taxpayers’ properties for the 2020 tax year. Accordingly, the court affirms the
district court order dismissing the complaint for failure to state a claim. The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado 2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
2023 CO 26
Supreme Court Case No. 22SC798 C.A.R. 50 Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Case No. 21CA1731 Jefferson County District Court Case No. 20CV31506 Honorable Lindsay L. VanGilder, Judge
Petitioners:
MJB Motels LLC; Samarah Investments LLC; Meek Enterprises LLC; Tosh Amir; MW Real Estate LLC; Palmetto Club Associates LLP; Winddrift Associates LLC; Sheridan LLC; Pickerings LLC; 2220 Rand, LLC; FGS Retail & Commercial Operations LLC; Firestone Real Estate Leasing Company; Kong Real Estate Holdings LLC; SFCA LLC; Rocky Mountain School of Art Inc; Schreivogel Investments LLC; Baron Ventures LLC; 875 Tabor Street LLC; Garney Holding Co; Dean Carson Grape St LLC; Golden Automotive Group Holdings LLC; Public Service Employees Credit Union; MPSC Limited Liability; Marketplace at Ken Caryl LTD Liability Co; GEP Investments Inc; Sooper Credit Union; Sartorius Corporation; Texas Roadhouse Holdings LLC; TR Alkire LLC; DLDL LLC; Deep Sky Holdings LLC; Software Bisque Inc; Alma D Gianolini Grandchildrens Trust; BTP 10445 Town Center LLC; New World Ventures LLC; Lee Doud Inc; Fawcett Enterprises LLC; B C S Community Credit Union; 9797 West Colfax LLC; Lifeloc Technologies Inc; Robb Street LLC; Brettler Real Estate Inc; Mauldin 50 LLP; The Mountainview Group LLC; Kastin Company, LLC; Keystone Group LLC; Suman Properties LLC; Hill Industries LLC; Hill Real Estate Rental LLC; Buffalo Partners LP; Raeouf Mohammad; Tehrani Simin; Sautter Arvada School Property LLC; Vivian Fortress LLC; Carol Pack Living Trust; Simms LLC; Norton Frickey Family Partnership; Kim R Haarberg; North Bear Meadows LLC; 1600 Garrison Street LLC; 9201 West Colfax Avenue LLC; Braman Colorado European Imports Inc.; 6833 Joyce Street LLC; Maxson Holdings LLC; Denver Area Council Boy Scouts of America; Southwestern Investments LLC; MNR LLC; J&S Holdings LLC; Showme Mountain Investors LLC; DDK Properties LLC; Janey Blehm; Terry Blehm; Surkalo Harry Mtarri; Paul B Trost; Bear Land Holdings LLC; Ivarsson LLC; Stern Lawrence Holdings LLC; Parkview Place LLC; United Land Investments LLC; Partners Credit Union; Solera National Bank; 6350 AEF LLC; Semcken Commercial LLC; Garlock Pipeline Technologies Inc; 10639 Bradford LLC; Castle Court LLC; 430 Indiana LLC; Going Green LLC; Signature Assisted Living LP; FFT Holdings LLC; SCFT Holdings LLC; Westland LLC; Ralston Development Corporation; Premium Panels Inc; Associated Bodywork & Massage Professionals; Yukon Court Apartments Holding Company LLC; Terra Village Apartments Holding Company LLC; Wellington Resources LLC; 1150 Catamount LLC; 4240 Kipling LLC; Summit Commercial Properties I LLC; 150 Capital Drive LLC; Domenico Real Estate Partnership III LLP; Maxim United LLC; PWN 1 LLC; Tebo Superstore LLC; 15000 W Kendrick St LLC; Morton Properties LLC; Hennessey; CFC Investments LLC; 4301 Wadsworth LLC; Doris N Guernsey; Paul L Guernsey; Enger Enterprises LLC; Warren Family Funeral Homes Inc; LHI Group LLC; 55 West LLC; TF Holdings LLC; UGWUD Properties LLC; Clay & Imes Inc; Creekside West Partnership LLP; Cheryl Rogers; Aleksander Staninovski & Ivka Staninovski Trust; Bridgestone Company LLC; Vlade Sekulovski; Tome Nechovski Living Trust; LFP&JP JJC; El Rancho Colorado Restaurant LLC,
v.
Respondents:
County of Jefferson Board of Equalization and Scott Kersgaard, Jefferson County Assessor.
