Taylor Borough Appeal

182 A.2d 754, 408 Pa. 56, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 1962
DocketAppeals, 265 and 266
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 A.2d 754 (Taylor Borough Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor Borough Appeal, 182 A.2d 754, 408 Pa. 56, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 467 (Pa. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Benjamin R. Jones,

On these appeals two municipal subdivisions attack the jurisdiction of the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County to entertain appeals by two coal mining corporations from the assessment for 1961 tax purposes of their coal properties by the Board for the Assessment and Revision of Taxes of Lackawanna County [Board]. The basis of their attack is that the *58 coal mining corporations did not properly and timely, under the provisions of the Act of June 26, 1931, as amended, 1 file a written appeal to the Board from the assessments.

The Act of 1931, supra, section 8, as amended, provides, inter alia: (1) the assessment roll shall be open to public inspection at the Board’s office from the time of its completion 2 until the first day of November; (2) upon completion of the assessment roll, the Board shall give notice, by newspaper publication, of the completion of the roll, the place where and the time when the roll is open for public inspection and “shall, in the same notice, state that any person desiring to appeal from any assessment shall file with the board, on or before the first day of November, an appeal, in writing, designating the assessment appealed from”; (3) when the roll is completed but in no event later than the first day of October, the Board shall mail each property owner or person assessed, the value of whose property or personal assessment has not theretofore been separately fixed or the value of whose assessment has been changed, a notice of the change and the amount of the old and the new assessment; (4) this latter notice must state that any aggrieved person may appeal to the Board for trial by filing an appeal in writing on or before the first day of November; (5) the written appeal must set forth the assessment complained of and an address of the aggrieved person for notification purposes; (6) the Board is required to hear appeals beginning the first Monday of November, continue to meet until all appeals have been “heard and acted upon” and all appeals shall be *59 “heard and acted upon” not later than the first day of January; (7) on or before the fifteenth day of January the Board shall certify the assessed valuations to each appropriate political subdivision. 3

Parmoff Corporation and Penn Anthracite Corporation, [taxpayers], corporations engaged in the mining and preparation of anthracite coal, own property in Scranton, Throop, Dickson City and Old Forge but the great bulk of their property is in the Borough of Taylor. The Borough of Taylor and the School District of the Borough of Taylor are the present appellants.

For a proper disposition of these appeals it is vital that we view, in chronological order, the various steps taken by both the taxpayers and the Board in connection with the assessment placed by the Board for 1961 on the taxpayers’ property in the Borough of Taylor.

On October 21, 1960, 4 representatives of the taxpayers met with the chairman of the Board to request a reduction in the assessment for 1961 on the ground that a large portion of the taxpayers’ coal properties had been flooded and the coal therein could not be recovered. At that time the Board had not completed the assessment roll, had not given notice by publication of the completion of the roll and had set no time for taking appeals from assessments. At the meeting on October 21, 1960, the chairman of the Board stated that he would arrange for a meeting of the full Board with representatives of the taxpayers to discuss a possible reduction in assessment for 1961. Three weeks later — November 15, 1960 — a representative of the tax *60 payers — in response to telephone calls — appeared at a Board meeting and a hearing before the Board was held at which were present all the members of the Board, its clerk, its counsel and its mining engineer as well as representatives of the taxpayers. At that meeting the taxpayers presented to the Board evidence to show that their coal properties had been flooded, the extent of such flooding and the expectation of further flooding, all for the purpose of securing a reduction in assessment for 1961. 5

On or about December 13, 1960 the Board, having requested additional data from the taxpayers, was furnished such data at its meeting. On December 21, 1960, counsel for the taxpayers and for the Board orally agreed “that while these negotiations are pending it is considered that no final assessment has been made from which an appeal would lie” and the existence of that oral agreement is not questioned on these appeals.

On December 27, 1960 a representative of the taxpayers appeared at another Board meeting and supplied and explained to the Board certain additional data. Several weeks later — January 17, 1961 — a representative of the taxpayers, again at the Board’s request, appeared at a Board meeting and discussed a reduced assessment for 1961.

On February 24, 1961, the taxpayers received tax bills for that portion of their properties located in Scranton City. 6 Thirteen days later — March 9, 1961— *61 the taxpayers filed written appeals to the Board from the assessments upon which the tax bills were based. Sometime later in March, 7 the appeals of March 9, 1961 were amended to include all taxpayers’ other properties in Lackawanna County not covered by the tax bills of February 24, 1961 and “as shown on maps or other documents previously supplied to the Board . .

While certification of valuation of taxpayers’ properties was made to the Borough and School District of Taylor on July 21, 1961, it was not until November 21, 1961. that the Board entered orders which formally and finally denied taxpayers’ appeals for reductions in the 1961 assessment. From these orders appeals were taken on November 80, 1961 to the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County. At this stage the Borough and School District of Taylor intervened and filed petitions challenging the jurisdiction of the court to entertain these appeals. After hearing, the court below held that the taxpayers should not be prejudiced by the informality of the procedure before the Board nor by irregularities in the Board’s records, stating “the taxpayer entered an appeal from the definitive assessment as soon as it had notice thereof, and made timely appeal . . . from the final decision of the Board . . . .” From the dismissal of the petition attacking jurisdiction these appeals were taken.

The position of appellants is that the taxpayers’ appeals to the Board were not timely filed nor were the appeals in writing as required by the statute. Appellants argue that, under the statute, the appeals should have been filed on or before November 1, 1960 or that, under the notice by publication given by the *62

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Bluebook (online)
182 A.2d 754, 408 Pa. 56, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-borough-appeal-pa-1962.