Lincoln Township v. S.D. Board of Equilization
This text of 1996 SD 13 (Lincoln Township v. S.D. Board of Equilization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Formatting Courtesy of
The State Bar of South Dakota and
South Dakota Continuing Legal Education, Inc.
222 East Capitol Ave.
Pierre, SD 57501
LINCOLN TOWNSHIP
and Wilbert A. Tubbs,
Appellees,
v.
SOUTH DAKOTA BOARD OF EQUALIZATION
and Ronald J. Schreiner, Secretary,
and Perkins County Board of Equalization,
Appellants.
South Dakota Supreme Court
Appeal From The Eighth Judicial Circuit, Perkins County, SD
Hon. Scott C. Moses, Judge
#19145 -- Reversed
T.L. Secrest, Hettinger, ND
Attorney for appellees.
Mark Barnett, Attorney General
David D. Wiest, Assistant Attorney General, Pierre, SD
Attorneys for appellants.
Considered On Briefs Nov 28, 1995; Opinion Filed Feb 7, 1996
SABERS, Justice.
[¶1] The South Dakota Board of Equalization (State Board) and the Perkins County Board of Equalization (County Board) appeal from a determination that certain agricultural property was overassessed.
FACTS
[¶2] Wilbert Tubbs owns property in Lincoln Township which is located in the northeastern part of Perkins County in northwestern South Dakota.
[¶3] In 1993, Jerald Seidel, Perkins County Director of Equalization, reviewed the 1991 and 1992 agricultural land sales in Perkins County, and compared their "sales ratios" (assessed value divided by sale price). Seidel used comparable sales to determine these sales ratios. The sales ratio in one area of the county was 62.7 percent and in another area it was 92.4 percent. This means that some land was being assessed at 62.7 percent of its sale price, while land in another area was assessed at 92.4 percent of sale price. He concluded some of the property was underassessed. Seidel divided the county into four zones. Lincoln Township, including Tubbs' property, is in zone one. Seidel raised all assessed values of agricultural land in zone one by ten percent in 1993.{1}
[¶4] Lincoln Township and Tubbs appealed the increase to the State Board, which affirmed. They appealed to the Circuit Court, which found that the assessments violated the "neighborhooding" statute, SDCL 10-6-33.6.{2} [96 SDO 89] The trial court also found that at least seven tracts of agricultural land in Lincoln Township were overassessed because they were used as rangeland not cropland. It held the seven tracts should be assessed as rangeland unless actively used as cropland. The trial court lowered the assessment value to pre-1993 levels for all of "zone one" of Perkins County. The State Board and the County Board appeal.
[¶5] There are two presumptions favoring the valuations of tax officials:
First, there is a presumption that tax officials will do their duty in accordance with the law and not act unfairly and arbitrarily regarding the assessment of property. Second, there is a presumption that the county director of equalization's valuations are correct.
Hutchinson County v. Fischer, 393 NW2d 778, 782 (SD 1986) (citations omitted).
[¶6] 1. Did the Director of Equalization Comply with SDCL 10-6-33.6?
[¶7] The trial court determined Seidel did not comply with the South Dakota "neighborhooding" statute when raising land values because he "failed to show a separate market value per acre for the valuation made by increasing the values ten percent." The trial court stated that use of comparable sales to determine a separate market value is required by Telkamp v. S.D. State Board of Equal., 515 NW2d 689 (SD 1994). Telkamp held property could not be assessed above its "true and full value" as determined through comparative sales but did not hold that SDCL 10-6-33.6 required county directors of equalization to determine a separate market value by comparative sales. The statute does not require it either. The statute simply provides that the "director of equalization may establish a separate market value per acre." SDCL 10-6-33.6 (emphasis added).
[¶8] Seidel testified he studied 1991 and 1992 sales ratios and discovered he had underassessed some areas of the county, so he drew zones. He used comparative sales to determine sales ratios and zones. Perkins County has different geological formations which affect the quality of agricultural land. A soil scientist testified Seidel's zones generally followed those geological patterns.
[¶9] The Board claims Seidel complied with the "neighborhooding" statute because the median sales value in zone one was $124.71 per acre and the median sales value of the entire county was $110.00 per acre. This was a deviation of more than 10 percent. The Board states:
A simple application of the addition of 10 percent to the county median of $110.00 yields $121.00 per acre, the separate market value utilized by Seidel. This is very, very close to the Zone 1 median of $124.71.
There are two minor problems with this interpretation. First, Seidel's testimony does not indicate he determined the 10 percent assessment increase in that manner.
[¶10] Seidel testified he compared the sales ratios in each zone with the county sales ratio and discovered a difference of more than ten percent. The sales ratio in zone one was 62.7 percent (meaning land was assessed at 62.7% of its selling price), and the sales ratio for the county was 73.2 percent. The statute provides the ten percent deviation must be in the "median value per acre." It is immaterial here, however, because the median values per acre between zone one and the entire county did vary by 10 percent as required by the statute. In fact, the county median sales value was $110.00, while the zone one sales value was $124.71.
[¶11] Second, the Board's market value of $121.00 is not entirely consistent with Seidel's calculations. Seidel's adjustments were to the assessed value per acre, not to the sale price.
[¶12] The memorandum opinion stated Seidel used a "weighted average of $97.00 per acre for 1991 and 1992 sales." However, Seidel did not testify he used a "weighted average of $97.00" to make his adjustments. Rather, his worksheets [96 SDO 90] show he increased the assessed value of the "number one" soil in the county to $198 per acre. This was a ten percent increase from the prior assessment of $180. All other values were raised accordingly.{3}
[¶13] The trial court's holding that Seidel did not comply with SDCL 10-6-33.6 is incorrect. The statute allows Seidel to "establish a separate market value per acre," and he established a market value of $198 per acre for "number one" soil. We therefore reverse the trial court's holding.
[¶14] 2. Does Current Use of the Property Control Valuation?
[¶15] Seidel based his determination that agricultural land was cropland or rangeland on the soil survey, which rates the soils as either range or crop, based on the productivity of that particular soil. Lincoln Township and Tubbs argue some of the tracts have been used as rangeland for 25 or more years and should not be labeled cropland because of revenue potential.
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