Order Affirmed en banc May 30, 2023
Attorneys for Petitioners: Law Offices of James P. Bick, Jr PC James P. Bick, Jr. Chesterfield, Missouri
Hutchinson Black and Cook, LLC Glen F. Gordon
2 Matthew A. Simonsen Boulder, Colorado
Attorneys for Respondents: Jefferson County Attorney’s Office Amber J. Munck, Assistant County Attorney Jason W. Soronson, Assistant County Attorney Golden, Colorado
Attorneys for Amici Curiae Assessor for Larimer County; Assessors and Boards of Equalization for Adams County, Arapahoe County, Boulder County, El Paso County, Mesa County, Routt County, Eagle County, Weld County, the City and County of Broomfield, and the City and County of Denver; and Colorado Assessor’s Association:
Adams County Attorney’s Office Meredith P. Van Horn, Assistant County Attorney Brighton, Colorado
Arapahoe County Attorney’s Office Ronald A. Carl, County Attorney Benjamin P. Swartzendruber, Assistant County Attorney Littleton Colorado
Boulder County Attorney’s Office Michael A. Koertje, Assistant County Attorney Boulder, Colorado
Office of the City & County Attorney of the City & County of Broomfield Patricia W. Gilbert, Deputy City and County Attorney Broomfield, Colorado
Denver City Attorney’s Office Charles T. Solomon, Assistant County Attorney Paige A. Arrants, Assistant County Attorney Denver, Colorado
Kathryn L. Schroeder
3 Pueblo West, Colorado
El Paso County Attorney’s Office Steven Klaffky, Senior Assistant County Attorney Colorado Springs, Colorado
Larimer County Attorney’s Office David P. Ayraud, Deputy County Attorney Fort Collins, Colorado
Mesa County Attorney’s Office Andrea Nina Atencio, Chief Deputy County Attorney—Civil Division John R. Rhoads, Assistant County Attorney II Grand Junction, Colorado
Routt County Attorney’s Office Erick Knaus, County Attorney Lynaia M. South, Senior Assistant County Attorney Steamboat Springs, Colorado
Eagle County Attorney’s Office Christina C. Hooper, Senior Assistant County Attorney Eagle, Colorado
Weld County Attorney’s Office Karin McDougal, Assistant County Attorney Greeley, Colorado
Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Colorado Property Tax Administrator: Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General Robert H. Dodd, First Assistant Attorney General John H. Ridge, Senior Assistant Attorney General Jessica E. Ross, Assistant Attorney General Denver, Colorado
4 JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT, JUSTICE HOOD, JUSTICE GABRIEL, JUSTICE HART, JUSTICE SAMOUR, and JUSTICE BERKENKOTTER joined.
5 JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 This is one of several cases filed in Colorado in which commercial property
owners have sued to compel the county assessor to revalue their properties and
lower their property tax assessments for the 2020 tax year to account for the
economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. This case concerns the valuation of
hundreds of parcels of commercial real property located in Jefferson County. The
taxpayers here—and in the other cases—contend that the pandemic and various
state and local public health orders issued in response were “unusual conditions”
that required revaluation of their properties under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I),
C.R.S. (2022).
¶2 We accepted jurisdiction under section 13-4-109, C.R.S. (2022), in four of
these cases to consider how the “unusual conditions” exception in
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) applies to the circumstances created by the COVID-19
pandemic during the 2020 property tax year. See Larimer Cnty. Bd. of Equalization v.
1303 Frontage Holdings LLC, 2023 CO 28, __ P.3d __; Educhildren LLC v. Cnty. of
Douglas Bd. of Equalization, 2023 CO 29, __ P.3d __; Hunter Douglas Inc. v. City &
Cnty. of Broomfield Bd. of Equalization, 2023 CO 27, __ P.3d __. In 1303 Frontage, we
address when an assessor must revalue property based on an unusual condition.
There, we conclude that article 1 of title 39 does not require an assessor to revalue
real property when an unusual condition occurs after the January 1 assessment
6 date for the intervening (second) year of the reassessment cycle. See 1303 Frontage,
¶ 90; accord Educhildren, ¶ 5.
¶3 In this case and in Hunter Douglas, we consider whether the COVID-19
pandemic and the public health orders issued in response constituted “unusual
conditions” for purposes of section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).1 We conclude they did not.
Specifically, we hold that COVID-19 was not a “detrimental act[] of nature,” and
the orders issued in response to COVID-19 were not “regulations restricting . . .
the use of the land” under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). Therefore,
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) did not require the Jefferson County Assessor to revalue
the taxpayers’ 2020 property valuations, and it did not require the Board of
1 We accepted jurisdiction under section 13-4-109 to review the following issues: 1. Whether the district court erred in concluding, as a matter of law, that the COVID-19 pandemic was not a detrimental act of nature as contemplated by C.R.S. § 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) and therefore not an “unusual condition” thereunder. 2. Whether the district court erred in concluding, as a matter of law, that the various regulations imposed by the Governor and Public Health authorities in response to the pandemic were not regulations restricting or increasing the use of land as contemplated by C.R.S. § 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) and therefore not an “unusual condition” thereunder. 3. Whether the district court erred in dismissing Taxpayers’ complaint on the basis of factual assumptions and speculation.
