Hart's Appeal

199 A. 225, 131 Pa. Super. 104, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 185
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 8, 1938
DocketAppeal, 11
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 199 A. 225 (Hart's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart's Appeal, 199 A. 225, 131 Pa. Super. 104, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 185 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadteeld, J.,

In the year 1934, the Union National Bank owned a twelve-story steel and concrete building on a corner of Lackawanna and Washington Avenues, Scranton. The ground floor was used as a bank, the upper floors for office purposes. The bank closed and John A. Hart was appointed receiver in February, 1934. The total tax assessment of the building for the year 1934, amounted to $259,150 of which $146,340 represented the land assessment. For the year 1935 the total assessment as first made by the assessors was $277,950, the land assessment being fixed at $130,750 and an increase in the assessment on improvements, accounting for the difference. Upon appeal by the bank, the board of revision and appeal reduced the land assessment to $111,750. The board having refused any further reduction on Jan. 19, 1935, the bank took an appeal to the court below on Feb. 25, 1935. On the following day, notice of the appeal was served upon and accepted by O. G. Chappell, chairman of the board. On July 29, 1936, counsel for the bank’s receiver and the city solicitor, representing the City of Scranton, agreed in writing that a hearing on the appeal was to be held on July 30, 1936 before Leach, P. J. in the court below. On Sept. 3, 1936, the hearing was held, the record revealing that, “By written agreement of counsel filed of record, the case is heard before Hon. Will Leach, P. J. with the same force and effect as though before the court en banc.” Leon M. Levy, Esq. appeared for the bank’s receiver; John R. Edwards, Esq., associate city solicitor, appeared for the City of Scranton; and David J. Reedy, Esq. appeared for the School District of the City of Scranton.

Counsel for the bank’s receiver petitioned the court below for leave to amend the caption of the case to read as follows: “In Re, Appeal of John A. Hart, re *107 ceiver of the Union National Bank of Scranton, Pa., from revision of assessment of taxes by the City of Scranton for the year 1934, upon Lot No. 26, Block No. 37, Ninth Ward, Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton, Pa., this revision having fixed the assessment and amount of taxes for the year 1985, which is herewith appealed for said year 1935.”

The clause in italics represents the portion amending, by addition, the original caption.

Leave to amend the original caption was granted by the court below over the objection of counsel for the City of Scranton and constitutes one of the assignments of error.

The court below entered a decree nisi, fixing the assessment as follows: Land value, $58,220, improvement value, $128,000. Exceptions to the decree nisi were filed but overruled and the decree made absolute. This appeal by the City of Scranton followed.

Appellant contends preliminarily, that the appeal from the tax assessment should have been dismissed by the court below (1) because no notice was given the board of revision of the hearing on the appeal from the assessment, and (2) because the tax appeal was not taken in time to affect the 1935 assessment.

It appears from the record that counsel for the City of Scranton had not only agreed, in writing, to the hearing before the court below, but had also appeared on behalf of appellant throughout the hearing. If there was any failure to give notice, it is clear that such notice Avas waived by attendance at the hearing: Walberg v. Underwood, 39 Cal. A. 748, 180 Pac. 55; 46 C. J. 552, Sec. 52.

Whether or not the tax appeal was taken in time to affect the 1935 assessment depends on the propriety of the action of the court beloAV in granting leave to amend the original caption of the case. The third averment in *108 appellee’s petition to the court below from the assessment by the board of revision and appeal clearly sets forth that the 1934 assessment was to be effective for the year 1935. The amendment served merely to remove an ambiguity in the caption so as to conform with the facts as set forth in the body of the appeal.

The word “assessment” is often loosely used to mean the preliminary valuation of the subject matter of a tax by a board of assessors rather than more accurately a certain sum of money fixed under a given rate on property valuation. The preliminary valuation is often made in a year preceding the tax year and hence the source of ambiguity.

“A pleading must be construed as an entirety, including the caption, and a count must be construed as a whole. Effect should be given to every part of the pleading, and all parts will, if the language permits, be so construed as to be consistent with each other ......49 C. J. 116, Sec. 108; Intercoastal Lumber Distributors, Inc. v. Derian et al., 117 Pa. Superior Ct. 246, 248, 178 A. 350: “The title of the action should not be allowed to control the averments of the complaint”: 49 C.J. 117 Sec. 108.

The sole question remaining for consideration is whether or not the tax appellant in the court below met the burden of proving the incorrectness of the tax assessment by competent evidence. The court below in the decree, fixed the value of the bank’s land and building as follows: land value, $58,220; improvement value, $128,000, making a total of $186,220.

“It should be remembered, that when the cases came into the court of common pleas on the appeal the proceedings were de novo and a prima facie case was made out by the appellees when the valuation of each tract and the data affecting the same on record in the office of the board of revision, were offered in evidence. *109 The burden was then on appellant to show by the weight of evidence that the valuation was unjust, inequitable, not uniform in comparison with the valuation of other real estate in the district, and not made on a proper legal basis ......Phila. & Reading Coal & Iron Co. v. Northumberland County Commissioners, 229 Pa. 460, 468, 79 A. 109.

From the documentary evidence taken from the records of the assessors, the following facts appeared: (1) the assessed value per front foot of appellee’s property had been fixed at the rate of $2,598.33 for a lot about ninety-one feet deep; (2) the assessed land value per foot front for a lot one hundred and thirty-three feet deep, immediately adjoining appellee’s property, had been fixed at $1,473; (3) the uniform value per foot front of lots, one hundred and thirty-three feet deep, in the block in which appellee’s property was located, had been fixed at amounts varying from $1,473 to $1,501; (4) properties on an adjoining lot testified to as being a much more valuable location, had been assessed a value per front foot of $2,784 and $2,996.

Oral testimony was supplied by witnesses for both sides. One expert witness called by appellant testified that in his opinion, the assessment as originally fixed for appellee’s property in 1935, was fair, but that the assessments for other properties in the same block was “too low”. This evidence suggests the absence of uniformity of assessments. He testified further that the total value of appellee’s property in 1935 was $284,000, the market value of the land being $126,000 and the improvements being $158,000. This opinion was based, in part, on the original cost, less depreciation, and, in part, on his knowledge of sales of comparable properties in the same block.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 A. 225, 131 Pa. Super. 104, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harts-appeal-pasuperct-1938.