Salom Pizá v. Secretary of the Treasury

92 P.R. 224
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 12, 1965
DocketNo. R-64-93
StatusPublished

This text of 92 P.R. 224 (Salom Pizá v. Secretary of the Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salom Pizá v. Secretary of the Treasury, 92 P.R. 224 (prsupreme 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blanco Lugo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

[225]*225The taxpayer, Pedro Salom Pizá, is the owner of real estate located on Ponce de León Avenue, in Santurce, known as the Hotel Capitol. On the 1273-square-meter lot there are two buildings: one, a five-story building constructed in 1928, and the other, also a five-story building constructed in two steps, first the basement and two stories in 1951 and later the upper three stories in 1961.

For the fiscal year 1951-52, the beginning of the scientific assessment method, and for the following years up to 1957-58, the Secretary of the Treasury determined, under codification number 040 037 013 01 901, the assessed value of the property to be $202,880. This value was broken down on the tax receipts as follows: lot $37,300, buildings, $165,580. According to the assessment cards offered by the taxpayer, the $165,580 value was made up as follows: building No. 1, $82,690; building No. 2, $78,890; and machinery, $4,000.

When the first revision of the scientific assessment method was carried out in 1958, the assessed value was increased, as shown on the cards, as follows:

1951 1958
Lot $ 82,300 $ 61,850
Building No. 1 82,690 105,490
Building No. 2 78,890 100,360
Machinery 4,000 6,440

However, when the 1958-59 to 1961-62 tax receipts were issued under an identical codification which stated that they corresponded to two concrete buildings (2H), a $173,780 assessment value was determined, $61,850 of this amount corresponding to the lot and $111,930 to the buildings. A simple mathematical computation shows that at the time of assessment of the buildings for the purpose of issuing tax receipts only the value of building No. 1, $105,490, and that of the machinery, $6,440 were considered, and the value of building No. 2, $100,360, was completely ignored.

[226]*226On October 2, 1961, the Secretary served upon the taxpayer additional tax receipts under codification number 040 037 013 01 002 for a concrete building with an assessment value of $100,360 for the years 1958-59 to 1960-61. Six days later the taxpayer was notified by an additional receipt of the assessment for the year 1961-62, under the identical codification number, with a $182,520 assessment for the same building. The $82,160 increase represents 70% of the addition of the three upper stories in building No. 2.1

The taxpayer, Salom Pizá, because he understood that this was a “retroactive” assessment of real property which had been “definitively” assessed — the original receipts issued by the Secretary were completely paid — instituted an appeal before the Superior Court, San Juan Part, requesting the cancellation of the additional receipts. He also contested the Secretary’s power to issue notice of such receipts, “since no property was omitted in the assessment . . . nor were there new structures justifying the aforementioned retroactive receipts.”2

The trial court sustained the complaint. The grounds for the decision appear in the two following paragraphs:

“From the receipts originally paid it appears that the tax was imposed on two structures, that is, the original one of 1929 and the annex of 1951. This would seem to be substantiated by the ‘901’ codification appearing in the receipt.
“A reassessment of the property was made in 1957, and for the years in this complaint it appears from the receipts that the lot, the building erected in 1929, and the annex erected in 1951 (lot and 2H) were assessed in the aforementioned amount. [227]*227The additional assessment for the year 1961 refers to one structure (1H). It cannot be said that that structure is a different one than the one referred to on the receipts already paid by the taxpayer. On these receipts the property was assessed lower than intended, but all this was under the control of the Secretary. What was done in 1961 could have been prospectively done since the receipts were already paid, and on that date, and since 1951, the annex has been assessed. It was not omitted from assessment. This is a case of an assessment in an amount less than the one intended. In these cases assessment shall not be made retroactively.”

The court, in a short resolution ruling on a request for reconsideration, ratified its criterion on the illegality of the additional receipts as follows:

“It cannot be sustained that the taxpayer, when he originally paid the receipt, did not pay for the lot and two buildings. The new receipt would be for an additional building. The taxpayer paid for the assessed lot and two buildings, but they were assessed in an amount less than the one intended. The receipts and the codification pointed out that the structures and the lot were assessed. The new receipt would be duplicity.”

1. The applicable law is centralized in § 303 of the Political Code, 1902 ed., as subsequently amended,3 13 L.P.R.A. § 454, providing:

“Whenever the Secretary of the Treasury of Puerto Rico shall learn that any real property liable to taxation has been omitted from the assessment of property of any taxpayer for any fiscal year or years, beginning with the fiscal year 1901-02, he shall immediately cause the same to be assessed for the years for which such property has failed of assessment, shall add such [228]*228property to the tax rolls for such years, and shall proceed to the collection of the taxes appertaining to the same and of all the surcharges accruing on account of such taxes not having been paid promptly, in the same manner as he collects other taxes under this title; Provided, however, That where such property has failed to be assessed and taxed through no willful default of the owner, it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to remit the surcharges in full. In all cases where property, real or personal, has been assessed for any fiscal year or years, but such assessment has been made in other than the name of the true owner or holder thereof, or has been so made as to be void, the Secretary of the Treasury of Puerto Rico shall cancel such assessment, eliminate the same from the tax rolls, and withdraw and cancel the tax receipts or bills corresponding to the same; and he shall proceed to assess such property and correct the tax rolls accordingly, and to collect such taxes as may be pending payment, appertaining to such re-assessment, in the same manner as is herein in this section provided for the assessment and collection of taxes on real property that have improperly failed of assessment. The Secretary of the Treasury or his agents in charge of property assessment shall have until up to the last day of the taxable year to assess and review the assessment of personal property for the taxable year involved.”

In García Commercial v. Sec. of the Treasury, 80 P.R.R. 739 (1958), the power of the Secretary to assess and levy property taxes is fully discussed. Even though that case dealt specifically with personal-property taxes, everything connected with taxation of real property was considered by way of comparison.

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92 P.R. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salom-piza-v-secretary-of-the-treasury-prsupreme-1965.