7 Equalization to correct the Assessor’s valuations. Accordingly, we affirm the
order of the district court dismissing the complaint for failure to state a claim.
I. Background
¶4 The Colorado Constitution sets forth a broad directive to achieve “just and
equalized valuations” for taxing real and personal property:
Each property tax levy shall be uniform upon all real and personal property . . . . The actual value of all real and personal property . . . shall be determined under general laws, which shall prescribe such methods and regulations as shall secure just and equalized valuations for assessments of all real and personal property.
Colo. Const. art. X, § 3(1)(a).
¶5 Pursuant to this mandate, the General Assembly has enacted a statutory
framework establishing a backward-looking, two-year reassessment cycle for
property taxes in Colorado. § 39-1-104(10.2)(a). In an odd-numbered year (the
first year of the two-year cycle), the assessor in the county where the property is
located determines the “actual value” of the property, which the assessor uses to
determine a “valuation for assessment.” § 39-1-104(1)(a); § 39-1-104(1.8)(b);
§ 39-1-104(10.2)(a). The actual value does not reflect the current value of the
property on the January 1 assessment date. § 39-1-105, C.R.S. (2022). Rather, it is
based on data gathered during a one-and-one-half year period “immediately prior
to July 1 immediately preceding the assessment date.” § 39-1-104(10.2)(d). For
example, assessors calculated the actual value for 2019 tax assessments using a
8 data-gathering period of January 1, 2017, to June 30, 2018. See id.; see also
1303 Frontage, ¶ 13 (describing the data-gathering periods for tax assessments for
the 2019 through 2024 tax years).
¶6 Generally, property valuations are calculated only once every two years.
That is, the actual value for the first (odd-numbered) year carries over to the
second (even-numbered) year of the biennial reassessment cycle.
§ 39-1-104(10.2)(a). However, section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) instructs assessors to
revalue a property before the next odd-year assessment date under certain limited
circumstances, including where “unusual conditions in or related to any real
property . . . would result in an increase or decrease in actual value.” 2 This
“unusual conditions” exception allows revaluation where “a change in the
property or the property’s use rendered application of the base year value unjust.”
LaDuke v. CF & I Steel Corp., 785 P.2d 605, 608 (Colo. 1990).
¶7 The “unusual conditions” that require an assessor to reassess the actual
value of a property are expressly limited to:
[1] the installation of an on-site improvement, [2] the ending of the economic life of an improvement with only salvage value remaining,
2 Additional exceptions to the two-year reassessment cycle include the total destruction of property and a clerical error. See 1303 Frontage, ¶ 14 (first citing § 39-1-123, C.R.S. (2022); and then citing Thibodeau v. Denver Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs, 2018 COA 124, ¶ 12, 428 P.3d 706, 709).
9 [3] the addition to or remodeling of a structure, [4] a change of use of the land, [5] the creation of a condominium ownership of real property as recognized in the “Condominium Ownership Act”, article 33 of title 38, C.R.S., [6] any new regulations restricting or increasing the use of the land, or a combination thereof, [7] the installation and operation of surface equipment relating to oil and gas wells on agricultural land, [8] any detrimental acts of nature, and [9] any damage due to accident, vandalism, fire, or explosion.
§ 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) (emphases added); see also LaDuke, 785 P.2d at 609 (“[W]e are
not free to adopt additional ‘unusual conditions.’”).
¶8 In interpreting section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I), we also look to the Assessors’
Reference Library (“ARL”), which describes “assessment policies and procedures
for real property valuation according to the Colorado Constitution and statutes.”
3 Colo. Div. of Prop. Tax’n & Dep’t of Loc. Affs., Assessors’ Reference Library: Real
Property Valuation Manual (“3 ARL”) Preface (Rev. Jan. 2023). The Colorado
Property Tax Administrator (“Administrator”) publishes the ARL pursuant to
section 39-2-109(1)(e), C.R.S. (2022), which authorizes the Administrator “[t]o
prepare and publish from time to time manuals, appraisal procedures, and
instructions.” The ARL is binding on the county assessors charged with
administering the statute. Huddleston v. Grand Cnty. Bd. of Equalization, 913 P.2d
15, 18 (Colo. 1996). Although we may defer to an administrative agency’s
reasonable interpretation of that statute, Gessler v. Colo. Common Cause, 2014 CO
44, ¶ 7, 327 P.3d 232, 235, we are not bound by its interpretation. BP Am. Prod.
Co. v. Colo. Dep’t of Revenue, 2016 CO 23, ¶ 15, 369 P.3d 281, 285.
