MPTH Associates v. State Department of Assessments & Taxation

487 A.2d 1184, 302 Md. 319, 1985 Md. LEXIS 543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 20, 1985
Docket93, September Term, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 487 A.2d 1184 (MPTH Associates v. State Department of Assessments & Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MPTH Associates v. State Department of Assessments & Taxation, 487 A.2d 1184, 302 Md. 319, 1985 Md. LEXIS 543 (Md. 1985).

Opinion

RODOWSKY, Judge.

This is an administrative appeal of a claim for refund of real property taxes. The issue is whether, on the taxpayer’s appeal of its assessment for the tax year 1979-80, an increase made in that assessment by an appeal board after the date of finality for tax year 1980-81 applies automatically to tax year 1980-81. For the reasons hereinafter set forth we shall hold that, on these facts, the increase does not apply to 1980-81.

Appellant, MPTH Associates (MPTH), owns a six-story office building in Bethesda. The Supervisor of Assessments for Montgomery County (Supervisor) assessed the property at $704,440 for the tax year beginning July 1, 1979, and ending June 30, 1980, (tax year 1979). MPTH protested this valuation, its protest was denied, and it *321 appealed to the Property Tax Assessment Appeal Board for Montgomery County (the Board). The appeal was not decided prior to January 1, 1980, the date of finality for tax year 1980, and the Supervisor did not send any notice to MPTH undertaking to value the property as of the 1980 date of finality. On July 30, 1980, the Board rendered its decision “REVERSING the ruling of the Supervisor ... with respect to the 1979 assessment” which the Board increased to $810,440. 1 MPTH did not pursue to conclusion an appeal of the Board’s order to the Maryland Tax Court. When the Supervisor received a copy of the Board’s July 30, 1980, order, he transmitted a form to the Division of Revenue, Department of Finance, for Montgomery County which, in turn, issued a revised tax bill to MPTH for 1980. The 1980 tax bill initially sent to MPTH utilized an assessment of $704,440 but the revised bill was based on $810,440 being the 1980 assessment. On September 30, 1980, MPTH paid the revised bill in full and on November 25, 1981, it requested a refund which was denied.

MPTH’s position is that the 1980 assessment is $704,440 because the Board’s increase applied only to 1979. Consequently, it claims a refund of taxes paid on $106,000 of the assessed valuation used in computing the revised bill. The taxing authorities contend that the Board’s increase was effective for 1980 as well as for 1979. The Maryland Tax Court agreed with MPTH while the Circuit Court for Montgomery County agreed with the taxing authorities. After MPTH appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, we issued the writ of certiorari on our own motion. Both the State Department of Assessments and Taxation (the State) and Montgomery County, Maryland (the County) appealed from the order of the Maryland Tax Court and each is an appellee here.

*322 The taxpayer and the Maryland Tax Court have correctly analyzed the question presented. It turns on a number of provisions of Art. 81 of the Maryland Code. 2 “All real property required by [Art. 81] to be assessed shall be valued at its full cash value on the date of finality.” § 14(b)(l)(i). “The phrase ‘date of finality ’ means the date as of which assessments become final for the taxable year next following, subject only to correction as [in Art. 81] authorized.” § 2(20). The date of finality is January 1. § 29A(a). Property taxes are “levied upon assessments made in conformity with [Art. 81], or upon existing assessments until changed in conformity with [Art. 81].” § 7. An assessment of real property, once made, “continue[s] in force from year to year until changed pursuant to the provisions of [Art. 81].” § 14(c). Under these fundamental rules we find that here there was no change in the 1979 assessment as of the 1980 date of finality. Consequently, the original 1979 assessment of $704,440 continued as the assessment for 1980.

The taxing authorities see support in § 214A for their position that the Board’s July 30, 1980, increase in the 1979 assessment also increased the assessed valuation for 1980. That, section reads:

Whenever any person shall have appealed from, or petitioned for the reduction of, any assessment, locally determined, for ordinary taxes, a final determination of such appeal or petition providing for a reduction in said assessment shall apply, ipso facto, to any assessment for ordinary taxes locally imposed, at the same valuation as that appealed or petitioned to be reduced, on the same property, made for any tax year which is subsequent to the tax year of the assessment so appealed or petitioned *323 to be reduced, for which the date of finality precedes the date of said final determination and for which no notice as to assessments has been sent under § 29(a) of this article.

This statute has no application here, where the assessment was increased on appeal. By its express terms § 214A operates only where either an appeal or a petition for reduction of an assessment has resulted in a final determination “providing for a reduction____” The statute is designed to obviate the need for a taxpayer to file a “protective” appeal for each tax year for which the same assessment continues. Under § 214A the taxpayer of real estate taxes gets the benefit of any reduction effected in the review process not only for the year formally under review but also for succeeding years as to which the assessment has continued. 3

If a supervisor of assessments believes that the assessment for a year under appeal should be the assessment for the next succeeding year, even if the assessment might be reduced in the review process for the year on appeal, the supervisor may send a notice assessing the property as of the next succeeding January 1 at the same valuation. One of the conditions under which § 214A operates is that the valuation which continues for the succeeding year has not been the subject of a notice of assessment sent under § 29(a). Section 29(a) includes a requirement that a supervisor of assessments send a notice of assessment “whenever a valuation or classification for a given year, or part thereof, has been appealed, but not finally determined, and the same valuation or classification is made for a subsequent year, on property locally assessed____” Section 214A and the above-quoted language from § 29(a) were enacted by Ch. 223 of the Acts of 1961. The two provisions interrelate. A supervisor of assessments can prevent a reduction *324 on appeal from applying to a continuing assessment by reimposing that same assessment for the succeeding year by notice. Of course, a supervisor can always change an assessment for the succeeding year by notice, in which event § 214A does not apply. But § 214A provides no mechanism for automatically making the Board’s increase for 1979, ordered July 30, 1980, in this case, also effective for 1980.

The County argues that an interpretation of § 214A which gives the taxpayer the benefit of a reduction in a continuing. assessment, but which does not give taxing authorities the benefit of an increase, is an absurd interpretation which is to be avoided. There is no absurdity in the General Assembly’s having greatly reduced in 1961 the necessity for proforma

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Bluebook (online)
487 A.2d 1184, 302 Md. 319, 1985 Md. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mpth-associates-v-state-department-of-assessments-taxation-md-1985.