Post-Newsweek Cable, Inc. v. Board of Review

497 N.W.2d 810, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 77, 1993 WL 81436
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 24, 1993
Docket91-1010
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 497 N.W.2d 810 (Post-Newsweek Cable, Inc. v. Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Post-Newsweek Cable, Inc. v. Board of Review, 497 N.W.2d 810, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 77, 1993 WL 81436 (iowa 1993).

Opinion

LAVORATO, Justice.

After unsuccessful tax protests to the city and county boards of review, the taxpayer appealed its real estate tax assessments to the district court. The assessments in question are for the year 1989 on certain cable television property located in the Sioux City and Woodbury County assessing jurisdictions. The district court reduced the assessments, and the boards of review and their chairpersons appealed to this court. We affirm.

The questions in this case concern burden of proof, methods of valuation, and the amount of the valuations.

Post-Newsweek Cable, Inc. owns Soo-land Cablecom, a cable television system in Woodbury County. The system provides service to Sioux City and Woodbury County. The taxable assets subject to the tax protests consisted of trunk and distribution systems (identified as RF distribution systems), head end equipment and microwave equipment.

The assessments for 1989 yielded a combined figure in excess of $5,500,000. This figure was then allocated between the city of Sioux City and Woodbury County based upon subscriber information. The property for the county was assessed at $162,344. The property for the city was assessed at $5,500,000.

Post-Newsweek objected to these assessments as excessive and filed protests with the boards of review of the city of Sioux City and Woodbury County. See Iowa Code § 441.37 (1989). The boards affirmed the assessments. Post-Newsweek then sought separate reviews of these assessments by the district court. See Iowa Code §§ 441.38, 441.39.

The district court ordered the cases consolidated by agreement among the parties. After a trial de novo, the court found the assessments excessive and decreased the combined assessment to $2,000,000. See Iowa Code §§ 441.39, 441.43. Based on a stipulation among the parties, the court then allocated 96.86% of the assessment to the city and 3.14% of the assessment to the county.

The boards and their chairpersons then filed this appeal.

Our review is de novo. Richards v. Hardin County Bd. of Review, 393 N.W.2d 148, 150 (Iowa 1986). We give the *813 district court’s fact findings consideration — especially as to witness credibility— but we are not bound by them. Iowa R.App.P. 14(f)(7). We decide the ultimate issues involved. Equitable Life Ins. Co. v. Board of Review, 281 N.W.2d 821, 827 (Iowa 1979). In doing so, we — like the district court — follow the statutory rule that “there shall be no presumption as to the correctness of the valuation of assessment appealed from.” Iowa Code § 441.89.

I. Burden of Proof.

In tax assessment cases such as this one,

[t]he burden of proof shall be upon any complainant attacking such valuation as excessive, inadequate, inequitable or capricious; however, in protest or appeal proceedings when the complainant offers competent evidence by at least two disinterested witnesses that the market value of the property is less than the market value determined by the assessor, the burden of proof thereafter shall be upon the officials or persons seeking to uphold such valuation to be assessed.

Iowa Code § 441.21(8). The burden of proof referred to is one of persuasion. Wunschel v. Board of Review, 217 N.W.2d 576, 578 (Iowa 1974). If the complainant fails to shift the burden of proof, the complainant must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the challenged valuation is excessive, inadequate, or capricious. Id.

The defendants — the boards and their chairpersons — contend that one of Post-Newsweek’s two experts, Don Turlington, was not a disinterested witness. For this reason, the defendants argue, the burden of proof did not shift to them to uphold the valuation.

Post-Newsweek engaged Turlington as an independent consultant to file compliance information with the Sioux City assessor and the Woodbury County assessor. The information furnished was historical and was not accompanied by any opinions by Turlington.

Turlington had no financial interest in the assessments for which the city and county assessors were responsible. Nor did Turlington make the decision to appeal the assessments to the boards of review. Roughly ten percent of his work, however, comes from Post-Newsweek.

An attorney represented Post-Newsweek before the two boards. Turlington did appear as an expert witness for Post-Newsweek at the hearings before the boards.

On appeal to the district court, Post-News week’s attorney — not Post-Newsweek — engaged Turlington as an expert. The attorney had used Turlington as an expert before.

“Disinterested witnesses” in Iowa Code section 441.21(3) is not defined. So we are obliged to give the term its ordinary meaning. See State v. Hennenfent, 490 N.W.2d 299, 300 (Iowa 1992). One dictionary defines disinterested witness as “one who has no interest in the cause or matter in issue, and who is lawfully competent to testify.” Black’s Law Dictionary 468 (6th ed. 1990). “Interest” is defined as “[t]he most general term that can be employed to denote a right, claim, title, or legal share in something.” Id. at 812. Putting the two definitions together, we have the following definition of disinterested witness: One who has no right, claim, title, or legal share in the cause or matter in issue, and who is lawfully competent to testify.

There is no record evidence that Turlington had any proprietary interest in the appeal at the time he testified. Nor is there any contention that he was not competent to testify. In our de novo review, we find that Turlington was a disinterested witness when he testified. Thus two disinterested witnesses testified that the market value of the taxable assets was less than the assessor’s valuation. The burden of persuasion was therefore on the defendants to uphold their valuation of the subject properties to be assessed. Wunschel, 217 N.W.2d at 578.

II. Methods of Valuation.

A. Applicable law. For the purposes of Iowa Code chapter 441, assessable property includes “all real and tangible person *814

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Bluebook (online)
497 N.W.2d 810, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 77, 1993 WL 81436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/post-newsweek-cable-inc-v-board-of-review-iowa-1993.