10 ¶9 Having outlined the constitutional and statutory authority that guides our
inquiry, we now turn to the facts.
II. Facts and Procedural History
¶10 The petitioners in this case are taxpayers who own commercial real property
located in Jefferson County. On December 10, 2020, the taxpayers sued the County
of Jefferson Board of Equalization and the County of Jefferson Assessor, Scott
Kersgaard, (collectively, “the County”) in Jefferson County District Court. The
complaint alleges that beginning in March 2020, in response to the COVID-19
pandemic, Colorado state and local authorities began issuing numerous
“executive orders and other regulations restricting the use and access to Plaintiffs’
properties.” According to the taxpayers, the pandemic and the related orders
issued by the Governor, the Colorado Department of Public Health &
Environment, and Jefferson County Public Health (collectively, “public health
orders”) amounted to “unusual conditions” under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) that
required the Jefferson County Assessor to revalue their properties and required
the Board of Equalization to lower the Assessor’s valuations of their properties for
the 2020 tax year.
¶11 The taxpayers’ complaint sought mandamus relief, declaratory relief, and
de novo review of section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). The taxpayers focused on two of the
enumerated unusual conditions in section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). First, they argued
11 that the COVID-19 pandemic was a detrimental act of nature. Second, they argued
that the public health orders issued in response to the COVID-19 pandemic
constituted new regulations restricting the use of the land. The taxpayers attached
their estimations of the value of their properties for the 2020 tax year, which
were—across the board—50% less than the Assessor’s valuations.
¶12 In June 2021, the County filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that (1) the
taxpayers failed to state a claim for relief; (2) the COVID-19 pandemic and public
health orders occurred after the statutory timeframe for consideration of an
unusual condition for the 2020 tax year; and (3) the COVID-19 pandemic and
related public health orders were not unusual conditions.
¶13 On September 23, 2021, the district court dismissed the taxpayers’ complaint
on the ground that the pandemic and public health orders did not qualify as
unusual conditions. The district court concluded that the COVID-19 pandemic
was not a detrimental act of nature because unlike direct, tangible forces such as
forest fires, landslides, and immediate erosion problems—the examples provided
by the ARL—the pandemic’s impacts on real property were “indirect and
intangible.”
¶14 The district court further found that the public health orders did not qualify
as regulations restricting the use of the land because the orders did not regulate
the land itself. The court reasoned that, “[w]hile the practical effect of those
12 regulations may have prevented Plaintiffs, in their capacities as owners of the
improvements on the Subject properties, from using those improvements for a
time, the ‘use of the land’ was never directly restricted.”
¶15 Having concluded as a matter of law that the pandemic and public health
orders were not unusual conditions, the district court dismissed the taxpayers’
complaint without reaching the County’s remaining arguments.
¶16 The taxpayers appealed. The court of appeals filed a motion for
determination of jurisdiction, requesting that this case and its three companion
cases be referred to this court because they raise issues of significant public
importance. See §§ 13-4-109 to -110, C.R.S. (2022); C.A.R. 50(a). In November 2022,
we granted the motion and accepted jurisdiction.
III. Analysis
¶17 After setting forth the standards of review, we explain why the COVID-19
pandemic did not constitute a “detrimental act[] of nature.” See
§ 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). Then, we describe why the public health orders issued in
response were not “regulations restricting . . . the use of the land.” See id. Finally,
we discuss prior cases stating that economic fluctuations are not unusual
conditions, which underscores our conclusion that the COVID-19 pandemic did
not trigger revaluation under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).
13 A. Standards of Review
¶18 We review rulings on motions to dismiss de novo. Bly v. Story, 241 P.3d 529,
533 (Colo. 2010); Allen v. Steele, 252 P.3d 476, 481 (Colo. 2011). Under
C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5), defendants may move to dismiss for “failure to state a claim
upon which relief can be granted.” “[W]here the plaintiff’s factual allegations
cannot, as a matter of law, support a claim for relief,” the trial court properly grants
a C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) motion. Bly, 241 P.3d at 533. Factual allegations in a complaint
“must be enough to raise a right to relief ‘above the speculative level,’ and provide
‘plausible grounds to infer’” a situation giving rise to a cause of action. Warne v.
Hall, 2016 CO 50, ¶ 9, 373 P.3d 588, 591 (citation omitted) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v.
Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555–56 (2007)).
¶19 We also review de novo questions of statutory interpretation. Jefferson Cnty.
Bd. of Equalization v. Gerganoff, 241 P.3d 932, 935 (Colo. 2010). “We begin by
looking to the express language of the statute, construing words and phrases
according to grammar and common usage.” Id. If the statute’s language is
unambiguous and “the intent appears with reasonable certainty, our analysis is
complete.” Id.
