’s protest. Further, in its answer to the plaintiff’s petition, the Board admitted the allegations of the petition in which the plaintiff asserted that the Board in its official capacity prior to its adjournment on June 10,1971, reduced the assessed value of plaintiff’s property from $1,030,-240, the amount fixed by the Polk County assessor, to $877,295.

In Grundon Holding Corp. v. Board of Review, 237 N.W.2d 755, 757 (Iowa 1976), in speaking to an almost identical jurisdictional question having to do with the filing of a protest, we noted that the evidence endorsed on the assessor’s valuation card introduced as a part of plaintiff’s case, included a notation the protest was denied. We held there was no merit to the claim of the Board of Review that the trial court was without jurisdiction. The facts in Grundon are almost identical to those in the case before us here.

On the whole record, we find there was no merit in defendants’ contention the trial court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine plaintiff’s appeal. The trial court erred in that regard and we reverse, holding that the necessary jurisdictional facts are present to establish the trial court could have, and should have, proceeded to a determination of the plaintiff’s appeal.

*61 II. In its second issue stated for review, the plaintiff contends the trial court erred in its finding that the plaintiff failed to establish its burden of proof that the real estate assessment was either excessive or inequitable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 N.W.2d 58, 1978 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-grain-dealers-assn-v-sather-iowa-1978.