In Re Protest Appeals of Lyerla, Kathy L. Liv. Trust

336 P.3d 882, 50 Kan. App. 2d 1012, 2014 Kan. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 17, 2014
Docket109577
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 336 P.3d 882 (In Re Protest Appeals of Lyerla, Kathy L. Liv. Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Protest Appeals of Lyerla, Kathy L. Liv. Trust, 336 P.3d 882, 50 Kan. App. 2d 1012, 2014 Kan. App. LEXIS 83 (kanctapp 2014).

Opinion

Leben, J.:

Five taxpayers who appealed tax valuations to the Court of Tax Appeals saw their appeals dismissed by that body because their appeal notices had been signed by non-attorneys. In addition, even though the Court of Tax Appeals ultimately concluded that it had no jurisdiction to hear the appeals, it ruled in some of the cases that the contractual agreements between the taxpayers and those they hired to represent them before the Court of Tax Appeals (an attorney and a tax-appraisal firm) were void as against public policy.

The taxpayers have appealed to this court, arguing that the Court of Tax Appeals should neither have dismissed their appeals nor addressed the validity of their contractual arrangements with the attorney and tax-consulting firm. We agree. Any problem with the signature on the appeal notices would have been a correctable matter, not a jurisdictional hurdle that should have prevented the Court of Tax Appeals from considering the appeals. And the Court of Tax Appeals has no statutory authority to determine the validity of contractual arrangements between a taxpayer and a third party foe taxpayer hires to represent it. We therefore reverse the decision of foe Court of Tax Appeals and remand these appeals for further proceedings.

Factual and Procedural Background

Five separate tax appeals, all from Johnson County, have been *1014 consolidated into one appeal. In all five cases, the taxpayers appealed real-property valuations, and the Court of Tax Appeals dismissed the appeals for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. All of the taxpayers are corporations, trusts, or some other form of artificial entity, i.e., they are not individuals owning property in their own name. And the notices of appeal for all the taxpayers were filed by non-attorneys who had been hired to assist with the tax appeals but who were not otherwise employees or owners of the taxpayers.

Three of the taxpayers — the Kathy L. Lyerla Living Trust, MBS Barkley 1031, LLC, and ACDC Investments, LLC — filed their appeals in the small-claims division of the Court of Tax Appeals. The other taxpayers — Flik, Inc., and THF College Boulevard, L.L.C.— filed their appeals in the regular division of the Court of Tax Appeals.

Flik and THF College Boulevard hired tax consultants (Property Tax Services, Inc., and Hollrah and Fricke, Inc., respectively) to handle their tax appeals. Non-attorney employees of those companies signed and filed the notices of appeal.

The other taxpayers all hired J.W. Chatam & Associates, Inc., a tax-consulting firm, to handle their tax appeals, and a non-attorney employee of Chatam signed and filed the notices of appeal for those taxpayers. When the taxpayers didn’t get any relief from their tax assessments from the small-claims division, they each pursued a further appeal to the regular division. Attorney Linda Terrill filed a notice of appeal in the regular division for each taxpayer.

That summarizes the relevant history for the appeals of Flik and THF College Boulevard. But quite a bit more took place in the appeals involving the Lyerla Living Trust, MBS Barkley 1031, and ACDC Investments.

In the appeal by the Lyerla Living Trust, Johnson County and Terrill reached an agreement to a reduced appraised value and submitted a proposed order reflecting that agreement. But the Court of Tax Appeals refused to consider the merits of any of these taxpayers’ appeals or to accept the parties’ agreement on the proper valuation for the property in the Lyerla case because it concluded that a non-attorney cannot sign the notice of appeal for a corporate *1015 or artificial entity. Based on that ruling, the Court of Tax Appeals concluded that none of the taxpayers had filed a timely appeal.

The process leading to that ruling began when the Court of Tax Appeals issued an initial order on August 23, 2012, asking that these taxpayers show cause why their cases should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. The orders said that the Court of Tax Appeals sought to determine the identity of the real party in interest in each case and whether the Court could properly exercise subject matter jurisdiction. On August 31, 2012, the Court of Tax Appeals asked Terrill to provide the contracts between Chatam and the taxpayers. It then held an extensive hearing (resulting in a 226-page transcript) on September 18, 2012. Most of the hearing focused on the taxpayers’ relationships with Chatam and Terrill.

The Court of Tax Appeals issued an order of more than 80 pages in each taxpayer’s case on October 11, 2012. It concluded that it had no subject-matter jurisdiction because the appeal notices weren’t properly signed. But the orders also made several other conclusions:

• That even though Chatam had a contingent-fee interest in the appeals, the taxpayers remained the real parties in interest in their tax appeals;
• That the written contracts between Chatam and the taxpayers were void as against public policy — specifically, that they were champertous (the result of “an officious intermed-dlerf’s]” involvement in a lawsuit in exchange for part of the proceeds, Black’s Law Dictionary 279 [10th ed. 2009]) but that the champertous nature of these agreements did not eliminate the Court of Tax Appeals’ jurisdiction over the appeals;
• That if the Court of Tax Appeals had proper jurisdiction over the appeal, it would require that the taxpayers proceed without their chosen representatives (Chatam and Terrill) because the court concluded that Chatam had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law, that Terrill had assisted Chatam in doing so, and that Terrill appeared to have violated several provisions of the Kansas Rules of Professional Conduct;
*1016 • That it found “general reasons to question the credibility of [Jerry W.] Chatam’s testimony and Terrill’s statements regarding whether or not the replacement decisions [replacing Terrill with another attorney in some cases] were economically motivated.” (Jerry W. Chatam is a principal and owner of J.W. Chatam & Associates, which we generally reference in this opinion as Chatam.)

The taxpayers responded on October 29, 2012, with a request for reconsideration and a motion to strike at least tiiose portions of die order that addressed issues involving attorney-ethics rules and the contractual relationship between die taxpayers, Chatam, and Terrill. The Court of Tax Appeals granted reconsideration, but on Februaiy 20, 2013, it issued a 175-page order in each case that reached the same basic conclusions as the earlier order.

Some of the conclusions went further than the initial order. For example, the Court of Tax Appeals now concluded that Terrill had actually violated several of the attorney-ethics rules, not merely appeared to have violated them. In addition, the court made extensive factual findings about why it did not find the testimony of Jerry Chatam or the representations made by Terrill at the September 18 hearing credible.

We must note one other procedural item specific to these appeals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
336 P.3d 882, 50 Kan. App. 2d 1012, 2014 Kan. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-protest-appeals-of-lyerla-kathy-l-liv-trust-kanctapp-2014.