B. Detrimental Act of Nature
¶20 The taxpayers first contend that the COVID-19 pandemic was a
“detrimental act[] of nature” under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). They start with the
14 definition of “detrimental”—“[c]ausing harm, damage, or loss; injurious or
hurtful”—and observe that the COVID-19 pandemic caused harm to communities,
damage to the economy, and loss of life. Detrimental, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th
ed. 2019). The taxpayers then borrow the definition of “natural cause” from
elsewhere in the tax code to argue that COVID-19 was an act of nature. See
§ 39-1-102(8.4), C.R.S. (2022) (defining “[n]atural cause” as “fire, explosion, flood,
tornado, action of the elements, act of war or terror, or similar cause beyond the
control of and not caused by the party holding title to the property destroyed”).
According to the taxpayers, because the COVID-19 pandemic fits within
definitions of “detrimental” and “act of nature,” it was a “detrimental act[] of
nature” for purposes of section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).
¶21 We disagree. The exception in section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) instructs assessors
to take into account “any unusual conditions in or related to any real property
which would result in an increase or decrease in actual value.” To fall within this
provision, the unusual condition must be both an “act of nature” and “in or related
to any real property.” Id. An “act of nature” is “[a]n overwhelming,
unpreventable event caused exclusively by forces of nature, such as an earthquake,
flood, or tornado.” Act of nature, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (referring
to the definition of an “act of God”). And to be “in or related to any real property,”
15 an act must be “[c]onnected in some way” to real property. See Related, Black’s
Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
¶22 COVID-19 meets neither of these requirements. COVID-19 is “a respiratory
disease caused by a novel coronavirus.” See In re Interrogatory on House Joint Resol.
20-1006, 2020 CO 23, ¶ 5, 500 P.3d 1053, 1056 (citing Colo. Exec. Order No. D 2020
003, at 1 (Mar. 11, 2020), https://www.colorado.gov/governor/sites/default/
files/inline-files/D%202020%20003%20Declaring%20a%20Disaster%
20Emergency_1.pdf [https://perma.cc/66FD-5MUY]). On March 11, 2020, the
World Health Organization officially declared COVID-19 to be a pandemic. Id. at
¶ 8, 500 P.3d at 1057 (citing H.R.J. Res. 20-1006, 72d Gen. Assemb., 2d Reg. Sess.,
at 1 (Colo. 2020)). Whether COVID-19 is viewed as a virus or a pandemic, it did
not resemble the natural events—earthquakes, floods, and tornados—that we
consider acts of nature. See Act of nature, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
¶23 Moreover, the COVID-19 pandemic was not “in or related to any real
property.” § 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). COVID-19 may have infected people who were
on the property. See In re Interrogatory, ¶ 5, 500 P.3d at 1056 (“COVID-19 is
transmitted by close exposure to a person with the virus, particularly an infected
person’s respiratory droplets from coughing or sneezing.”). But COVID-19 did
not infect the property itself. Because the COVID-19 pandemic was not an act of
16 nature and because it was not “in or related to” the taxpayers’ properties, COVID-19
was not an “unusual condition” for purposes of section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).
¶24 The Administrator’s interpretation of the statute bolsters our conclusion. It
lists as examples of “[d]etrimental acts of nature” forest fires, landslides, and
immediate erosion problems. 3 ARL 1.10. These examples share three qualities.
First, as the district court observed, they are “direct, tangible forces . . . capable of
‘diminish[ing] the use or availability of a parcel of land.’” (Quoting 3 ARL 1.10.)
Second, they affect properties in a limited geographic area. And third, their impact
occurs in a defined window of time. As a virus, COVID-19 is different in all three
respects: It does not directly affect the use or availability of real property, its
impact is worldwide, and its duration has spanned years.
¶25 These differences are relevant to the practical application of
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). As discussed, the existence of an unusual condition
permits an otherwise prohibited mid-cycle revaluation of a property. Such
revaluation is feasible in the event of a forest fire, landslide, or immediate erosion
problem that affects a limited number of properties. But requiring a mid-cycle
revaluation based on a global pandemic would be absurd, both because every
property would be at least indirectly affected by it and because COVID-19 is not a
single event (like a landslide); rather, the intangible impacts of COVID-19 have
spanned years. It is therefore not clear under the taxpayers’ interpretation when—
17 or how many times—an assessor would have to undertake such revaluation.
(Each time a new or revised public health order issues?)
¶26 The taxpayers contend that even if COVID-19 does not resemble the events
listed in the ARL definition, the pandemic nevertheless “fits squarely within the
ARL catchall provision” of “other natural occurrences that would diminish the use
or availability of a parcel of land.” But just as this court cannot add unusual
conditions to section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I)’s exhaustive list, neither can the Tax
Administrator. So the “other natural occurrences” provision in the ARL is
necessarily limited to events that are “in or related to any real property.” As
discussed, COVID-19 was not such an event.
