In Re: Appeal of Coatesville Area Sch Dist

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 2021
Docket7 MAP 2020
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Appeal of Coatesville Area Sch Dist (In Re: Appeal of Coatesville Area Sch Dist) 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
In Re: Appeal of Coatesville Area Sch Dist, (Pa. 2021).

Opinion

[J-72-2020] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLE DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

IN RE: APPEAL OF COATESVILLE : No. 7 MAP 2020 AREA SCHOOL DISTRICT FROM THE : DECISION OF THE CHESTER COUNTY : Appeal from the Order of the BOARD OF ASSESSMENT APPEALS : Commonwealth Court at Nos. 1130 & FOR THE PROPERTY LOCATED AT 50 : 1161 CD 2018 dated 8/7/19, dismissing SOUTH FIRST AVENUE, CITY OF : the order dated 6/30/18, exited 7/5/18, COATESVILLE, CHESTER COUNTY, : by the Chester County Court of PENNSYLVANIA, PROPERTY TAX : Common Pleas, Civil Division, at No. PARCEL NO. 16-05-0229.0000 : 2013-10936 : APPEAL OF: COATESVILLE AREA : SCHOOL DISTRICT : ARGUED: September 16, 2020

OPINION

CHIEF JUSTICE SAYLOR DECIDED: January 20, 2021

In this appeal by allowance, two taxing districts undertook parallel challenges to a

property’s partial tax exemption. We consider whether res judicata and collateral

estoppel preclude merits disposition of the second taxing district’s appeal to the

Commonwealth Court, where the first district elected not to appeal to that court.

I. Background

Appellee Huston Properties, Inc. (“Taxpayer”), owns the subject property, a

historically significant building in Coatesville, Chester County (the “Property”). In 2013,

Taxpayer, claiming to be a charitable institution, sought tax-exempt status for the

Property for the 2014 tax year. After a hearing, the Chester County Board of

Assessment Appeals granted a partial exemption of 72%, reasoning that that portion of the Property was used for charitable purposes. It thus reduced the Property’s

assessment from $954,450 to $267,250.1

On October 31, 2013, the City of Coatesville appealed that decision to the

Chester County Court of Common Pleas, which hears tax assessment appeals de novo.

See Green v. Schuylkill Cty. Bd. of Assessment Appeals, 565 Pa. 185, 195, 772 A.2d

419, 425 (2001); 53 Pa.C.S. §8854(a)(1).2 In its appeal, the City challenged the

Property’s partially-tax-exempt status. The appeal was docketed at No. 2013-10761

(the “City’s case”). Six days later, the Coatesville Area School District – another taxing

authority encompassing the Property – lodged its own appeal, also challenging the

Property’s partially-tax-exempt status. That appeal was docketed at 2013-10936 (the

“School District’s case”).

On December 31, 2013, the School District filed a notice of intervention in the

City’s case. See 53 Pa.C.S. §8855 (giving taxing districts the right to appeal

assessments within its jurisdiction, and to participate in assessment appeals initiated by

others). In January 2015, the common pleas court, per Judge Carmody, issued an

1 Under Pennsylvania law, charitable institutions enjoy tax-exempt status to the extent their properties are used for charitable purposes. See PA. CONST. art. VIII, §2(a)(v); Act of Nov. 26, 1997, P.L. 508, No. 55 (as amended 10 P.S. §§371-385) (the Institutions of Purely Public Charity Act).

Although the appeal originally pertained only to the 2014 tax year, by operation of law it encompassed the Property’s valuation for subsequent tax years during the pendency of the appeal. See 53 Pa.C.S. §8854(a)(5).

2 Section 8854 is part of the Consolidated County Assessment Law, Act of Oct. 27, 2010, P.L. 895, No. 93, §2 (as amended 53 Pa.C.S. §§8801-8868) (the “Assessment Law”). See generally In re Consol. Appeals of Chester-Upland Sch. Dist., ___ Pa. ___, 238 A.3d 1213, 1216 n.2 (2020) (noting that the Assessment Law recodifies several previous acts relating to various classes of counties). The Assessment Law is to be read in pari materia with the Institutions of Purely Public Charity Act. See 53 Pa.C.S. §8804(b).

[J-72-2020] - 2 order consolidating the appeals for trial, and a consolidated trial was ultimately held in

November of that year. By that time, Senior Judge Shenkin was presiding over the

case, and although he expressed uncertainty as to whether the consolidation order

applied only to the actual hearing or to the cases as a whole, see N.T., Nov. 17, 2015,

at 15, in the post-trial timeframe he treated it as applying only to the trial. Thus, in

resolving the matters, he issued two separate but identical orders, one for each of the

appeals, rather than a single order with a double caption.3 In the orders, he affirmed the

Board’s grant of a partial exemption and its assessment figure of $267,250.

Both the City and the School District appealed to the Commonwealth Court, and

Taxpayer cross-appealed as to each, seeking fully-exempt status for the Property. See

53 Pa.C.S. §8854(b) (authorizing such appeals). The intermediate court consolidated

the four appeals and designated the City and School District as the appellants.

In a memorandum decision, the Commonwealth Court vacated and remanded to

the trial court for more specific findings to support the partial tax exemption. The

appellate court expressed that the common pleas court should have set forth its findings

and legal conclusions as to the specific factors discussed in Hospital Utilization Project

v. Commonwealth, 507 Pa. 1, 22, 487 A.2d 1306, 1317 (1985), as well as the elements

reflected in Section 5 of the Institutions of Purely Public Charity Act, i.e., 10 P.S.

§375(b). See In re City of Coatesville, Nos. 511, 530, 607, 608 C.D. 2016, 2017 WL

631821, at *2-*3 (Pa. Cmwlth. Feb. 16, 2017).

On remand, the trial court set forth particularized findings and conclusions, and

re-affirmed its earlier decision assessing the Property at $267,250. It issued two

opinions to this effect on the same day. The opinions were, again, substantively

3The orders differed only in their captions and in that one of the orders contained an explanatory footnote, while the other incorporated that footnote by reference.

[J-72-2020] - 3 identical, the only difference being that the captions reflected different docket numbers:

one for the City’s case, and the other for the School District. At this juncture, the City

elected not to appeal to the Commonwealth Court. For its part, the School District

appealed the ruling in its own case, but it did not appeal the identical, simultaneous

ruling which contained the City’s docket number.

Taxpayer moved to quash the School District’s appeal. The Commonwealth

Court granted the motion and dismissed the appeal in a published decision. See In re

Coatesville Area Sch. Dist., 216 A.3d 539 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019).4 The court observed that

the common pleas court’s ruling in the City’s case became final after no party appealed

it. Because the School District had intervened in that matter, the court continued, it was

a party to those proceedings. With that premise, the court found that res judicata,

relating to claim preclusion, and collateral estoppel, relating to issue preclusion, barred

it from reaching the merits. See id. at 542-43. Additionally, the court noted that a given

property can only have one assessed value regardless of how many taxing districts

have authority to tax it. The court suggested that an “absurd result” could ensue if the

assessment figure ultimately reached on appeal in the School District’s case were to

differ from the trial court’s final, unappealed assessment in the City’s case, i.e.,

$267,250. Id. at 544.

This Court granted further review to consider whether the Commonwealth Court

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