Margaret Murray v. CIty of Burlington

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 13, 2013
Docket2013-164
StatusUnpublished

This text of Margaret Murray v. CIty of Burlington (Margaret Murray v. CIty of Burlington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margaret Murray v. CIty of Burlington, (Vt. 2013).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2013-164

SEPTEMBER TERM, 2013

Margaret Murray } APPEALED FROM: } } Superior Court, Chittenden Unit, v. } Civil Division } } City of Burlington } DOCKET NO. S1239-10 CnC

Trial Judge: Geoffrey W. Crawford

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Taxpayer Margaret Murray appeals from a superior court order affirming a decision by the Board of Abatement of the City of Burlington on her request for the abatement of taxes, interest, and penalties incurred from 1994 to 2010. Taxpayer contends that the conduct at the abatement hearing and deliberations violated her due process rights and denied her a fair and impartial hearing because the City’s attorney played an inappropriate role in the process and had ex parte communications with Board members during the Board’s deliberations, and that the Board was biased against her. We affirm.

This is the second appeal to reach the Court in this matter. The basic facts are set forth in in Murray v. City of Burlington, 2012 VT 11, 191 Vt. 597 (mem.), and may be briefly summarized. Additional material facts are set forth in the discussion which follows. Taxpayer owns property on Shelburne Street in the City, where a cleaning business has operated in the past. In 1994, apparent petroleum-based contamination was discovered on the property. Taxpayer unsuccessfully appealed the assessment of her property in 1995 and 1996. In 1995, in addition to appealing her tax assessment, taxpayer also filed a tax abatement request. In response, the Board of Abatement abated her taxes by reducing the appraisal on the property by $10,000, to $155,300, but it declined to find the property totally worthless. Id. ¶ 3.

Although the City thereafter continued to assess taxes, taxpayer did not pay any further taxes, and did not appeal her tax assessments. A substantial arrearage, over $112,000 including interest and penalties, accrued. In 2010, taxpayer filed a request for abatement of the accrued taxes, interest, and penalties, again asserting that the property was worthless. Following a hearing, the Board voted to abate the taxes that had accrued prior to 1994, amounting to $16,112, on the ground that arrearages more than fifteen years old were uncollectible due to the limitations period, but it denied the abatement request as to the balance of the arrearage. Id. ¶ 4.

Taxpayer appealed to the superior court, which dismissed on jurisdictional grounds, ruling that by failing to challenge the tax assessment—taxpayer had failed to exhaust her available statutory remedies. Id. ¶ 7. We reversed that decision, holding that her request for abatement, and her appeal of the Board’s abatement decision, were not foreclosed by taxpayer’s failure to challenge her tax assessments. Id. ¶ 9. On remand to the trial court, we noted that the superior court’s review of the Board’s abatement decisions is normally on the administrative record—although the court retains discretion to admit additional evidence depending on the issues raised and the state of the record. Id. ¶ 11. We also emphasized that the superior court’s review of the board’s decision was “necessarily narrow,” and that abatement is not required even if a taxpayer falls within one of the categories allowing for abatement. Id. ¶ 14.

Following our remand, the trial court issued a preliminary order on taxpayer’s motion to introduce additional evidence to support her claim that members of the Board were improperly lobbied at the abatement hearing. The court ruled that it would “permit evidence of alleged ex parte communications and other irregularities claimed by” taxpayer. The court held a merits hearing in December 2012, in which it heard testimony from the assistant city attorney, the City assessor, and taxpayer. The court also viewed a videotape of the abatement hearing in its entirety. Shortly thereafter, the court issued a written ruling, affirming the Board’s decision.

To address taxpayer’s claim of improper communications and influence, the court described the abatement proceeding in some detail. The court noted that taxpayer and her attorneys were present and afforded a full opportunity to participate and present any information they deemed to be relevant. The abatement hearing commenced with a Board member presenting a recommendation of a subcommittee of the Board that the tax abatement be limited to $16,112 in taxes that were no longer collectible due to the limitations period. The assistant city attorney and taxpayer’s attorney gave brief opening statements, and Board members then addressed questions to taxpayer, her attorney, and, in some cases, the assistant city attorney. After about an hour of discussion, a Board member moved to adopt the recommendation of the subcommittee, and another member then moved to amend the motion to increase the abatement to either fifty percent of the arrearage, or to waive all interest and penalties. Due to some uncertainty as to the actual amounts involved, the Board suspended the hearing to allow the assistant city attorney to retrieve his file, and the Board then took up other business.

During the Board’s consideration of another matter, Board member Kurt Wright may be seen on the videotape talking briefly with the assistant city attorney. A minute or two later, the assistant city attorney addressed the Board concerning the other unrelated abatement request under consideration, and the Board then voted on the matter. Immediately thereafter, Board member Wright moved to recess the Board so that the City Council could hear from members of the public who had been waiting to speak during the Council’s regularly scheduled public forum period.1 During the public forum session, the assistant city attorney may be seen briefly walking past the camera. At the completion of the Council’s public forum, the Board reconvened to continue with taxpayer’s abatement request. The assistant city attorney reported that the taxpayer’s arrearages consisted of approximately $54,000 in back taxes and $58,000 in interest and penalties.

A Board member then clarified that the intent of the amended motion was to abate all interest and penalties. The City assessor, in response, suggested as a condition of abatement that the City obtain an agreement from taxpayer to pay the remaining outstanding taxes. The amended motion was put to a vote, and was defeated ten to three. Board member Wright voted

1 The Board of Abatement is composed of the full City Council, the mayor, and the assessor. It is not uncommon for the City Council to move back and forth between roles, as occurred here. 2 in favor of the motion. The original recommendation of the subcommittee to abate $16,112 was then considered, and passed unanimously.

As noted, in addition to viewing the videotaped hearing, the trial court here took additional evidence on any off-the-record communications that may have occurred between the assistant city attorney and the Board. The assistant city attorney testified that he could not recall speaking with Board member Wright while taxpayer’s hearing was suspended . He did not recall walking in front of the Board before the abatement hearing reconvened and speaking with taxpayer’s attorney, nor did he recall speaking with the assessor during the reconvened hearing. He testified that he had no position on taxpayer’s abatement request, and could not recall making any off-the- record statements to the Board about the request or seeking to influence their decision. The City assessor testified that he could not recall speaking with the assistant city attorney or another City attorney during the hearing nor did he recall the nature of their conversation.

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In Re Miller
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Begins v. Begins
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Johnson v. Johnson
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Thompson v. Pafundi
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Murray v. City of Burlington
2012 VT 11 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2012)

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Margaret Murray v. CIty of Burlington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margaret-murray-v-city-of-burlington-vt-2013.