¶27 In light of the plain language of the statute, as well as the Tax
Administrator’s interpretation, we conclude that COVID-19 was not a
“detrimental act[] of nature” for purposes of section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).
C. Regulations Restricting the Use of the Land
¶28 Next, the taxpayers contend that the public health orders issued in response
to COVID-19 constituted regulations restricting the use of their land that triggered
revaluation under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). Their complaint references 141
orders issued by the Governor, 28 orders issued by the Colorado Department of
Public Health & Environment, and orders issued by Jefferson County Public
18 Health related to the COVID-19 pandemic.3 The taxpayers contend that the orders
were “regulations” under the plain meaning of the word and that “[m]any of the[]
3 In their briefing to this court, the taxpayers focus on seven orders: (1) Executive Order D 2020-017, directing non-critical businesses “to close temporarily, except as necessary to engage in minimum basic operations,” Colo. Exec. Order No. D 2020-017, at 2 (Mar. 25, 2020), https://www.colorado.gov/governor/sites/ default/files/inline-files/D%202020%20003%20Declaring%20a%20Disaster% 20Emergency_1.pdf [https://perma.cc/7SBC-TTDN]; (2) Executive Order D 2020-003, declaring a disaster emergency due to the presence of coronavirus disease in Colorado, Colo. Exec. Order No. D 2020-003, at 1 (Mar. 11, 2020), https://www.colorado.gov/governor/sites/default/files/inline-files/ D%202020%20003%20Declaring%20a%20Disaster%20Emergency_1.pdf [https:// perma.cc/SJL2-SQL2]; (3) Executive Order D 2020-013, ordering Colorado employers to reduce in-person workforce by fifty percent, Colo. Exec. Order No. D 2020-013, at 2 (Mar. 22, 2020), https://www.colorado.gov/governor/sites/ default/files/inline-files/D%202020%20013%20Ordering%20Colorado% 20Employers%20to%20Reduce%20In-Person%20Workforce%20by%20Fifty% 20Percent_0.pdf [https://perma.cc/HFJ5-S8Y2]; (4) Public Health Order 20-22, closing bars, restaurants, theaters, gyms, casinos, businesses offering non-essential personal services, horse tracks, and off-track betting facilities statewide, Colo. Dep’t of Pub. Health & Env’t, Notice of Public Health Order 20-22 Closing Bars, Restaurants, Theaters, Gymnasiums, and Casinos Statewide (Mar. 16, 2020), https:// covid19.colorado.gov/public-health-orders-and-executive-orders [https:// perma.cc/V7HM-JTMS]; (5) Public Health Order 20-24, directing all Colorado employers, except certain essential businesses, to reduce in-person work by fifty percent and to implement work-from-home capabilities to the extent possible, Colo. Dep’t of Pub. Health & Env’t, Order No. 20-24, Implementing Fifty Percent Reduction in Nonessential Business In-Person Work and Extreme Social Distancing (Mar. 22, 2020), https://drive.google.com/file/d/ 1ndUBYTXVM7yULGMiDPRhjVrUj8qTF2pk/view [https://perma.cc/3LVE- NJVD]; (6) Third Amended Public Health Order 20-28, setting forth requirements for the implementation of Safer at Home, Colo. Dep’t of Pub. Health & Env’t, Third Amended Order No. 20-28, Safer at Home (May 14, 2020), https:// drive.google.com/file/d/1FSR3HMNIZqscMyNjn23j8GhT9xyuwaPp/view [https://perma.cc/F32L-224H]; and (7) Fourth Amended Public Health
19 orders significantly restricted the use of commercial land.” The taxpayers argue
that the orders required them to shift their business operations because “[n]o
customers were allowed to enter the properties”; the taxpayers “were not
permitted to enter let alone use their property”; and “‘non-critical properties’
[could] not be used for any purpose.”
¶29 We disagree that the public health orders were “regulations restricting . . .
the use of the land” under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). (Emphasis added.) “Land” is
“[a]n immovable and indestructible three-dimensional area.” Land, Black’s Law
Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). It is “not the fixed contents of th[e] space . . . , but the
space itself.” Id. (quoting Peter Butt, Land Law 9 (2d ed. 1988)). “Land” is therefore
distinct from an improvement (such as a building or business) on the land. See
Improvement, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining “improvement” as
“[a]n addition to property, usu[ally] real estate, whether permanent or not;
esp[ecially], one that increases its value or utility”).
Order 20-28, restricting restaurants to fifty percent capacity or fifty people total, whichever is less, for in-person dining, Colo. Dep’t of Pub. Health & Env’t, Fourth Amended Order No. 20-28, Safer at Home (May 26, 2020), https:// drive.google.com/file/d/19mjy5vyuLpPcrXz58nK1gWGWUFL4Op_D/view [https://perma.cc/KX7W-D2GJ].
