South Iowa Methodist Homes, Inc. v. Board of Review

393 N.W.2d 804, 1986 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1301
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 15, 1986
DocketNo. 85-1745
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 393 N.W.2d 804 (South Iowa Methodist Homes, 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
South Iowa Methodist Homes, Inc. v. Board of Review, 393 N.W.2d 804, 1986 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1301 (iowa 1986).

Opinion

NEUMAN, Justice.

In this appeal from a summary judgment entered in a certiorari action, we consider which of two statutory schemes, chapter 427 or chapter 441 of the 1985 Code of Iowa, dictates the process by which a tax exempt status previously enjoyed by a property owner may be revoked.

Plaintiff South Iowa Methodist Homes, Co. Inc. (SIMH) is the owner of real estate located in Atlantic, Cass County, Iowa. In January 1983, and in preceding years since SIMH acquired ownership of the real estate, it had filed with the county assessor a duly verified statement of objects and uses as required by section 427.1(23) of the relevant Iowa Code. Each year, SIMH’s claim for exemption had been allowed, based on the property’s use for religious, charitable or benevolent purposes.

A Code amendment enacted in 1983 eliminated the requirement of annual filings for property on which a claim of exemption had been previously filed and allowed, so long as the property continued to be used for the purposes specified in the original claim for exemption. 1983 Iowa Acts ch. 178 (codified at Iowa Code § 427.1(23) (1985)). Nevertheless, in January 1985, the Cass County assessor requested that SIMH file a statement of objects and uses. SIMH complied, reciting the same objects and uses for the property as in former years.

Subsequently, the Cass County Board of Review (board) partially denied this “application” for property tax exemption filed by SIMH, asserting insufficient evidence that the property was being used for charitable purposes.

SIMH protested the action of the board and after hearing, the board affirmed its previous action. SIMH then filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the district court, claiming that the board’s action taken pursuant to section 441.35(2) was illegal and beyond its jurisdiction, reasoning that an exemption once allowed may only be revoked by following the provisions of section 427.1(26) by application to, or action of, the Director of Revenue. In a subsequent hearing on plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court entered judgment in favor of SIMH, concluding that the board’s action was not within the jurisdiction conferred by statute upon a county board of review. We agree with the trial court and affirm.

The facts are not in dispute and thus the issues were properly raised and decided by summary judgment. Iowa R.Civ.P. 237(c). Because the case involves a jurisdictional challenge to a county board of review’s exercise of its judicial function, the plaintiff properly sought a writ of certiorari. Iowa R.Civ.P. 306; Curtis v. Board of Supervisors of Clinton County, 270 N.W.2d 447, 449 (Iowa 1978).

The question posed by the SIMH protest and this appeal is not whether the property owned by SIMH is entitled to a property tax exemption, but whether the board of review acted legally in proceeding under section 441.35(2) to revoke SIMH’s previously exempt status. Section 441.35(2), upon which the board relies, authorizes the board of review “[t]o add to the assessment rolls any taxable property which has been omitted by the assessor.” The trial court found that this “omitted property” power did not authorize the board’s action with regard to property previously enjoying an exempt status. We agree.

[806]*806The board’s entire argument rests on the premise that exempt property equals omitted property, an equation apparently derived from the following Department of Revenue ruling which has been incorporated into a Department of Revenue guidebook for local boards of review:

Previously exempt property. Property which has been erroneously determined to be exempt from taxation may be restored to taxation by the making of an omitted assessment. See Talley v. Brown, 146 Iowa 360, 125 N.W. 243 [248] (1910). An omitted assessment is also made to restore to taxation previously exempt property which ceases to be eligible for an exemption.

730 Iowa Admin.Code § 71.25(l)(b); accord, § 71.20(3)(b).

Ordinarily, we give great weight to an agency’s construction of a statutory provision that it is charged with enforcing. State ex rel. McElhinney v. All-Iowa Agricultural Association, 242 Iowa 860, 868, 48 N.W.2d 281, 285 (1951). However, in this case we are compelled to reject both the Department of Revenue’s interpretation of Talley v. Brown, supra, and the board’s resultant suggestion that the words omit and exempt are synonymous in the context of a property tax assessment.

First of all, Talley was not an exemption case. In Talley, the county assessor omitted from the tax rolls a contingent claim to fire insurance proceeds in the belief that the claim did not constitute personal property subject to taxation. We held that the assessor’s decision was no obstacle to the subsequent determination by the county treasurer that the claim was a chose in action subject to taxation. The decision discussed at length the importance of a four-tier system of checks and balances involving the assessor, treasurer, auditor and board of review, designed to insure that no property, real or personal, escaped taxation. An important distinction was drawn, however, between property carelessly or deliberately overlooked, and property previously determined to be exempt from taxation:

Of course, property declared nontaxable by a tribunal on which authority to decide has been conferred is not omitted property within the meaning of the law for it has been adjudged otherwise.

125 N.W. at 254.

In the seventy-six years since Talley was decided, society and the tax system have changed markedly. Under the present system, the emphasis has shifted from locating property and preventing corrupt officials from overlooking its existence, to debate over valuation and exemption. In 1910, it was undoubtedly difficult to discover all property “real and personal” including “ ... bank bills, government currency, property or labor due from solvent debtors on contract or judgment, mortgages or other like securities” and “every claim or demand due or to become due for money, labor, or other valuable thing, and all money or property of any kind secured by deed ...” not to mention, “[a]ccounts, contracts for cash or labor ... [and] choses inaction.” Iowa Code §§ 1308-1310(1910); Talley at 249. With so much property to find and assess, the legislature understandably enacted a system in which more than one elected official monitored the assessor’s responsibility to see that no property escaped taxation. The primarily real property based system of taxation in existence today has substantially reduced that effort. See generally Iowa Code § 427A.10 (1985 Supp.) (all personal property tax is eliminated on July 1, 1987.) Nevertheless, the backup system still functions when property is omitted. Okland v. Bilyeu, 359 N.W.2d 412

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Related

Richards v. Iowa Department of Revenue
414 N.W.2d 344 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
393 N.W.2d 804, 1986 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-iowa-methodist-homes-inc-v-board-of-review-iowa-1986.