First Natl. Stores v. BD. OF ASSESSORS OF SOMERVILLE

265 N.E.2d 848, 358 Mass. 554, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 887
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 265 N.E.2d 848 (First Natl. Stores v. BD. OF ASSESSORS OF SOMERVILLE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Natl. Stores v. BD. OF ASSESSORS OF SOMERVILLE, 265 N.E.2d 848, 358 Mass. 554, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 887 (Mass. 1971).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

The appellant (Stores) sought from the Somerville assessors for certain of the years 1964, 1965, *555 and 1966 abatements of real estate taxes on three parcels of land. When the assessors failed to act on the abatement applications, Stores (see 6. L. c. 59, §§ 64, 65) filed with the Appellate Tax Board (the board) petitions under the formal procedure. Each petition alleged not only that the particular property was overvalued by the assessors in excess of the full and fair cash value, but also that Stores was aggrieved by deliberate, disproportionate, and discriminatory assessments.

On May 15, 1968, the board directed Stores “to make within five days a further and better statement of the nature of . . . ^Stores’] claims of a disproportionate assessment” conforming to “the standards of pleading set forth in” Stone v. Springfield, 341 Mass. 246, 251, and Shoppers’ World, Inc. v. Assessors of Framingham, 348 Mass. 366, 370. Stores filed such a statement specifying, among other matters, that for each of the years 1964, 1965, and 1966, the aggregate assessed value of all the properties sold in Somerville in the next prior calendar year was a percentage between 38.3% (1966) and 45.7% (1964) of the aggregate fair cash value of those properties sold, whereas during these years, Stores contends, its three groups of properties were assessed at 124.2%, 97.2%, and 74% of their respective fair cash values.

Evidence of most of the real estate sales in Somerville during the years 1960 to 1966, inclusive, was presented at frequently postponed hearings before the board. 1 A certified copy of each individual recorded deed of Somerville real estate in those years was introduced. There was also introduced a tabulation of these sales giving (for each sale, deed, and parcel of land) the following information: (a) the month and year of sale, (b) the street location, (c) the record book and page, (d) the value of affixed revenue stamps, (e) the sales price thereby indicated, (f) the assessment as of the January 1 next following, (g) later change (if any) in the assessment, and (h) the ratio of assessed value to sales price. In Stores’ brief this evidence is summarized for the years *556 1964 to 1966 inclusive, 2 apparently on the basis of the sales listed in the compilation.

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In its brief Stores further breaks down the statistics shown in the tabulation to indicate the number of parcels within various ranges of ratios of assessment to sales price in each of the years 1964, 1965, and 1966, as follows: 3

TABLEB
Assessment-Sales Parcels of Property Having Column (1)
Price Ratio Assessment-Sales Price Ratio
(D (¿9 (8) (4) 1964 * 1965 1966 o%-19% 4 3 7 20% 29% 32 46 53 30% 39% 135 125 116 40% 49% 32 60 42 50%-59% 20 12 21 60% - or over 35 23 26

*557 Assessors of Somerville also testified. Chairman. George J. Moran, Jr., gave testimony that Somerville assessments made by him were based on visual inspection of each parcel, whether residential or commercial; that he (in the assessment process) does not take sales prices into consideration; and that he would not do so even if he knew what they were.* 4 He uses the same visual method for all types of property. He did not know whether Somerville residential, commercial, and industrial property was assessed at full and fair cash value in the years 1964 to 1966. He does not use (a) capitalization of income or (b) reproduction cost less depreciation as a valuation method. He sometimes uses the value of comparable properties as an aid. There was testimony from another assessor that with reference to assessments in Somerville, for twenty years “the policy has been the same, fair market value,” and the assessments have remained “[practically” the same. The assessors were aware of the information in their records concerning sales prices.

There was substantial evidence before the board concerning the fair cash value of each of Stores’ three groups of properties. The board found that the Group “A” properties (5 Middlesex Avenue and Mystic Avenue) were over-assessed by $352,200. It also concluded that the Group “B” (Middlesex Avenue) and Group “C” (57R Mystic Avenue) properties were not assessed at more than their *558 fair cash value. The various views on value are set out in the margin. 5

On May 22, 1968, Stores requested the board to find as a fact and also to “rule as . . . matter of law that the evidence supports an inference of fractional, unequal, and discriminatory assessments in . . . Somerville during the years in issue and that the . . . [assessors have] the burden of going forward to show that there . . . [were] no such fractional, unequal, and discriminatory assessments.” Each request for ruling was denied when the board announced its decisions. “On the issue of disproportionate assessment,” the board entered in each case a decision for the assessors because Stores “has not sustained its burden of proof and further . . . wrongfully used a market data approach to valuation to determine the fraction of alleged disproportionate assessments and at the same time used a capitalization method of valuation of its own property to form the basis of an abatement.”

Stores thereupon claimed an appeal to this court, assigning as error that the board (1) incorrectly failed to rule that the evidence supported an inference of fractional, unequal and discriminatory assessments; (2) ruled wrongly that Stores had not sustained its burden of proof of disproportionate assessment; and (3) erred in ruling that Stores im *559 properly used inconsistent valuation methods. No appeal has been taken from the board’s decisions on the issue of fair cash value.

1. The proper method of assessment of real property is at 100% of fair cash value. 6 See Part II, c. 1, § 1, art. 4, of the Constitution of the Commonwealth, and also art. 10 of the Declaration of Rights; G. L. c. 59, §§ 38, 52; Bettigole v. Assessors of Springfield, 343 Mass. 223, 231-232; Shoppers’ World, Inc. v. Assessors of Framingham, 348 Mass. 366,

371-372, and cases cited; Bennett v. Assessors of Whitman, 354 Mass. 239, 240. The requirement that real estate assessments be proportional is firmly established. In the Shoppers’ World case (at p. 377), we held that a taxpayer may show, if he can, that “substantially all other . . .

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Bluebook (online)
265 N.E.2d 848, 358 Mass. 554, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-natl-stores-v-bd-of-assessors-of-somerville-mass-1971.