20 ¶30 The tax code reinforces this distinction between land and improvements
located on the land. See, e.g., § 39-5-105(1), C.R.S. (2022) (requiring that
improvements be valued separately from land); § 39-1-102(14) (listing “[a]ll lands”
and “[i]mprovements” in separate subsections in the definition of real property);
§ 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) (listing as a separate unusual condition the installation of an
on-site improvement). As does the ARL. 3 ARL 1.1 (listing “practical reasons for
separation of land and improvements” in the Colorado statutes).
¶31 Because “‘land’ is given a technical meaning and is distinguished from
‘improvements’” in the property tax code, this court has previously rejected the
invitation to construe “land” in section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) as synonymous with
“improvements.” LaDuke, 785 P.2d at 609. In LaDuke, a steel manufacturing
facility “faced with severe financial stress due to the depressed state of the
American steel industry” decided to permanently close one of its mills. Id. at 606.
The issue was whether this shut-down constituted a “change in the use of the
land,” another unusual condition in section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). Id. We viewed the
operation of the steel mill to be use of improvements on the land, not use of the land
itself. Id. at 609. As such, we rejected the taxpayer’s argument that the assessor
was required to consider the shutdown to the steel mill in its valuation. Id. at 606.
Because “the land was still being used as a site for an industrial plant producing
steel,” the use of the land did not change. Id. at 609–10.
21 ¶32 Here, because the public health orders regulated the operation of
commercial activity on the land, and not the use of the land itself, they were not
“regulations restricting . . . the use of the land” under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). It
is true that the orders required certain businesses to shift their operations.4 For
example, a Colorado restaurant owner complying with the orders had to “reduce
in-person work requirements by fifty percent,” Colo. Exec. Order No. D 2020-013,
at 1 (Mar. 22, 2020); “offer food and beverage using delivery service, window
service, walk-up service, drive-through service, or drive-up service,” Colo. Dep’t
of Pub. Health & Env’t, Notice of Public Health Order 20-22 Closing Bars, Restaurants,
Theaters, Gymnasiums, and Casinos Statewide, at 5 (Mar. 16, 2020); and later limit
reopening to “fifty percent (50%) of their in-office occupancy,” Colo. Dep’t of Pub.
Health & Env’t, Third Amended Order No. 20-28, Safer at Home, at 20 (May 14,
2020). But critically, these orders did not change how the land itself was being
used. The land could still be used to operate a restaurant, even if the public health
orders meant such operations became “less intensive.” LaDuke, 785 P.2d at 610
4That said, it is not clear that the plaintiff taxpayers were directly affected by the public health orders. In their complaint, the taxpayers do not allege how the public health orders affected each of their specific business operations.
22 (“Such a less intensive use of the land does not constitute a change in the use of
the land for purposes of section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).”).
¶33 Further, to accept the taxpayers’ argument that the public health orders in
this case were an unusual condition would lead to absurd results. If the COVID-19
orders were deemed regulations restricting the use of land because they required
a temporary closure, then ordinary changes to fire codes affecting occupancy
limits or even a routine public health order requiring the temporary closure of a
particular restaurant would likewise amount to an unusual condition requiring
revaluation of the property. Such an outcome defies legislative intent and is
contrary to our holding in LaDuke.
¶34 Our conclusion today is bolstered by the ARL. As examples of “regulations
increasing or decreasing the use of the land,” it lists “changes in zoning; creation
of, or changes in, comprehensive land use policies; creation of land set-aside
requirements for open space; creation of new flood zones; or any other
governmental acts that would affect the ultimate use or disposition of a parcel of
land.” 3 ARL 1.10. These examples, all involving changes to the categorization of
the land, are intended to be permanent until and unless the land is subsequently
recategorized. In contrast, the public health orders issued in response to
COVID-19 were intended to be temporary. See, e.g., Colo. Exec. Order
No. D 2020-011 (Mar. 20, 2020), https://www.colorado.gov/governor/sites/
23 default/files/inline-files/D%202020%20011%20Ordering%20the%
20Temporary%20Suspension%20of%20Certain%20Regulatory%20Statutes_0.pdf
[https://perma.cc/R67X-3AD7] (“ordering the temporary suspension of certain
regulatory statutes due to the presence” of COVID-19 (emphasis added)).
¶35 Indeed, we note that the public health orders at issue here were repeatedly
clarified, amended, repealed, and re-enacted to adjust to the ever-fluctuating risks
of COVID-19. If each such public health order amounted to a regulation restricting
the use of land that triggered a mid-cycle revaluation, assessors would have had
to revalue every affected property dozens of times in the past two years, a result
the legislature could not have intended.
