Moyer v. Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals

803 A.2d 833, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 521
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 803 A.2d 833 (Moyer v. Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moyer v. Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals, 803 A.2d 833, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 521 (Pa. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEAVITT.

Ray and Clara Moyer (Landowners) appeal from an August 30, 2001 order (Order) of the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County (trial court), affirming a decision of the Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals (Board) to eliminate their preferential use assessment and to impose certain roll-back taxes on their farmland. The Board’s action ended the enrollment of Landowners’ farmland in the tax relief program established by the Farmland and Forest Land Assessment Act of 1974, popularly known as the “Clean and Green Act.” 1 The Board cross-appeals on the trial court’s calculation of the amount of roll-back taxes. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Prior to June 28, 2000, Landowners had three tracts of land enrolled in the Clean and Green program. Two of the tracts, known as the Moyer Farm and the Woodland Tract, were enrolled in the Clean and Green program on March 3, 1993, through a single application. The third tract, known as the Christman Farm, had been enrolled in the Clean and Green program by the previous owner, and Landowners continued the enrollment by application dated May 19,1997.

On January 14, 2000, Landowners obtained approval of a subdivision plan to *836 establish a residential use for 5.362 acres of the Christman Farm located on the east side of Pearl Road. Because the local township zoning ordinance requires agricultural lots to be a minimum of 25 acres, Landowners’ subdivision plan also had the Christman Farm annex 2.789 contiguous acres from the Moyer Farm. The newly configured Christman Farm of 25.06 acres was now located entirely on the west side of Pearl Road. On June 25, 2000, Landowners conveyed the Christman Farm to themselves; this conveyance did not include the subdivision of 5.362 acres on the east side of Pearl Road. The Christman Farm deed was recorded in the Berks County Recorder of Deeds office on July 5, 2000. All parties agreed that the change in the use of the 5.362 acres from agricultural to residential constituted a split-off under the Clean and Green Act, triggering the imposition of roll-back 2 taxes on the Christman Farm.

The Chief Assessor of Berks County (Chief Assessor) however, determined that the Christman’s Farm’s annexation of 2.789 acres also constituted a split-off from the Moyer Farm for purposes of the Clean and Green Act. Thus, he terminated the preferential use assessment for the Christ-man Farm, the Moyer Farm and the Woodland Tract and ordered roll-back taxes, with interest, on all three properties. The logic for including the Woodland Tract, which was unaffected by the subdivision plan, was that its application for enrollment in the Clean and Green program was made in a joint filing with the Moyer Farm. The Chief Assessor notified Landowners of his decision by letter dated September 7, 2000.

Landowners challenged the Chief Assessor’s action by filing appeals for each of the three properties on September 29, 2000. The Board affirmed the decision of the Chief Assessor by letter dated December 8, 2000. Landowners thereafter appealed the decision to the trial court, which heard the case in a de novo hearing on June 6, 2001.

At the hearing, evidence was presented on the use of the three properties, changes in their boundaries and associated governmental filings. Because there was no issue that the subdivision plan created a split-off with respect to the 5.362 acres on the east side of Pearl Road, the evidence focused on the 2.789 acres that was moved from the Moyer Farm to the Christman Farm.

The Director of Real Estate for the Assessment Office of Berks County (Director) testified that the 2.789 acres annexed to the Christman Farm continued to be used for agricultural use; that both the Moyer Farm and the Christman Farm exceeded ten acres; and that both continued to be owned by the same property owners. He also testified that the 2.789 acres was never a separately existing tract. (R.R. 50a).

There was also testimony that the deed creating the newly configured Christman Farm was recorded on July 5, 2000 and then forwarded to the Assessment Office, probably between July 28 and August 3, 2000. It was also established that the Chief Assessor’s notice was sent to Land *837 owners on September 7, 2000, more than one month after his office became aware of the Christman Farm deed.

The trial court entered its Order denying Landowners’ appeal of the revocation of the preferential use assessment for all three properties and the imposition of roll-back taxes. In calculating the rollback taxes, the trial court applied a regulation of the Department of Agriculture in effect on the day of its Order, and not the statement of policy in effect when the conveyance, or breach, occurred, to calculate the Landowners’ tax liability. The tax liability would have been higher under the statement of policy. Both Landowners and the Board appealed the trial court’s Order. 3

On appeal, the issues are: 1) whether the transfer of 2.789 acres from the Moyer Farm to the Christman Farm constituted a “separation” or a “split-off” as those terms are used in the Clean and Green Act; 2) whether including two separate properties on a single application for enrollment in the Clean and Green program means that a change in the use of one will cause the other to lose its preferential use assessment and be subject to roll-back taxes; 3) whether the sanctions for a split-off include the loss of a preferential use assessment for property remaining in farmland; 4) whether the Board’s failure to follow the notice requirement in the statute exonerates the Landowners from any roll-back tax liability; and 5) whether the trial court should have applied the Department of Agriculture’s statement of policy, not the regulation, to calculate the Landowners’ tax liability.

Landowners argue that the annexation of 2.789 acres from the Moyer Farm to the Christman Farm constitutes a separation under the Clean and Green Act because each farm, before and after the annexation, remained in agricultural use and exceeded 10 acres. They describe the transaction as a change in boundary lines between two parcels of farmland that does not trigger penalties under the Clean and Green Act. We agree.

Under the Clean and Green Act, a “split-off’ is defined as,

A division, by conveyance or other action of the owner, of lands devoted to agricultural use, ... and preferentially assessed under the provisions of this act into two or more tracts of land, the use of which on one or more of such tracts does not meet the requirements of section 3.

Section 2, 72 P.S. § 5490.2 (emphasis added). Section 3 relates to the size of the new tracts of land. The relevant provision of Section 3 states:

(a)(1) Land presently devoted to agricultural use: Such land was devoted to agricultural use the preceding three years and is not less than ten contiguous acres in area ... or has an anticipated yearly gross income of at least two thousand dollars ($2,000).

72 P.S. § 5490.3(a)(1). (emphasis added). In contrast, a “separation” under the Clean and Green Act is defined as,

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Bluebook (online)
803 A.2d 833, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moyer-v-berks-county-board-of-assessment-appeals-pacommwct-2002.