Narehood v. Pearson

96 A.2d 895, 374 Pa. 299, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 397
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 25, 1953
DocketAppeal, 197
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 96 A.2d 895 (Narehood v. Pearson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Narehood v. Pearson, 96 A.2d 895, 374 Pa. 299, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 397 (Pa. 1953).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Bell,

Many taxpayers were naturally surprised and incensed because the total assessments of real property in Clearfield County for 1953 were increased 400% over 1952.

Narehood and a large number of other taxpayers of Clearfield County filed a bill in equity to enjoin the county commissioners and the county board of assessment and revision of taxes “from proceeding on the assessments” which they averred were illegally and unconstitutionally made, or “levying any millage or collecting any taxes thereon.” The amended bill of complaint alleged that the imlues of properties fixed in the 1953 county assessment were not uniform or equal but were arbitrary, discriminatory and unconstitutional. The lower Court overruled and dismissed defendants’ preliminary objections; the county commissioners then took this appeal.

*302 The mere averment that an assessment is arbitrary, discriminatory, illegal and unconstitutional, without adequate supporting facts is insufficient. Preliminary objections admit as true all facts which are averred in the bill of complaint but not the pleader’s conclusions or averments of law: Carlin v. Pa. Power & Light Co., 363 Pa. 543, 70 A. 2d 349; Price v. Robbins, 298 Pa. 568, 148 A. 849; Pfeil’s Estate, 287 Pa. 21, 134 A. 385.

Plaintiffs averred that the assessments were illegal because the Board (for the assessment and revision of taxes) did not establish a Permanent Records System as required by §306 of the amendatory Act of January 18, 1952, P. L. 2094. Since this Act required the new Permanent Records System to be established within five years from January 18, 1952, this averment or contention of plaintiffs was utterly devoid of merit.

Plaintiffs also alleged that the assessors did not comply with §506 of the Act of January 18, 1952, P. L. 2138, which amended the Act of May 21, 1943, known as The Fourth to Eighth Class County Assessment Law, in that they did not gather and report to the chief assessor all data and information necessary to assess, rate and value all subjects or objects of local taxation, namely, 45,000 parcels of real estate; and that the chief assessor failed to take into consideration the value of such property as indicated by the use of cost charts and land values applied on the basis of zones and districts as well as the general adherence to the established predetermined ratio. It is obvious that the assessors could not, in a few months, gather all the required data and information with respect to 45,000 properties; and similarly, that the required cost charts and land values could not possibly have been obtained in time for the 1953 assessments. If injustice has resulted from any *303 technical irregularities in the assessments, it can be corrected on appeal.

The taxpayers in this suit have failed to realize the time element involved, and the practical situation and difficulties confronting the assessors and the chief assessor under the amendatory Acts. How could the assessors gather and collect all the data and information required, and the chief assessor personally assess in a few months 45,000 properties under and pursuant to the provisions of the Acts of January 18, 1952? Suffice it to say that so far as was practically possible, due to the limitations of time, the assessors and chief assessor followed the provisions of the new or amendatory Acts of 1952 under which, as will hereinafter more fully appear, each property owner or taxpayer’s rights are carefully and adequately protected by a full public hearing on an appeal to the Board, with a further right of appeal to the Court of Common Pleas.

Taxpayers’ main averments were that the assessments were based on an unconstitutional “mode” in that an arbitrary figure was fixed, such as $10 an acre for surface land, $10 an acre for mineral land, $20 an acre where a person owned both surface and mineral land, and a specific but unnamed value per acre for farm land; and that this figure per acre would then be multiplied by the number of acres or fractional acres owned. There was no averment or contention that any property was assessed “at more than 75% of its actual value”, or that it was not “assessed at a value based upon an established predetermined ratio” as required and restricted by §602 of the Act of January 18, 1952, P. L. 2138, supra.

The taxpayers’ contentions on this point are completely answered in Hammermill Paper Co. v. Erie, 372 Pa. 85, 92 A. 2d 422. In that case we approved as constitutional (1) a reasonable division or classification of *304 land based upon different kinds of real property; (2) as well as a different method or formula or yardstick or standard for the valuation and assessment of each separate class of real property; and (3) we likewise held that the assessor did not have to have a personal knowledge of each individual, property and the component parts thereof. It is clear, therefore, that the division or classification of land into surface, mineral, and farm land was not arbitrary or discriminatory or illegal, but was unquestionably reasonable, practical and just, and did not violate any provision of the Federal or State Constitution.

But, say the taxpayers, the assessors or chief assessor had no right to fix an arbitrary value of so much per acre for each class of property; what they should have done was to take each 1952 assessment and increase it “by a small percentage”.

There was no allegation that $10 an acre for surface land, or $10 an acre for mineral land, or the assessed value of each acre of farm land, was unreasonable and confiscatory or more than 75% of the actual or market value of each property in that class. Merely because a taxpayer can suggest a formula or method or yardstick which appeals to him as one that should be adopted, does not prohibit a tax-assessing body from adopting any formula or yardstick or method it desires, provided it is valid and constitutional. Moreover, it is quite evident that if the 1952 assessment of each property had been increased, not by a small percentage, but by 400%, the resentment and protests of the taxpayers would be just as great as is now expressed, and similar charges would be made of discrimination and lack of uniformity.

The last and perhaps most important contention of plaintiffs was that the assessors or chief assessor acted arbitrarily, diseriminatorily, unjustly and unconstitutionally in that they failed to value and assess each *305 individual property at its actual value considering its location, market facilities and other factors which make up market value. Assuming this to be true, should Equity grant injunctive relief?

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Bluebook (online)
96 A.2d 895, 374 Pa. 299, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/narehood-v-pearson-pa-1953.