Picerne v. DiPrete

542 A.2d 1101, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 107, 1988 WL 63146
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 24, 1988
Docket86-143-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 542 A.2d 1101 (Picerne v. DiPrete) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Picerne v. DiPrete, 542 A.2d 1101, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 107, 1988 WL 63146 (R.I. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

MURRAY, Justice.

This matter is before the court on the defendants’ writ of common-law certiorari to review a judgment by a justice of the Superior Court. The trial justice granted injunctive relief after finding that the defendants had selectively and illegally revalued only the plaintiffs’ property. 1 We affirm.

I

The defendants include Edward D. DiPrete, former mayor of Cranston; Carlo DelBonis, tax assessor for Cranston; and Anthony J. Ruscetta, tax collector and treasurer for Cranston. The plaintiffs own and operate apartment houses in Cranston. 2 The trial justice found that defendants had been selective and discriminatory in increasing the assessments of plaintiffs’ property without revaluing properly in the city as a whole. The assessments in question are those of plaintiffs’ property as of December 81, 1979, for the calendar year 1980, and as of December 31, 1980, for the calendar year 1981. The assessments for the 1980 and 1981 calendar years were formulated subsequent to litigation that involved the same parties and similar issues. Picerne v. DiPrete, 428 A.2d 1074 (R.I. 1981) (Picerne I). The parties filed an agreed statement of facts.

II

Picerne I resulted from litigation that began in 1979 when plaintiffs, together with approximately twenty other Cranston taxpayers, sought equitable and injunctive relief, alleging that defendants made selective and discriminatory revaluations of plaintiffs’ property for the 1979 tax year. In Picerne I we affirmed a holding by the trial court that then Mayor DiPrete erred when he ordered tax officials to raise an additional $1,200,000 in revenue in the shortest time possible without an across-the-board tax-rate increase. In that case, at the mayor’s direction, a committee was created to identify assessments necessary to raise additional revenue. Subsequently, 114 parcels of property were selected for revaluation.

In Picerne I the trial court found that the mayor and his committee selected properties held by 114 of approximately 28,000 taxpayers solely to balance the budget. At trial the mayor claimed that the city discovered mistakes in the apartment-valuation scheme while reviewing records relevant to discussions regarding the possibility of attaching an apartment service charge. Pi- *1103 cerne I, 428 A.2d at 1076. The mayor testified that his primary goal was equality of valuation and that increasing revenue was only a secondary aim. However, he also testified that when he instructed city administrators to raise tax revenue, he knew of no inequities in assessed values of any apartments. 3 The trial justice noted in Píceme I that the last time a general revaluation was conducted in Cranston was in 1954 when all property was revalued. The trial justice added that it was clear that in 1979 the city did not attempt to revalue the whole city, nor was the revaluation part of a citywide program.

The trial justice in Píceme I rejected the mayor’s explanation that the assessments were an attempt to rectify past assessment inequities, and he determined that defendants’ purpose in selecting plaintiffs’ property for reassessment was to satisfy a $1,600,000 revenue gap. Píceme I, 428 A.2d at 1076. The trial justice found that “defendant[s] had made a conscious effort to avoid a general revaluation and instead had targeted the smallest number of parcels that could yield the needed revenue.” Píceme I, 428 A.2d at 1076. Consequently the trial justice determined that the 1979 revaluations were arbitrary and discriminatory and resulted in disproportionate assessments in violation of the fair-distribution clause of art. 1, sec. 2, of the Rhode Island Constitution and the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.

We affirmed the trial justice and held that “a knowing or intentional assessment that is made discriminatorily would be unlawful.” Pice rne I, 428 A.2d at 1077; CIC-Newport Associates v. Stein, 121 R.I. 844, 403 A.2d 658 (1979). We held that plaintiffs “must show that defendants intentionally sifted them out for reassessment.” Pic erne I, 428 A.2d at 1077. Although we stated that attempts to correct past inequities without a general revaluation were not illegal per se or violative of constitutional provisions, we held that when tax authorities act out of improper or discriminatory motives, the legitimacy of the revaluation process ends. Id. at 1078.

Accordingly we held both that an abundance of legally competent evidence supported the factual findings and that the trial justice had ruled correctly that defendants had assessed plaintiffs’ property in an illegal manner for the 1979 tax year.

Ill

We turn to the case before us involving defendants’ writ of certiorari with regard to the 1980, 1981, and 1982 tax years. 4

In 1980, while defendants’ appeal in Pí-ceme I was pending, defendants in this action revalued and reassessed the same real estate of plaintiffs in the prior litigation.- Carlo DelBonis became the tax assessor in April 1980 and certified the tax roll for the 1980 tax year. Armand DiVincen-zo, who had been assessor during the prior period, left his position in September 1979, and Anthony J. Rusetta served as acting assessor until DelBonis was appointed in 1980. During that interim, DelBonis had the responsibility for assessing commercial and industrial properties and large apartment houses. DelBonis utilized another assessment method and revalued plaintiffs’ properties. After the reassessments, several property owners entered into a settlement agreement with defendants. The plaintiffs in the instant case chose to contest the new assessments determined by DelBonis. The plaintiffs collectively own sixteen pieces of property that are at issue on appeal.

When trial commenced in 1982, DelBonis testified that he reassessed the properties owned by plaintiffs because he was aware from Píceme I that the prior assessments of the properties were inequitable. He stated that the reassessments “were resultant in that I felt that the reassessments *1104 were incorrect and should be corrected.” With regard to the method he utilized, Del-Bonis testified that he discovered a “commercial schedule” that was prepared in 1954 by the Cole-Layer-Trumble Company, the firm that supervised the last citywide revaluation in that same year. DelBonis used the commercial schedule to reassess the apartment houses owned by plaintiffs for the 1980 tax year. However, DiVincen-zo, who had served as tax assessor and deputy tax assessor over a seventeen-year period, testified that he had always used an “apartment building schedule” to assess apartment buildings.

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Bluebook (online)
542 A.2d 1101, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 107, 1988 WL 63146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picerne-v-diprete-ri-1988.