First Baptist Ch. of Pbgh. v. Pbgh.

20 A.2d 209, 341 Pa. 568, 134 A.L.R. 1169, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 469
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 25, 1941
DocketAppeals, 54 and 55
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 20 A.2d 209 (First Baptist Ch. of Pbgh. v. Pbgh.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Baptist Ch. of Pbgh. v. Pbgh., 20 A.2d 209, 341 Pa. 568, 134 A.L.R. 1169, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 469 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Parker,

These appeals arise out of a claim by the First Baptist Church of Pittsburgh that a plot of ground assessed *570 to it for school and city taxes is exempt from taxation. The chnrch appealed from a final assessment by the board of assessors to a court of common pleas and at the same time filed a bill in equity alleging that the property as a whole was exempt from taxation and praying that the municipal authorities be restrained from levying taxes against it for the years 1936, 1937, and 1938. Practically the same facts being involved in the two cases, they were consolidated for the purposes of trial. The court, after hearing, decided the cases adversely to the church, filing separate opinions in each case. The church has appealed from those decisions to this court.

(1) The court below held that the appeal from the board of assessors was not taken within the time prescribed by statute and that it should therefore be dismissed. Assessments for taxes and appeals therefrom in cities of the second class, such as Pittsburgh, are regulated by article VI of the Act of March 7, 1901, P. L. 20, as amended (53 PS §8771, et seq.), and by the Act of July 9, 1897, P. L. 219 (53 PS §§9971-2-3, 9991), reserved from repeal by the Act of 1901. * The Act of 1901 provides for a triennial assessment and gives any property owner on appeal from any valuation the right to be heard by the full board. Section 2 of the Act of 1897, giving the owner a right of appeal from the board of assessors to the court of common pleas, provides: “When such assessors shall have finally acted upon such assessments and appeals, an appeal may be taken therefrom to any court of common pleas of the county in which such city is located, whose decision shall he final thereon. Such appeals shall be *571 taken to snck court within thirty days after final action by the assessors as aforesaid.” (Italics supplied.)

We are of the opinion that the court below correctly held that the church did not take its appeal from the board of assessors to the court of common pleas in time. Triennial assessments were made for city and school purposes in Pittsburgh in the fall of 1933 for the years 1934, 1935, and 1936, and in the fall of 1936 for the years 1937, 1938, and 1939. There were various conversations and communications between the church and the board of assessors, many of them informal in character, between June 28, 1935, and November 19, 1938. The subject of discussion was rather a general right to an exemption than a complaint as to any particular assessment. However1, the board took specific action on two occasions, after the 1933 assessment and after the 1936 assessment, declining to grant any exemption to the church on the lot in question.

The church, on December 16, 1938, presented a petition to the court of common pleas in which it stated that it was taking an appeal from tax assessments made against land particularly described therein and purchased by it in 1919, and prayed that that land be “declared to be exempt from taxation.” The petition failed to give any indication that the church was appealing from any particular assessment and such information was not supplied to the court in any other form. The court granted the appeal on the next day and framed an issue. When the cause was tried it seemed to be the theory of the church that it could appeal generally from any and all tax assessments and thereby raise the broad question as to whether this land was exempt. This theory loses sight of the provisions in the statute for appeals which furnish a method of contesting particular assessments. When the issue was presented to the court, the trial judge considered the appeal as if it was from the triennial assessment made in 1936 *572 for the years 1937, 1938, and 1939, and dismissed the appeal for the reason heretofore stated. Consideration of the 1933 assessment was eliminated because the board rendered a definite decision on January 17, 1936, refusing the claim of the church and gave notice thereof to the church on February 15, 1936, many months before the appeal was taken.

After the 1936 assessment was made, the church renewed its application to the board for relief and the board, on November 30, 1937, again took formal action and refused the claim for exemption, so notifying the church on December 1, 1937. This was more than a year before the present appeal was taken. After that action by the board, further correspondence and conversations were had between members of the board and counsel for the church. This did not extend the time for taking an appeal: cf. Frazier’s Assigned Estate, 188 Pa. 415, 41 A. 528; Rumsey’s Case, 135 Pa. Superior Ct. 515, 7 A. 2d 43.

On November 19, 1938, the board again took the matter under consideration and refused to reconsider its former decision. This refusal of reconsideration was not reviewable: cf. McCready v. Gans, 242 Pa. 364, 371, 89 A. 459, and cases there cited holding that a re-’ fusal of reargument in a common law proceeding is not reviewable upon appeal. The board having previously made a definite decision and having given no indication that it was suspending its decision, the original action was final and the subsequent proceedings did not stop the running of the statutory period allowed for appeal: cf. Chester School District v. Richardson & Luce, 320 Pa. 438, 182 A. 500; Frazier’s Assigned Estate, supra. An intolerable situation would be created if the right to appeal could be delayed indefinitely by loose correspondence between a person assessed and the board. It seems clear that the church lost its right of appeal by delay.

*573 We also call attention to the decisions of this court and of the Superior Court holding that where a statute expressly denies an appeal from the order of the court below or it is provided that the action of the court below shall be final, appellate review, by way of certiorari, will be limited to the question of jurisdiction and the regularity of the proceedings: Grime v. Dept. of Public Instruction, 324 Pa. 371, 375, 188 A. 337; State Board of Undertakers v. Frankenfield, 329 Pa. 440, 198 A. 302. Also, see McGettigan’s Liquor License Case, 131 Pa. Superior Ct. 280, 285, 200 A. 213. In the Grime case, Chief Justice Kephakt said (p. 378) : “Even if its [the lower court’s] construction of the statute had been erroneous, it is the final court of appeal in such matters.”

(2) In the equity case, the court below found as a fact that the entire lot for which exemption was claimed was not “necessary for the occupancy and enjoyment of the church”, remarking incidentally that while the church might have been entitled to add a portion of the land in question to the church property already exempt, there was no justification for including the entire plot at the corner of Bayard Street and Buskin Avenue. It then concluded as a matter of law that equity would not have jurisdiction and dismissed the bill.

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Bluebook (online)
20 A.2d 209, 341 Pa. 568, 134 A.L.R. 1169, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-baptist-ch-of-pbgh-v-pbgh-pa-1941.