Farny v. Board of Equalization of Dolores County

985 P.2d 106, 1999 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4466, 1999 Colo. App. LEXIS 211, 1999 WL 515777
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 22, 1999
Docket98CA0992
StatusPublished
Cited by340 cases

This text of 985 P.2d 106 (Farny v. Board of Equalization of Dolores County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farny v. Board of Equalization of Dolores County, 985 P.2d 106, 1999 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4466, 1999 Colo. App. LEXIS 211, 1999 WL 515777 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge CRISWELL.

In this property tax ease, respondent, the Dolores County Board of Equalization (BOE), appeals from an order of the Board of Assessment Appeals (BAA) which changed the BOE’s classification of certain real property owned by petitioners, David H. and Sharon S. Farny (taxpayers), from vacant to residential for the 1997 tax year. We affirm.

The subject property consists of a 320-acre parcel of mountain property upon which taxpayers built and have used a small structure. Prior to the 1997 tax year, the county assessor had classified this property as residential. In that year, however, after the assessor changed the status of the structure from a cabin to a shed, the property was reclassified as vacant. At issue in the taxpayers’ appeal to the BAA was the appropriate classification of this property for that tax year, based on the character and use of the property.

*108 At the BAA hearing, taxpayers sought residential classification and described the various characteristics of their two-story, 400-square-foot structure and the periodic use of it as a rustic dwelling place for family outings.

In contrast, the BOE asserted that the property should be classified as vacant, insisting that the structure’s use was for storage. In support of this position, the BOE presented certain conflicting evidence as to the character of the structure and its use, including various statements previously made by taxpayers that were purportedly inconsistent with their testimony before the BAA.

Following the hearing, the BAA credited taxpayers’ testimony and found that taxpayers and their family and friends had resided in the structure approximately 25 days every year. Noting that the assessor had not actually inspected the structure, the BAA found that, although it had no electricity or plumbing, the cabin had separate eating and sleeping areas and was heated by a wood stove.

Based on these findings, the BAA ruled that the cabin should be classified as a “minimal residential improvement” and that the land should be reclassified as residential for the 1997 tax year.

I.

Taxpayers and the BAA contend that this court lacks jurisdiction to consider the issues raised on appeal by the BOE and that this appeal must, therefore, be dismissed. We disagree.

Section 39-8-108(2), C.R.S.1998, the statute that governs appeals to this court from the BAA, differentiates between an appeal by a taxpayer and an appeal by a taxing authority. That statute authorizes a taxpayer to “petition the court of appeals for judicial review according to the Colorado appellate rules and the provisions of section 24-4-106(11), C.R.S. [the Administrative Procedure Act].” The statute does not require that the taxpayer make any special showing, nor does it limit the nature of the issues that may be raised, save to the extent that § 24-4-106(7), C.R.S.1998, limits the issues that this court may address in any review of an administrative agency’s decision.

In contrast, under § 39-8-108(2), a taxing authority may have this court review the BAA’s decision only if:

1. The BAA recommends that the matter is“of statewide concern or has resulted in a significant decrease in the total valuation” of the county; or
2. In the absence of such recommendation, the taxing authority petitions this court to review “alleged procedural errors or errors of law .... ” (emphasis supplied)

This latter condition was added in 1989. Colo. Sess. Laws 1989, eh. 324 at 1459. Before this amendment, a taxing authority was limited to seeking judicial review by this court only upon an appropriate finding and recommendation by the BAA.

Clearly, therefore, the legislative intent reflected in § 39-8-108(2) prior to its amendment was to limit substantially the right of a taxing authority to appeal from an adverse decision of the BAA. Also clear is that, by its 1989 amendment to this statute, the General Assembly intended to expand the circumstances under which a taxing authority may initiate such an appeal.

What is not so clear, however, are the circumstances under which a taxing authority may now appeal such an adverse decision.

An appellate court has authority only to pass upon “errors of law”; it cannot act as a fact-finder. See Page v. Clark, 197 Colo. 306, 592 P.2d 792 (1979). Hence, this court’s authority to review a decision of the BAA would have been limited to our consideration of alleged errors of law, even in the absence of the limitation contained in the 1989 amendment to § 39-8-108(2).

Further, the question whether the record evidence supports a fact-finder’s findings has traditionally been considered to be a question of law. Indeed, before the adoption of the 1989 amendment here, our supreme court had held that, under § 16-12-102, C.R.S. 1998, which authorizes the prosecution in a criminal case to appeal upon any “question of law,” the issue whether the evidence is legal *109 ly sufficient is such a question. People v. Gonzales, 666 P.2d 123 (Colo.1983).

It is presumed, of course, that, when it adopted the pertinent amendment, the General Assembly was aware of the common meaning of this phrase, as well as the interpretation placed upon it by the supreme court. Hence, while it is certainly arguable that that legislative body intended to restrict in some way the right of a taxing authority to appeal to this court, we are bound to give the words found in the amendment their plain, ordinary, and common meaning. See Gorman v. Tucker, 961 P.2d 1126 (Colo.1998) (if legislative intent is conveyed by commonly understood and accepted language, a different interpretation will not be adopted).

While one could reasonably conclude that, even under the amended statute, the General Assembly intended to restrict in some way a taxing authority’s right to appeal from an adverse BAA decision, we cannot divine the nature of the intended restriction from the words used by it. Hence, given the similarities between § 16-12-102 and the statute at issue here, both of which are designed to allow governmental authorities to appeal unfavorable decisions made by a hearing tribunal, they must be given a similar construction. We conclude, therefore, that a claim that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the BAA’s decision is a claim based upon an alleged “error of law” under § 39-8-108(2), and an appeal by a taxing authority is authorized in such cases.

In reaching this conclusion, we are mindful of Principal Mutual Insurance Co. v. Boulder County Board of Equalization, 890 P.2d 273, 276 (Colo.App.1994), the final paragraph of which says: “We do not address the BOE’s additional contention regarding sufficiency of the evidence because it does not raise a procedural error or error of law.”

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Bluebook (online)
985 P.2d 106, 1999 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4466, 1999 Colo. App. LEXIS 211, 1999 WL 515777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farny-v-board-of-equalization-of-dolores-county-coloctapp-1999.