Sunrise Retirement Villa v. Dear

58 Cal. App. 4th 948, 68 Cal. Rptr. 2d 948, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8275, 97 Daily Journal DAR 13341, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 863
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 27, 1997
DocketC024496
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 58 Cal. App. 4th 948 (Sunrise Retirement Villa v. Dear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunrise Retirement Villa v. Dear, 58 Cal. App. 4th 948, 68 Cal. Rptr. 2d 948, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8275, 97 Daily Journal DAR 13341, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 863 (Cal. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion

CALLAHAN, J.

Revenue and Taxation Code section 51.5 (all further unspecified statutory references are to this code) requires a county tax assessor to correct errors in the tax roll which are not based on judgment as to value in the same assessment year they are “discovered.” This case calls on us to plumb the murky waters of available remedies when the county assessor refuses the taxpayer’s request to correct such an error eight years after it was allegedly made and the normal time for appeal has expired.

In 1986 the Placer County Assessor (Assessor) determined there had been a change in ownership on property owned by plaintiffs to trigger a new “base year” for purposes of property valuation under article XIII A of the California Constitution. The determination triggered a supplemental assessment and was reflected in valuations for succeeding years.

In 1994 plaintiffs discovered facts which they claimed showed the Assessor had erred in determining that ownership had changed. After failing to persuade the Assessor, plaintiffs filed an appeal with the Placer County Assessment Appeals Board (AAB) to change the assessment. The AAB ruled it had no jurisdiction because the application was filed more than four years after the Assessor redetermined the base-year value (§ 80, subd. (a)(3)).

Plaintiffs thereafter filed this petition for writ of mandate in superior court, asking that the court either (1) direct the Assessor to correct its 1986 base-year value to reflect no change in ownership, or (2) compel the AAB to *952 set aside its order denying the application for lack of jurisdiction and set the matter for a hearing on the merits.

The trial court granted the first prayer for relief. On this appeal, we will conclude it should have granted the second.

Background

The properties which are the focus of this appeal are two separately assessed parcels known in rolls of the Assessor as Parcel No. 470-010-045 (Parcel 045) and Parcel No. 470-010-001 (Parcel 001). Prior to 1986, record title to Parcel 001 stood in the name of Edward and Nancy Latin (Latin), David Lonon (Lonon), and Michael Klein (Klein). Parcel 045, on the other hand, stood in the name of Latin only under a 1977 grant deed.

In September 1986 Klein, Latin, and Lonon formed a partnership known as Sunrise Retirement Villa (SRV) whose purpose was to construct and operate a retirement facility on the parcels.

In 1986 the three partners deeded Parcel 001 to SRV and Latin deeded Parcel 045 to SRV. 1 On the basis of the documentation available, the Assessor determined there had been a change in ownership for both parcels in 1986 and reassessed the property. (§ 60 et seq.) Supplemental assessments were levied and revised assessment notices were sent.

Lonon died in 1990. During a probate of his estate, one of the surviving partners of SRV reviewed the large tax bill owed by the partners to Placer County and discovered the 1986 change in ownership reassessment. SRV promptly reported to the Assessor’s office that a mistake had been made with respect to both parcels, maintaining the deeds conveying title to SRV merely changed the form of ownership from the individual partners to the partnership.

The 1986 deed for Parcel 001 showed a transfer from Lonon, Klein, and Latin to SRV, but the deed for Parcel 045 showed a conveyance only from Latin to SRV. On this basis, the Assessor concluded that an error had been made in its change of ownership determination for Parcel 001 (§ 62, subd. (a)(1)), but there was insufficient evidence that Klein and Lonon coowned Parcel 045 equally with Latin such that in fact no change of ownership *953 occurred with respect to the 1986 deed for that parcel. The Assessor made the correction to the assessment roll and issued a refund on Parcel 001, but refused to change the roll for Parcel 045.

There ensued a period of correspondence and meetings between SRV and the Assessor during which SRV provided documentation in support of its claim that the subject property had been coowned by the individual partners in SRV since the middle of 1982 notwithstanding that record title stood solely in the name of Latin at the time of the 1986 deed. One of the documents was a superior court judgment obtained by stipulation on a complaint by SRV to quiet title. The judgment was obtained in response to county counsel’s statement to SRV’s attorney that “[cjourt judgments or decrees concerning this property” would provide “crucial” support to the claim of continuous coownership. The judgment obligingly recited that “ownership of the subject property remained in the Latins, Lonons, and Kleins from the middle of 1982 until the property was transferred on October 20, 1986 to [SRV].”

The judgment failed to persuade the Assessor to change his position that there was insufficient evidence that Klein and Lonon held partnership interests in the property prior to 1986. SRV then appealed his decision to AAB by filing an application for a changed assessment.

The application came before the AAB for an administrative hearing. At the hearing, a motion was made, prior to the introduction of evidence, to refuse to hear the appeal on jurisdictional grounds, because SRV’s application was made beyond the four-year limitation period for challenging base-year value reassessments established in section 80, subdivision (a)(3) (section 80(a)(3)). The motion carried and the appeal was “denied” for lack of jurisdiction.

Plaintiffs SRV and its surviving partners then commenced this action for writ of mandate in superior court against both the Assessor and the AAB. The essential thrust of the petition is: (1) under section 51.5, errors in the assessment roll which are not based on judgment as to value (hereafter nonjudgmental errors) may be corrected anytime during the year in which they are discovered; (2) SRV had conclusively shown the Assessor committed such an error in refusing to correct the roll upon proof that no change of ownership occurred; (3) the Assessor abused his discretion in refusing to carry out his “mandatory duty” to correct the error; and (4) the AAB abused its discretion in refusing to hear the appeal on statute of limitations grounds.

Plaintiffs prayed for either a peremptory writ commanding the Assessor to correct the 1986 base-year value determination and change the rolls accordingly, or directing the AAB to set aside its previous order and hear the appeal.

*954 After overruling the Assessor’s demurrer, receiving voluminous evidence, and holding a hearing, the court issued a peremptory writ ordering the Assessor to make the correction. In its written ruling, the court placed crucial reliance on the judgment decreeing that the SRV partners had continuously owned the property since 1982. In the words of the court: “[The] judgment in rem was binding on all the world, and the Assessor was not entitled to disregard it.”

Appeal

I

The Parties’ Positions

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Bluebook (online)
58 Cal. App. 4th 948, 68 Cal. Rptr. 2d 948, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8275, 97 Daily Journal DAR 13341, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunrise-retirement-villa-v-dear-calctapp-1997.