Lunkenheimer Co. v. Bd. of Revision

322 N.E.2d 133, 41 Ohio App. 2d 27, 70 Ohio Op. 2d 40, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2604
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1974
DocketC-73453
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 322 N.E.2d 133 (Lunkenheimer Co. v. Bd. of Revision) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lunkenheimer Co. v. Bd. of Revision, 322 N.E.2d 133, 41 Ohio App. 2d 27, 70 Ohio Op. 2d 40, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2604 (Ohio Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Palmee, J.

This matter arose from a complaint as to the assessment of real property filed by the plaintiff taxpayer, an Ohio corporation located in Hamilton County and the appellee herein, on March 5, 1970, with defendant Board of Revision of Hamilton County (hereafter called “Board”), an appellant. The taxpayer sought a reduction in the tax valuation of land and buildings in Hamilton County. After a hearing and the presentation of evidence and arguments, the Board rendered its decision denying any reduction. Thereafter, the taxpayer timely filed its appeal to the Court of Common Pleas from the Board’s order. Following the presentation of evidence and arguments, the court found the true value of the taxpayer’s property for the years in question to be $1,498,000 and found that, based upon a stipulation of the parties “with respect to determinations made by the State Board of Tax Appeals of the *28 common level of assessments of real property in each of the 88 counties of the state for the years 1969,-1970, 1971 and 1972, the applicable level of assessments for the years in question were as. follows:”

1969 — 32.4%
1970 — 31.5%
1971 — 30.4%
1972 — 33.2%

This appeal is directed solely to what is conceded by both parties to be the use by the Court of Common Pleas of the statewide common average percentage level of assessment for the years 1969, 1970 and 1971, as opposed to the use by the Board of the higher Hamilton County assessment percentages, but does not call into question either the determination of the true value of the property, or the determination of the percentage fixed for the year 1972. As phrased by the Board in its assignment of error, the sole question before us is whether the trial court erred “in finding that the Board of Revision should have applied a ‘statewide’ common level of assessment to the true market value of plaintiff-appellee’s property for the tax years 1969, 1970 and 1971, rather than the common level of assessment of Hamilton County as determined by the Board of Tax Appeals for said years.” The question thus presented is limited, but, bringing into play as it does questions of statutory interpretation and constitutional mandate, all intermixed with a substantial judicial gloss and superimposed over a significant economic interest on the part of both government and the individual taxpayer, has been as vexatious as it is limited.

The problem, simply put, arises from the custom of counties in this state of appraising property at differing percentages of its true value for purposes of applying applicable tax rates. State, ex rel. The Park Invest. Co., v. Bd. of Tax Appeals (1964), 175 Ohio St. 410, 413. Thus, two adjoining counties having an identical tax rate will exact from the owners of properties having an identical true market value differing taxes if County A appraises at, say, 35% of true value and County B at 30% of true *29 value. Under these circumstances, the taxpayer from County A may be expected to react eholerically when he compares his tax bill with his neighbor’s in County B, and to express, forcibly, the instinctive indignation felt at unequal treatment, a universal instinct against injustice formalized by such enactments as, for example, the U. S. Constitution’s Fourteenth Amendment prohibition against the denial to any person of the equal protection'of the laws, and, more directly to the point, Section 2 of Article XII of the Constitution of Ohio, expressing the following philosophy with respect to taxation: “Land and improvements thereon shall be taxed by uniform rule according to value.”

The question, however, is whether such constitutional (and other) mandates are satisfied by uniformity and equality within the county, so that the taxpayers in County A may not complain of the lesser tax paid by the taxpayer in County B, so long as his neighbors in County A are appraised uniformly and equally with himself. The Board argues the affirmative answer to this question, and the taxpayer, obviously, the negative; both find support in the same, or approximately the same, authorities.

The appeal from the decision of the Board was prosecuted under R. C. 5717.05, which establishes the parameters of judgment on review by the Court of Common Pleas, in the following words pertinent to this appeal:

“* * * It shall determine the taxable value of the property whose valuation or assessment for taxation by the countv board of revision is complained of, or in the event the complaint and appeal is against a discriminatory valuation, shall determine a valuation which shall correct such discrimination * * *. In correcting a discriminatory valuation, the court shall increase or decrease the value of the property whose valuation or assessment by the county' board of revision is complained of by a per cent or amount which will cause such property to be listed and valued for taxation by an equal and uniform rule.” (Emphasis added.)

The trial court here, after reviewing the applicable authorities, felt itself constrained to apply a statewide *30 common level of assessment to the true market value for the three years preceding the year 1972 — the later year being accorded singular treatment since it is governed by the provisions of amended R. C. 5715.01, effective June 28, 1972 — and, accordingly, corrected what it held to be the discriminatory valuation resulting from the Board’s initial application of the Hamilton County common level of assessment. After a careful review of the authorities cited to us by the parties, we are unable to find that the trial court erred in rendering such a judgment.

Thus, in the first of a series of four Park Investment cases, which together fairly sum up the philosophy and rulings of the highest court of this state on the general is sue involved in this appeal, State, ex rel. Park Invest. Co., v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, 175 Ohio St. 410, 411, the Supreme Court noted:

“Relator bases its right to relief on statistical records of real estate transactions in every county of the state, compiled by The Board of Tax Appeals, which admittedly show that ‘commercial’ real estate in Cuyahoga County has a higher assessed valuation in relation to sales price than real estate in other classifications, and real estate generally * * V* (Emphasis added.)

Addressing itself to this aspect of the problem, the court stated, at 413:

“This brings us to a consideration of a question which is ancillary to the question of value. It is and has been the practice in this state for taxation purposes to establish an assessed value of less than actual value, in other words, to assess property for taxation only for a percentage of the actual value. This raises the question of uniformity. Taxation by uniform, rule within the requirement of the constitutional provision requires uniformity in the mode of assessment. Thus, inasmuch as property is not assessed on the basis of full value, the percentage of such value which is the basis of taxation

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322 N.E.2d 133, 41 Ohio App. 2d 27, 70 Ohio Op. 2d 40, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunkenheimer-co-v-bd-of-revision-ohioctapp-1974.