Leto v. Board of Assessors of Wilmington

202 N.E.2d 922, 348 Mass. 144, 1964 Mass. LEXIS 687
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 202 N.E.2d 922 (Leto v. Board of Assessors of Wilmington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leto v. Board of Assessors of Wilmington, 202 N.E.2d 922, 348 Mass. 144, 1964 Mass. LEXIS 687 (Mass. 1964).

Opinion

Cutteb, J.

Leto and others seek declaratory relief concerning the methods used in assessing property in Wilmington for 1964 taxes. In the companion case, the plaintiffs seek to restrain further action with respect to the 1964 tax assessment. A demurrer to each bill, addressed to the bill as a whole, was sustained. Each case has been reported by the trial judge for the decision of this court. See Gr. L. c. 214, § 30.

The bill in the Leto case alleges the following facts. In 1955 and 1956, the town established a “consistent scheme ... for ascertaining the fair cash value of all taxable real estate on a uniform, consistent, and equitable basis.” In 1962, the assessors doubled the valuations theretofore determined on each parcel “to approximate 100% of fair cash value for each such parcel.” The assessors voted for “a general revaluation to be conducted in 1965.” For the taxes of the year 1964, however, the chairman of the assessors “submitted revaluations made solely by him on only that land . . . zoned for commercial and industrial use. 2 These revaluations increased assessments “from 300% to 1,900%” on “20% of all taxable land in the town,” in-eluding land of the plaintiffs and were accepted by a major *146 ity of the assessors. 3 No similar revaluations were made of other land with minor exceptions. The most significant allegations are that the chairman of the [b]oard [of assessors] admitted that most residential land was assessed at a ratio of 79% to 82% of fair cash value and . . . was not generally revalued ’ ’ in 1964 while ‘ commercial and industrial land was purportedly assessed at full cash value” and actually at “substantially in excess of fair cash value.”

Upon the basis of earlier allegations the bill states as conclusions (a) that the valuations “cast a disproportionate tax burden” on the plaintiffs; and (b) that the assessors “deliberately and intentionally” have established and are pursuing a policy of assessing real estate “on a non-proportional basis . . . discriminatory against many taxpayers, including the” plaintiffs. The bill also states that the chairman of the assessors conducted this revaluation of land in industrial and commercial zones by himself without participation by other assessors who acted thereon without understanding the chairman’s methods, and in a manner different from that employed in prior years.

The bill in the Evans case (fn. 1) contains essentially the same allegations in substantially the same somewhat general and vague language. The allegations in both cases are diffuse and confusing and not made with the precision found in the careful statement of agreed facts described in Bet-tigole v. Assessors of Springfield, 343 Mass. 223.

In the Bettigole case, and in Opinion of the Justices, 344 Mass. 766, 768, we have recently discussed or referred to the statutory and constitutional requirements that property taxation be “proportional” and that property subject to *147 local taxation be taxed at full and fair cash value. See e.g. Constitution of the Commonwealth, Part II, c. 1, § 1, art. 4, and art. 10 of the Declaration of Rights; G. L. c. 59, §§ 38, 52. The duty of assessors was stated in the Bettigole ease, 343 Mass. 223, 230-232. These opinions state what continues to be the law of the Commonwealth.

The difficulties of allegation, proof, timeliness, or appropriate remedy, frequently encountered by those who bring proceedings to test the constitutional and statutory validity of all one year’s assessments and the whole tax levy for that year in a particular town, are illustrated by decisions discussed and cited in the Bettigole case. See e.g. Dowling v. Assessors of Boston, 268 Mass. 480; Amory v. Assessors of Boston, 306 Mass. 354; Amory v. Assessors of Boston, 310 Mass. 199; Carr v. Assessors of Springfield, 339 Mass. 89; Stone v. Springfield, 341 Mass. 246. See also notes, 75 Harv. L. Rev. 1374; 42 B. IT. L. Rev. 246. Such a general attack upon a tax levy presents important public issues and formidable problems of proof. To grant wholesale relief, rather than to remit the complaining taxpayers to less drastic remedies, may seriously affect a town’s ability to conduct its public services and cause great fiscal confusion.

Other remedies, even if not wholly satisfactory, 4 afford some measure of relief from disproportionate assessments. See e.g. Gr. L. c. 59, § 59 (as amended through St. 1963, c. 125), § 64 (as amended through St. 1956, c. 544), § 65 (as amended through St. 1945, c. 621, § 6); Gr. L. c. 60, § 98. The existence of such remedies sometimes has been taken into account in determining whether a court should grant *148 relief in equity or by extraordinary writ. Even in the Bet-tigole case, 343 Mass. 223, 236-238, where the facts of a grossly nonproportional assessment scheme were plainly established, full consideration was given to whether practical difficulties and the public interest required that relief be denied. We said (at p. 236) that “the courts properly are always slow to grant injunctive relief in tax matters of this type except upon a very clear showing of violation of fundamental constitutional or statutory rights.” In the Stone case, 341 Mass. 246, 249, we pointed out the necessity, in cases of this general type, of making “specific allegations of such asserted facts as would, if proved, establish invalid official action, as, for example, the precise nature of the lack of uniformity in assessments which . . . [the plaintiffs expect] to prove and the circumstances indicating that it was intentionally discriminatory, rather than caused by inadvertence, mistake, or incompetence.” We went on to discuss (at p. 250) the “necessity of specific allegations if judicial inquiry is not to cover an unduly wide range in a case of this character” in which a plaintiff “essentially asks the court to make ‘a revaluation of nearly all of the taxable real estate of a large . . .’ ” community. We noted that, in this type of litigation, “courts should be slow to deal with issues of fact or law relating to properties other than those of the litigants before it, unless clearly required to do so.”

The Bettigole case establishes that a court of equity may prevent the enforcement of the whole of an illegal city or town tax assessment for a given year. The authorities just cited, however, make it plain that such somewhat extraordinary relief will not be granted (1) unless basic facts exist showing essentially a deliberate and substantial violation 5 of the constitutional and statutory requirements that property tax valuations shall be proportional; (2) unless the plaintiffs show themselves to be directly, significantly *149

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Bluebook (online)
202 N.E.2d 922, 348 Mass. 144, 1964 Mass. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leto-v-board-of-assessors-of-wilmington-mass-1964.