Madway v. Board for the Assessment & Revision of Taxes

233 A.2d 273, 427 Pa. 138, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 470
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 26, 1967
DocketAppeal, No. 90; Appeal, No. 91
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 233 A.2d 273 (Madway v. Board for the Assessment & Revision of Taxes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madway v. Board for the Assessment & Revision of Taxes, 233 A.2d 273, 427 Pa. 138, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 470 (Pa. 1967).

Opinion

Opinion jby

Mr. Justice Roberts,

In this opinion we dispose of two appeals involving the same parties and closely related issues. Appeal No. 90 challenges the constitutionality of certain sections of the First Class Township Code, the Public School Code, and amendments thereto,1 all of which govern the reassessment of real property to reflect increases in value resulting from new construction made during the tax year.

The taxpayers-appellants, Madway Engineers and Constructors, and Wynnewood House, Inc. own property situated at 1001-1021 City Line Avenue and 300 East Lancaster Avenue respectively. In 1963 appellants began to construct apartments on their properties. During. the course of this construction, these properties were assessed three times: on January 1, 1964, April 1, 1964 and July 1, 1964. Each assessment reflected the increase in value caused by the progressing construction. All three assessments were protested by appellants on the ground that the 1963 amendments to the Public School and First Class Township Codes prohibit the interim assessment of residential construction until the property has been occupied or conveyed to a bona fide purchaser.2 The Board for the Assess[141]*141ment and Revision of Taxes of Montgomery County upheld the assessment of January 1, 1964 on the theory that it was actually an unfinished annual assessment and hence not governed by the interim assessment provisions of the Public School and First Class Township Codes. This ruling was affirmed by the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County and is now the subject of Appeal No. 91. As for the April and July assessments, the board struck them down on the authority of the 1963 amendments, supra note 2. On appeal to the court of common pleas however, the 1963 amendments were declared unconstitutional as violative of the Pennsylvania Constitution’s uniformity clause.3 As a result of these two decisions, all three assessments have been upheld below; hence the appeal by the taxpayers.

[142]*142, The April and July Assessments: Appeal No. 90

The basic interim assessment provisions of the First Class Township and Public School Codes provide that upon request of the taxing authority (School District or Township), the authority responsible for assessments shall direct the assessor to inspect and reassess property upon which improvements have been made after September 1 of any given year (September 1 being the date on which the annual assessments are made). These annual assessments are used to compute the tax due the following year. In 1968 however, both codes were amended to prohibit interim assessments for unconveyed or unoccupied residential structures. We agree with the court below that these amendments violate the Pennsylvania Constitution.

Whether the 1963 amendments be interpreted as a classification of real estate into such categories that one category, unoccupied Or unconveyed residential property, is not subject to interim assessments, or whether they be treated as simply exempting such property from otherwise permissible interim assessments, the- result is still the same: the amendments cannot stand. It is certainly too late in the day to argue that the 1963 amendments qualify as valid tax exemptions. Article IX, §2 of our constitution clearly states that all exemptions, other than those set forth in section 1, “shall be void.” Since section 1 nowhere exempts residential property, occupied or not, the result is inescapable.

The appellants, however, argue strenuously that the 1963 amendments are not tax exemptions since the property can certainly be reassessed during the next annual assessment period and in any event, can be reassessed as soon as it is conveyed or occupied. We need not face this argument that only a total exemption from all taxation violates Article IX, §2, since [143]*143viewed as classification statutes, as appellants contend, the amendments still violate the uniformity clause.

Admittedly the uniformity clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution has followed a path through our courts that is easily as unpredictable and winding as Alice’s road through Wonderland. No provision in our constitution has been so much litigated yet so little understood; and certainly not the least thorny question has been whether real estate as a whole constitutes a class which cannot be further broken down for tax purposes. To put to rest some of this confusion, we hold today that real estate as a subject for taxation may not validly be divided into different classes.

It is quite true, as appellants contend, that this Court’s initial interpretation of the uniformity clause permitted division of real estate into different classes. In both Kitty Roup’s Case, 81* Pa. 211 (1874) and City of Williamsport v. Brown, 84 Pa. 438 (1877) ordinances taxing rural and urban property at different rates were sustained. Accord, Jermyn v. Scranton City, 212 Pa. 598, 62 Atl. 29 (1905). But in 1909 these three cases were all implicitly overruled by Mr. Justice Elkin, writing for the Court in Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Co.’s Tax Assessment (No. 1), 224 Pa. 240, 73 Atl. 429 (1909). An attempt to tax coal land at a higher assessment-to-market-value ratio than other property in the same district was unequivocally struck down on the authority of the uniformity clause.

Far from being merely the correction of a “mathematical error” as the appellants style the case in their brief, the Delaware decision is a clear enunciation of a constitutional mandate. The mathematical error so lightly dismissed by appellants actually caused the different taxing rates. The refusal of the lower court to correct this error prompted Justice Elkin to state: “It will not do to assess farm lands at one-fifth their [144]*144actual value, dwelling houses at one-third, manufacturing establishments at one-half, and coal lands at full value. The constitution says the valuation must be uniform on the same class of taxable subjects and real estate is a taxable subject of a particular class, and. coal lands are real estate, hence the rule of uniformity must be applied to all kinds of real estate as a class.” 224 Pa. at 248, 73 Atl. at 432.

Not only has Delaware remained unchallenged since 1909, its holding has been buttressed three times by this Court in the last five years. One such instance is Deitch Co. v. Board of Property Assessment, 417 Pa. 213, 209 A. 2d 397 (1965), which involved the determination of the proper method to be used in computing an assessment. There the taxpayer’s premise was that in a given taxing district the assessments will be somewhat less than the real market value and that in fact there will often exist a fairly consistent ratio of assessment to market value within the district. The issue on appeal involved how such a ratio could be shown by the taxpayer. The trial court held that the ratio could only be shown by reference to comparable property within the taxing district and that comparable meant “properties which are similar properties of the same nature in the neighborhood of the taxpayer’s property.” In reversing this decision on the ground that comparable property must mean all real property within a taxing district, we said: “the uniformity requirement of the Constitution of Pennsylvania has' been construed to require that all real estate is a class which is éntitled to uniform treatment.” See

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Bluebook (online)
233 A.2d 273, 427 Pa. 138, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madway-v-board-for-the-assessment-revision-of-taxes-pa-1967.