Jessica A. Goodman, Saline County Assessor v. Saline County Commission and Kile Guthrey, Jr., Presiding Commissioner, and Stephanie Gooden, Northern Commissioner, and Charles Monte Fenner, Southern Commissioner, and Cindi Sims, Saline County Collector

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 2025
DocketWD86126
StatusPublished

This text of Jessica A. Goodman, Saline County Assessor v. Saline County Commission and Kile Guthrey, Jr., Presiding Commissioner, and Stephanie Gooden, Northern Commissioner, and Charles Monte Fenner, Southern Commissioner, and Cindi Sims, Saline County Collector (Jessica A. Goodman, Saline County Assessor v. Saline County Commission and Kile Guthrey, Jr., Presiding Commissioner, and Stephanie Gooden, Northern Commissioner, and Charles Monte Fenner, Southern Commissioner, and Cindi Sims, Saline County Collector) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jessica A. Goodman, Saline County Assessor v. Saline County Commission and Kile Guthrey, Jr., Presiding Commissioner, and Stephanie Gooden, Northern Commissioner, and Charles Monte Fenner, Southern Commissioner, and Cindi Sims, Saline County Collector, (Mo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT JESSICA A. GOODMAN, ) SALINE COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) WD86126 ) SALINE COUNTY COMMISSION, ) Filed: March 18, 2025 KILE GUTHREY, JR., PRESIDING ) COMMISSIONER, STEPHANIE ) GOODEN, NORTHERN ) COMMISSIONER, CHARLES ) MONTE FENNER, SOUTHERN ) COMMISSIONER, and CINDI ) SIMS, SALINE COUNTY ) COLLECTOR, ) ) Respondents. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Saline County The Honorable Kelly Ann Rose, Judge Before Division One: Alok Ahuja, P.J., and Cynthia L. Martin and Thomas N. Chapman, JJ. This case involves two disputes between the Assessor of Saline County, on the one hand, and the Saline County Commission and County Collector, on the other: (1) a dispute over the percentage of property taxes which the County is required to deposit into an assessment fund to finance the operations of the

Assessor’s office; and (2) a dispute concerning the legality of certain compensation the Assessor intended to pay to members of her staff. The circuit court dismissed the Assessor’s petition, which sought declaratory and injunctive

relief. The Assessor appeals. This Court initially transferred the Assessor’s appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court, based on our conclusion that the Assessor had raised a challenge to the constitutional validity of § 48.020.1.1 After finding

that the Assessor had not properly raised any constitutional claim in the circuit court, the Missouri Supreme Court retransferred the appeal to this Court. We now affirm the circuit court’s judgment in part, and reverse in part.2

Factual Background On October 25, 2022, Jessica Goodman, in her capacity as the elected Saline County Assessor, filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Saline County against the Saline County Commission; the three County Commissioners at that time (Kile Guthrey, Jr., Charles Monte Fenner, and Stephanie Gooden); and Cindi Sims, the Saline County Collector. Since the filing of the Assessor’s

petition, Becky Plattner has been elected as a County Commissioner in place of Kile Guthrey, Jr., and has been substituted for him as a defendant. We refer to the County Commission and the Commissioners collectively as “the

Commission,” and refer to all defendants collectively as “the County.” In Count I, the Assessor’s petition alleged that on June 10, 2022, she closed her office for a day because the year’s tax valuations had been completed. The petition alleged that, “[a]s a benefit to [sic] the work done by her employees, and

1 Unless otherwise indicated, statutory citations refer to the 2016 edition of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, updated by the 2024 Cumulative Supplement. 2 We borrow substantially from our initial opinion in this appeal without further attribution.

