State ex rel. State Board of Equalization v. Barta

188 P.3d 1092, 124 Nev. 612, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 58, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 63
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 2008
DocketNo. 47397; No. 47398; No. 47399; No. 47400; No. 47401
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 188 P.3d 1092 (State ex rel. State Board of Equalization v. Barta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. State Board of Equalization v. Barta, 188 P.3d 1092, 124 Nev. 612, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 58, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 63 (Neb. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Hardesty, J.:

These consolidated appeals arise from the same central conflict over property tax valuation that we addressed in State, Board of Equalization v. Bakst.2 In Bakst, several taxpayers challenged the Washoe County Assessor’s use of certain appraisal methods to es[616]*616tablish the taxable values of their properties for the 2003-2004 tax year. The district court, and later this court, determined that the Assessor’s methods were unconstitutional and ordered the taxpayers’ properties’ taxable values rolled back to the 2002-2003 tax year levels.3

Meanwhile, several Incline Village and Crystal Bay area property owners in Washoe County, including many of the taxpayers involved in the Bakst litigation, administratively challenged the Washoe County Assessor’s assessments for the subsequent tax year, 2004-2005. Both the Washoe County and State Boards of Equalization denied the Taxpayers relief, and the Taxpayers petitioned the district court for judicial review. The district court determined that the Taxpayers’ petitions for judicial review presented issues that were factually identical to the issues in Bakst, which at that point had been decided at the district court level and was pending appellate review. As a consequence, the district court granted their petitions and rolled back their properties’ 2004-2005 taxable values to the 2002-2003 rates, as was done to the prior year’s values in Bakst. These consolidated appeals from the district court’s orders regarding the 2004-2005 tax year followed.

In resolving these appeals we, like the district court, conclude that nothing significant distinguishes these cases, factually or legally, from Bakst. The State and County appellants nevertheless contend that, even if unconstitutional methods were used to determine the respondent Taxpayers’ properties taxable values, we should reverse the district court orders granting the petitions for judicial review because the Taxpayers failed to prove that their properties’ 2004-2005 taxable values exceeded their full cash values. That position, however, disregards a taxpayer’s right to a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation, which is guaranteed by Article 10, Section 1 of the Nevada Constitution. We conclude, as we stated in Bakst, that a property value determined using unconstitutional, nonuniform methods is necessarily unjust and inequitable. Thus, because the methods used to value a taxpayer’s property are a material consideration in determining whether the property was justly and equitably valued, a taxpayer may challenge an assessment based on the use of unconstitutional methods even if the assessment does not exceed full cash value. Since the Taxpayers here properly challenged their assessments and demonstrated that those assessments were based on unconstitutional methods, we affirm the district court’s orders.

[617]*617 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In assessing property for tax purposes, county assessors must determine the property’s “taxable value”4 by separately appraising the “full cash value” of improved land consistently with the use of the improvements, and the replacement cost of any improvements, less depreciation and obsolescence.5 The taxable value must not exceed the entire property’s “full cash value.”6 Then, assessors calculate 35 percent of the taxable value to establish the property’s “assessed value,” the amount on which property taxes are ultimately based.7

By statute, assessors are required to determine taxable value by physically reappraising properties at least once every five years.8 Appellant the Washoe County Assessor last physically reappraised properties located in Incline Village and Crystal Bay in 2002, to establish their values for the 2003-2004 tax year.9 In appraising the properties, the Assessor used a “sales comparison approach” to value the land. Thus, to arrive at the taxable value for the subject land, the Assessor relied on sales prices of properties in the surrounding area, adjusting the sales prices of those properties and the subject land’s valuation based on the properties’ comparable views, beachfront qualities, times of sale, and planned uses.

Pursuant to several taxpayer challenges, we reviewed the Assessor’s 2003-2004 Incline Village and Crystal Bay assessments in Bakst. Our review led to the conclusion that the methods the Assessor used to adjust the comparable sales prices were unconstitutional because they had not been established or approved by the Nevada Tax Commission and varied from the methods used in other parts of Washoe County and throughout the State.10 Accordingly, we rolled back the properties’ taxable values to the 2002-2003 tax year rates.11

While the Bakst case was proceeding through the various stages of review, the Assessor assessed property taxes in Washoe County for the next tax year, 2004-2005, which is at issue here. The [618]*6182004-2005 tax year was a factoring year for the Incline Village and Crystal Bay area, meaning that the Assessor was not compelled to physically reappraise each property’s value. If the Assessor did not reappraise a property, he was required by statute to determine the property’s current assessed value by multiplying the prior year’s assessed value by a factor for any improvements, developed by the Tax Commission, and a factor for land, developed by the Assessor and approved by the Tax Commission.12

No statute or regulation governs the factors’ development, except for a statute requiring that the land factor chosen result in a median assessed-value to taxable-value ratio between 30 and 35 percent.13 Apparently, the land factor for the Incline Village and Crystal Bay area for the 2004-2005 tax year was 1.0, and the improvements factor was 1.00962. According to the Assessor, to establish the assessed values for 2004-2005, he multiplied the 2003-2004 assessed values by the above factors, resulting in a slight increase in total assessed value for each property in 2004-2005. In certain instances, however, the record demonstrates that the Assessor visited the properties and established valuations for 2004-2005 by altering his previous classification of the property’s view or beach quality.

Arguing that the Assessor used unconstitutional and unauthorized methodologies in determining the 2004-2005 values of their properties, respondents, who comprise 35 Incline Village and Crystal Bay area taxpayers, administratively challenged their 2004-2005 property taxes. In responding to the Taxpayers’ challenges, the Assessor did not rely on any explanation of factoring to justify his 2004-2005 assessments, but instead presented an analysis of comparable sales establishing that the properties’ taxable values for 2004-2005 did not exceed their full cash values. The analysis of comparable sales in each case used at least one of the methods that this court declared unconstitutional in Bakst.

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Bluebook (online)
188 P.3d 1092, 124 Nev. 612, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 58, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-board-of-equalization-v-barta-nev-2008.