Metropolitan District v. Town of Barkhamsted

485 A.2d 1311, 3 Conn. App. 53, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 727
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1984
Docket2632
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 485 A.2d 1311 (Metropolitan District v. Town of Barkhamsted) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan District v. Town of Barkhamsted, 485 A.2d 1311, 3 Conn. App. 53, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 727 (Colo. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Hull, J.

This case involves the proper basis for assessing land owned by the plaintiff, the Metropolitan District, and used for reservoir purposes in the defendant town of Barkhamsted, on the tax assessment lists of 1979,1980, and 1981. The underlying facts are not in dispute.

The district is a specially chartered municipal corporation which owns 6628 acres of land in the town. The land consists of a reservoir and associated watershed area used to meet the needs of member towns and nonmember customers of the district. In a dispute over the tax assessment on its land, the district argued that the per acre value of its land was $118.65; the town claimed that the land value was $1900 per acre. The district appeals from the judgment of the trial court valuing [55]*55its land at $1800 per acre, claiming error in the court’s application of the property tax assessment provision of the special act which created it.

The district was created in 1929 by a special act of the Connecticut General Assembly. 20 Spec. Acts 1204, No. 511.1 The charter, as amended by 21 Spec. Acts 655, No. 505, provides as a method of real estate tax assessment that land shall be “assessed for taxation at the average assessed valuation per acre of the improved farming land in such town.” See Part I, infra.

On October 1,1979, the town’s tax assessor assessed the district’s property at $1900 per acre. The district appealed this assessment to the board of tax review of the town. Upon the board’s refusal to change the assessment, the district appealed to the Superior Court.2

The court determined that the true and actual value of the property was $11,930,400, representing an $1800 per acre valuation.3 The court rejected the district’s claim that General Statutes §§ 12-107a through 12-107c4 applied to its land in the town. The court found that the land had never been classified under those sections and that the legislature never intended those sections to be used in determining the value of water company property.

[56]*56The court did not further consider the question of the possible existence of improved farmland5 in the town or its average assessed value per acre. It proceeded, without explaining the reasons for not applying the charter assessment provision, to determine the assessment value of the district’s property on the basis of testimony by the town’s appraiser, James Oles, and common knowledge of increasing farmland values. The court reduced the assessment per acre to $1800, which it labeled a “conservative figure,” agreed to by the town.

The tax assessor of the town testified that $118.65 was the average assessment per acre of the farmland in the town. A document posted at the town hall showed various farmland classifications and a schedule of recommended use values pursuant to General Statutes §§ 12-107a through 12-107e.6 Tillable land is classified, in descending order of quality from best to worst, as “Tillable A,” “Tillable B,” “Tillable Cl” and “Tillable C2.” “Permanent Pasture Land” is defined as “Untillable Land.” The term “improved farmland” is not used in the document. The entire assessment of farmland consists of 254.6 acres classified as “Tillable C2” and 427.9 acres classified as “Permanent Pasture.” For the years 1979,1980 and 1981, “Tillable C2” farmland was assessed by the town at $150 per acre and “Permanent Pasture Land” at $100 per acre. These values were based on the list of statewide and river valley recom[57]*57mended use values per acre provided to towns by the state tax commissioner. The resulting calculation is as follows:

Thus, $118.65 per acre, computed as $80,980 for 682.5 acres, is the average assessed valuation per acre of farmland in the town. This $118.65 per acre valuation reflects the fact that the owners of all farmland in Barkhamsted have applied for and received classification of their land as farmland under General Statutes §§ 12-107a through 12-107c.

The district proffered only two witnesses. The first of these was the town assessor, Mary Ringuette. She testified as follows: There is no improved farmland in the town; her definition of such land is “land along the river valley or along some flat land that is not slopey, not rocky, so it’s able to have a tractor go through and plant crops” such as lettuce or tobacco, as distinguished from hay; tillable C2 land is not improved farmland; she stated that her opinion is consistent with those of the other assessors at the Hartford County and Litchfield County assessors’ meetings.

The other witness was Leon C. Kirk, a senior engineer with the real estate department of the district. He examined assessment cards in the assessor’s office for land classified as farmland, being all of the tillable C2 land and pasture land. These cards show that if all of the town’s farmland were assessed without the preferential statutory reduction, the average assessment per acre would be $963.54, or $874.14 if farmland located in a business zone were excluded.

[58]*58Kirk testified that in his opinion “tillable C2 and pasture land do come within the definition of improved farmland.” The trial court specifically found that the district tried the case without a competent appraiser.

James C. Oles, an expert appraiser with twenty-six years of experience, testified for the town. He prepared a report for trial estimating the fair market value, in a sale, of improved farmland from a willing seller to a willing buyer. He did not consider any farmland within the town despite the fact that there are four working dairy farms in the town and despite the land classified as farmland by the assessor.

Oles testified that the reason he did not consider existing farms in Barkhamsted in determining the value of the district’s land is that the only “improved farming land” in the town is now under water as the “reservoir was built by the Metropolitan District on the best land that existed in the Town of Barkhamsted.” He defined “improved farming land” as “prime crop land cleared, the absolute best farmland there is.” He used farmland values from other towns in Litchfield County with similar market conditions for farming.

The district briefed three major issues: (1) that the court erred in interpreting the property tax assessment provisions of the charter; (2) that the court erred in its interpretation of the relationship of the charter to General Statutes §§ 12-63, 12-76 and 12-107a through 12-107c; and (3) that the court erred in setting the assessment at $1800 per acre.

The appellee also briefed, as an alternate ground upon which the judgment may be affirmed pursuant to Practice Book § 3012 (a), whether General Statutes § 12-76, as amended in 1963, repealed by implication the assessment provision of the district’s charter.

[59]*59I

Statutory History

In West Hartford v. Board of Water Commissioners, 44 Conn. 360 (1877), the Supreme Court held that a reservoir owned by a municipal corporation in another town was not liable to taxation in the latter town.

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Bluebook (online)
485 A.2d 1311, 3 Conn. App. 53, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-district-v-town-of-barkhamsted-connappct-1984.