2 an agreement duly reached between each employee and the Assessor, the Assessor declared the day off would be compensated.” The petition alleged,

however, that the Commission had refused to authorize payment of compensation to the Assessor’s employees for June 10. The petition contended that the Commission had acted in excess of its authority in denying this

compensation, and in derogation of the Assessor’s authority to determine how the funds appropriated for her office are allocated. (Count I also included an additional dispute about employee pay increases that the parties agree is now

moot). In Count II, the Assessor’s petition alleged that Saline County is a fourth- class county with an obligation under § 137.720 to deposit one percent of all ad valorem property tax collections into the County’s assessment fund. Despite that mandatory obligation, the petition alleged that the County has only deposited one-half of one percent of property tax collections into the assessment fund,

thereby significantly underfunding the Assessor’s operations. Count III contended, in the alternative, that the court should declare that Saline County is properly classified as a third-class county. The Assessor alleged

that, as a fourth-class county, Saline County was “operat[ing] under the laws of this state applying to [counties of] the second classification.” § 48.020.1. The petition listed the certified total assessed valuation of Saline County property for 2016 through 2022. The Assessor alleged that, for more than five years, the total assessed valuation of property in the County had fallen below the monetary threshold required for it to qualify as a second-class county. The petition alleged

that, “[a]s Saline County has had five (5) consecutive years of assessed valuation

3 placing it as a third class county, Section 48.030 mandates Saline County be classified as a county of the third class beginning with the 2021 fiscal year or after

the general election.” In Count IV, the Assessor requested a temporary restraining order against the Collector, requiring her to deposit one percent of the County’s property tax

collections into the assessment fund. Count V prayed for an award of attorney’s fees against the Commission. To justify a fee award, the Assessor contended that the Commission had failed to comply with its ministerial duties to pay Assessor’s

Office employees as the Assessor directed, and to deposit required funds in the assessment fund. The petition alleged the Commission’s actions were “arbitrary, capricious, or in bad faith,” and “were consciously designed to hamstring the [Assessor] . . . as retribution for the [Assessor] speaking out against” the Commission. The Commission moved to dismiss the Assessor’s petition. The motion

argued that the Commission and its members were not proper parties-defendant with respect to Counts II and IV (concerning the amount of the County’s required deposits into the assessment fund). The motion also argued that the extra

vacation day authorized by the Assessor was an unlawful bonus payment to Assessor’s Office employees for work previously performed. In response to the Assessor’s claim that Saline County had been reclassified as a third-class county under § 48.030, the Commission argued that the County was exempted from this reclassification process by statute. The Commission noted that, under § 48.020.1, fourth-class counties are defined as follows:

Classification 4. All counties which have attained the second classification prior to August 13, 1988, and which would otherwise

4 return to the third classification after August 13, 1988, because of changes in assessed valuation shall remain a county in the second classification and shall operate under the laws of this state applying to the second classification. The Commission argued that “RSMo § 48.020(1) is explicit in that changes in assessed valuation are immaterial to a change in classification for Fourth Class counties, particularly for those counties which would return to the third

classification as the Assessor is seeking.” The Collector filed a separate motion to dismiss, which similarly argued that Saline County was not subject to reclassification pursuant to § 48.030, based on the definition of fourth-class counties in § 48.020.1. Although the Collector’s motion itself argued that Saline County falls within the definition of Classification 4 in § 48.020.1, and was therefore exempt from reclassification under § 48.030, the motion also contended that the petition should be dismissed because “[t]he Assessor has not submitted any allegations regarding Saline County’s classification on or about August 13, 1988, a necessary element to making any

determination under” § 48.020.1. In her opposition to the motions to dismiss, the Assessor argued, among other things, that it would be unconstitutional for § 48.020.1 to exempt fourth-

class counties from the assessed-valuation-based reclassification process applicable to all other counties.

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Jessica A. Goodman, Saline County Assessor v. Saline County Commission and Kile Guthrey, Jr., Presiding Commissioner, and Stephanie Gooden, Northern Commissioner, and Charles Monte Fenner, Southern Commissioner, and Cindi Sims, Saline County Collector, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jessica-a-goodman-saline-county-assessor-v-saline-county-commission-and-moctapp-2025.