Montana Department of Revenue v. Barron

799 P.2d 533, 245 Mont. 100, 47 State Rptr. 1869, 1990 Mont. LEXIS 309
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1990
Docket90-416
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 799 P.2d 533 (Montana Department of Revenue v. Barron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montana Department of Revenue v. Barron, 799 P.2d 533, 245 Mont. 100, 47 State Rptr. 1869, 1990 Mont. LEXIS 309 (Mo. 1990).

Opinion

JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

On September 11, 1990, this Court in this cause handed down a temporary order declaring that the application by the Department of Revenue of the stratified sales assessment ratio study in Area 2.1 (Great Falls Downtown) to the valuation of Patricia C. Barron’s property was invalid for reasons to be later explained; we ordered that for all other properties in the state to which the Department’s stratified sales assessment ratio studies for tax year 1990 had been applied, except for those instances now pending on appeal or properly appealed by the property owners, the effective date and application of our temporary order was prospectively continued until December 31, 1990; and we resolved for future decision the proper valuation of the property of Patricia C. Barron.

The effect of the prospective stay in the Order of September 11, 1990, is that as to all property affected by the stratified sales assessment ratio studies except for those stated in the Order, the appraised values for property tax purposes for the tax year 1990 shall be those found and applied by the Montana Department of Revenue (DOR) under said studies.

Under our state constitutional duty to pronounce our decisions in writing (Art. VII, § 3,1972 Mont. Const.), as an aid to the legislature in its future enactments and by way of explanation to affected Montana taxpayers, we come now to make permanent the provisions of our temporary order and to set out the facts and conclusions which form the basis for the temporary order.

This is an original proceeding in this Court brought by the DOR which petitioned for a writ of review, a writ of supervisory control, or other appropriate emergency writ for relief from an order of STAB dated August 3, 1990. In that order, STAB had concluded, upon the protest of Patricia C. Barron, that the DOR’s implementation of §§ 15-7-111(4) (8) , MCA, was unconstitutional. (STAB contended here that it did not find the implementation unconstitutional, but only that a court would find it unconstitutional.) DOR’s petition pointed to imminent statutory deadlines in the property tax collection process which created an emergency situation and said that a prompt *102 ruling from this Court was necessary to end the uncertainty. DOR contended that no other adequate remedy existed that was speedy enough and that irreparable harm to taxpayers and governmental entities would occur if the controversy was not resolved well in advance of the issuance of tax notices that had to be mailed by October 25, 1990.

On receipt of DOR’s application, we ordered that we would treat the proceedings as one for declaratory relief under Ch. 8, Title 27, MCA, obtain a response from the respondents, and set an oral argument date. Responses were filed and served, oral argument was had, and thereafter, on consideration, we issued a temporary order to which we have above adverted.

OVERVIEW

The Montana Constitution provides that the state shall appraise, assess, and equalize the valuation of all property which is to be taxed in a manner provided by law (Art. VIII, § 3). The state must establish the assessed valuations (Art. VIII, § 4) and the legislature must provide independent appeal procedures for taxpayer grievances, appraisals, assessments, equalization and taxes, with a review procedure at the local government unit level (Art. VIII, § 7).

To implement the constitutional provisions, the legislature provided for property appraisals in Ch. 7, Title 15, MCA. In 1975, a scheme was adopted whereby the state would evaluate under a comprehensive reappraisal plan all taxable property in the state at least every five years. The DOR was required to adopt a plan so that all property in each county was revalued at least every five years or that no less than 20% of the property in each county was revalued each year. Section 15-7-111, MCA (1987).

The current five-year cycle for reappraisal began in 1986. The legislature extended that cycle period in 1989 for an additional two years, to end December 31, 1992, and postponed the commencement of another five year revaluation cycle until January 1, 1993. Section 15-7-133, MCA. The DOR was given an additional two years to complete the current revaluation cycle. Section 15-7-132, MCA.

In the last two legislative sessions, however, the legislature substantially amended the revaluation cycle. Ch. 613, Laws of Montana (1987); Ch. 636, Laws of Montana (1989). While keeping the five-year provision in effect, it provided in amended § 15-7-111, MCA, that for every taxable year beginning January 1,1990, and each taxable year thereafter, the DOR is to conduct a “stratified sales assessment ratio study” of all residential land and improvements (and other property *103 not pertinent here). Under the amendment, the DOR was to partition the State into as many as 100 areas of residential property, and as many as 20 of commercial property. The areas in each are to be separately studied. Under the study, the actual sales prices of real property parcels sold for three taxable years prior to the study were compared with their appraised values then in effect, and a ratio determined. If the average appraised values of the properties in the study, compared to the average of the actual sales amounts were less than 95% or more than 105%, the assessments for each stratum within each area were to be rescaled to bring all ratios to common value 1.

The criteria for establishing the residential areas were that they should contain statistically sufficient numbers of sales and be as economically and demographically homogenous as practicable. Section 15-7-111(6), MCA. For tax year 1990, the DOR established 47 residential areas in the state, of which Area 2.1 (Great Falls Downtown) was one.

Criteria for obtaining statistically valid samples of sales in each area were also set out in the 1989 amendment. It is enough to say that only arm’s-length sales were to be considered in the ratio study. The sales of remodeled residences were not to be considered and sales which showed assessment ratios of less than 50% or greater than 200% were to be excluded.

If the result of the study in each area produced sales assessment ratios of less than minus 5% of common value 1, or greater than plus 5% of common value 1, then all of the assessments in the area were to be adjusted to bring the ratios to common value 1. Section 15-7-111(8) (a), MCA. If the ratio for any area was within plus or minus 5% of the common value 1, then the assessments in the area were considered equalized and no rescaling was necessary. Section 15-7-lll(8)(c), MCA.

The legislature required the sales assessment ratio studies to commence for the taxable years beginning January 1, 1990, and for every taxable year thereafter and further provided that the ratio so determined “must be used to determine appraisals for the immediately succeeding tax year.” Section 15-7-111(4), MCA.

FACTS

Patricia C. Barron is the owner of a residence in Great Falls, Cascade County, Montana. Her property is in an area designated by the DOR as Area 2.1. Prior to 1990, the Barron property was *104

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Bluebook (online)
799 P.2d 533, 245 Mont. 100, 47 State Rptr. 1869, 1990 Mont. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montana-department-of-revenue-v-barron-mont-1990.