In Re Tax Assessments Against Pocahontas Land Corp.

210 S.E.2d 641, 158 W. Va. 229, 1974 W. Va. LEXIS 275
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1974
Docket13433 and 13434
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 210 S.E.2d 641 (In Re Tax Assessments Against Pocahontas Land Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Tax Assessments Against Pocahontas Land Corp., 210 S.E.2d 641, 158 W. Va. 229, 1974 W. Va. LEXIS 275 (W. Va. 1974).

Opinion

Berry, Justice:

Pocahontas Land Company, the appellant, hereinafter referred to as the appellant, appeals from two final judgments of the Circuit Court of Wyoming County entered December 29, 1972 and June 11, 1973 wherein the circuit court held that the county court sitting as a board of equalization and review was correct in upholding the county assessor’s 20% increase in the assessments of the appellant’s Class III property in Wyoming County. The appellant had filed its return for the 1972 tax year listing the real property it owned in Wyoming County with its statement of the properties’ true and actual value. The assessor of Wyoming County increased the amount of the assessments by 20% across the board on all Class III property owned by the appellant. The assessor increased the assessment of the appellant’s property in 1973 in the same manner and the appellant protested the actions of the assessor in both cases. On December 3, 1973 this Court granted the appellant’s two appeals from the judgments of the Circuit Court of Wyoming County and on September 17, 1974 the case was submitted for decision upon the briefs and oral arguments on behalf of *231 the respective parties. For all practical purposes the issues and the facts in both appeals are identical; therefore, both appeals are consolidated for disposition.

It appears from the voluminous record that for the tax year 1971 in Wyoming County, according to the “Study of Property Evaluations in West Virginia” of the State Tax Commissioner, Class I property was assessed at 53.54% of appraised value; Class II property was assessed at 51.34%; Class III property was assessed at 59.18%; Class IV property was assessed at 49.75%. Subsequently, for the 1972 tax year the appellant filed its tax return setting forth the quantity, location and true and actual value of all its real property using the same value of its real property that was accepted by the assessor for the 1971 tax year. However, the appellant and twenty-nine other large mineral and landowners in Wyoming County were informed by Malcolm Arnold, the assessor for Wyoming County, that the appellant’s real property, as well as that of the others, would be assessed at a 20% increase over the assessments for 1971. The appellant was the largest real property owner in the county and the appellant and the other twenty-nine large landowners in the county owned the majority of the minerals and surface lands in the county. The 20% increase in their assessments amounted to $3,128,640 and the appellant’s increased assessment amounted to $1,653,000 of that total, or more than half. These increased assessments raised approximately $77,000 in additional tax revenue for Wyoming County.

The appellant contends that since $3,128,640 is 20% of $15,643,200, which is the amount the thirty real property owners were assessed in 1971, and the state tax commissioner’s report for 1971 shows that all Class III real property in the county was assessed at a total of $27,968,840 for 1971, the real property owners who were assessed at approximately $12,325,640 in 1971 were not subjected to the 20% increased assessment. However, the appellees counter with the argument that if one subtracts the total increased assessments of 20% applied to the thirty real property owners from the total amount *232 assessed by the assessor for all Class III real property in 1972 the remainder is approximately $208,000 more than the amount assessed to all Class III real property owners in 1971. Therefore, it appears that some of the remaining landowners were apparently assessed at a slightly increased rate for 1972 although far less than the 20% increase applied to the appellant and the other large landowners.

The record reveals the following assessments in Wyoming County:

1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971
Class I 89.51% 59.31% 58.04% 55.60% 54.07% 53.54%
Class II 29.82% 31.82% 39.85% 52.98% 51.35% 51.34%
Class III 90.77% 53.73% 57.21% 58.50% 56.84% 59.18%
Class IV 43.43% 29.52% 34.67% 41.21% 49.65% 49.75%

Mr. Arnold, the assessor, testified that he increased Class II and Class IV properties in the years 1967, 1968 and 1969 to bring those assessments up to a minimum of 50% as required and directed by the state tax commissioner in order for the county to comply with the legal requirements for the state aid to school formula which requires that all property be assessed at not less than 50% of appraised value. Mr. Arnold testified that he spread the increases for residential homeowners over the three year period in order that the assessments in any one year would not be too great an increase for the individual taxpayer. Mr. Arnold testified that he felt justified in raising the large landowners’ assessments because of the large percentage increases in residential homeowners’ assessments over the previous years. Mr. Arnold stated the reason for choosing a 20% increase as: “Well, it seems to me like, in view of what went on in other classifications of property in Wyoming County, that that was the most reasonable figure to use to accomplish what was needed and still be fair and equitable to the company as well as the county, and, of course, that is the reason I chose to use that figure.” The assessor also published an advertisement in the newspaper in Wyoming County prior to the appellant’s protest which *233 made the following statement: “We don’t feel justified in seeing real estate assessments doubled in some cases and tripled in other cases under the State reappraisal of the homeowners’ property while the absentee landlords’ assessments remain the same as before the reappraisal.”

For the year 1972 Class III property was assessed at 66.08% of appraised value while Class II and Class IV were assessed at 50.89% and 52.14% respectively. The appellant contends that these figures reveal that the assessor systematically and intentionally discriminated against the large landowners of Class III property, especially since not all Class III property owners were assessed an additional 20%. Therefore, the thirty large property owners whose property assessments were increased 20% were actually being assessed at 71% of appraised value assuming that all Class III taxpayers were being assessed at the 59.18% rate for 1971. Moreover, the appellant contends that since Class III property was already being assessed at a higher percentage of appraised value for 1971 than Class I, Class II and Class IV property, the 20% increase was unjustified and discriminatory as to the appellant’s Class III property.

The appellant protested the increased assessment for 1972 but the county court, sitting as a board of equalization and review, found that the appellant did not affirmatively show that it had been discriminated against and the assessments were upheld. The Circuit Court of Wyoming County held that the county court was correct except as to the increased assessments for Class IV property of the appellant which was located within the corporate limits of municipalities in Wyoming County. The appellant appealed to this Court from the decision concerning its Class III property assessment.

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.E.2d 641, 158 W. Va. 229, 1974 W. Va. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tax-assessments-against-pocahontas-land-corp-wva-1974.