¶36 In sum, we conclude that the public health orders issued in response to
COVID-19 did not constitute “regulations restricting . . . the use of the land” under
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).
D. Economic Conditions
¶37 Our conclusion that the COVID-19 pandemic did not constitute an unusual
condition is also consistent with case law holding that changed economic
conditions are not unusual conditions for purposes of section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I).
¶38 In Carrara Place, Ltd. v. Arapahoe County Board of Equalization, 761 P.2d 197,
199 (Colo. 1988), for example, the taxpayer plaintiffs protesting their 1985 property
valuations argued that, because vacancy rates and property tax rates were
24 substantially higher in 1985 than in 1976 (the year used to determine the property’s
value for tax purposes), the assessor should “consider 1985 economic data in
making his appraisals.”5 We rejected this argument, observing that a change in
economic conditions does not amount to an unusual condition under
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). Id. at 201. As we explained, the legislature “chose to
limit revaluation to those cases in which it deemed that a change in the property
or in the property’s use rendered application of the base year value unjust.” Id.
Thus, although changed economic conditions resulted in the property’s value
falling below the 1976 value, the assessor was not required to revalue the property
to account for the economic downturn. Id.
¶39 Similarly, in LaDuke, this court reaffirmed that a change in economic
conditions does not constitute an unusual condition for purposes of
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). 785 P.2d at 610. In appealing its 1984 tax assessment,
the steel manufacturing facility argued that “the permanent shut-down of a
portion of the steel mill and subsequent reduction of 52 percent in the number of
its employees constituted an ‘unusual condition.’” Id. at 608. We disagreed,
5 In Carrara Place, assessed values for the 1983 to 1986 tax years were determined with reference to economic conditions in 1976. 761 P.2d at 200. As we explain in 1303 Frontage, the legislature subsequently amended title 39 to increase the frequency of base year property tax assessments. See 1303 Frontage, ¶ 52.
25 noting that “often there will be significant changes in the intensity of the use of
commercial property” between the year the actual value is set and the year of the
assessment. Id. at 610. But to take into account such changes would negate the
reassessment system to which unusual conditions are a limited exception. Id.
¶40 Our reasoning in LaDuke and Carrara Place applies with equal force here.
The General Assembly did not list “economic conditions” as an unusual condition
in section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). We cannot smuggle what amounts to a change in
economic conditions into section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) under cover of “any
detrimental act[] of nature” or “regulations restricting . . . the use of the land,”
without contravening the plain language of the statute.
¶41 Doing so would also undermine the advantages the legislature sought to
achieve through the tax code it enacted. If we expanded “unusual conditions” in
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I) to include changed economic conditions, taxpayers—
unsure which economic fluctuations would trigger a revaluation—would struggle
to anticipate their future tax burdens. And in the event of an economic upturn, a
taxpayer whose property taxes increased in the intervening year would have to
shoulder a tax burden they could not reasonably have foreseen and for which they
were unable to adequately prepare. See Carrara Place, 761 P.2d at 204. What’s
more, assessors would be working incessantly to determine whether changed
economic conditions constitute an unusual condition and, if so, to revalue all the
26 properties affected by that changed economic condition. Such constant
revaluation would thwart the legislative intent (as well as the stability and
predictability) of the two-year reassessment cycle.
¶42 So here, for the reasons set forth in LaDuke and Carrara Place, the economic
impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic are not an unusual condition.6
¶43 While the COVID-19 pandemic and public health orders did not trigger
section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I)’s revaluation requirement, the tax code accounted—and
continues to account—for its economic impact elsewhere. Our legislature enacted
a backward-looking reassessment system in which the actual value of a property
is based on data from a preceding eighteen-month period. § 39-1-104(10.2)(d).
This means the economic impacts of COVID-19 from the first half of 2020, if any,
were reflected in the January 1, 2021 tax assessment. See 1303 Frontage, ¶¶ 4, 65.
And ensuing economic impacts will be reflected in subsequent two-year
reassessment cycles. Id.; accord Educhildren, ¶ 50.
6 Because we conclude that the COVID-19 pandemic and public health orders did not constitute unusual conditions under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I), the taxpayers’ claims fail as a matter of law. Therefore, we need not address the third issue the taxpayers raise contesting the factual support for the district court’s conclusion.
27 IV. Conclusion
¶44 Although COVID-19 has undoubtedly had negative, wide-ranging, and
lasting impacts, it was not a “detrimental act[] of nature,” nor were the public
health orders passed in response “regulations restricting . . . the use of the land”
under section 39-1-104(11)(b)(I). Thus, we affirm the district court’s order finding
that the taxpayers failed to state a claim for relief and granting the County’s motion
to dismiss.