Town of Watertown v. Dibeneditto, No. 114556 (Dec. 2, 1993)
This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 10404 (Town of Watertown v. Dibeneditto, No. 114556 (Dec. 2, 1993)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
"Once the moving party has presented evidence in support of CT Page 10405 the motion for summary judgment, the opposing party must present evidence that demonstrates the existence of some factual issue." (Citations omitted.) Scrapchansky v. Plainfield,
In the present case, the defendant, John DiBeneditto denies that he was properly taxed. He submits the minutes of the meeting of the inland wetlands commission which attack the right of the plaintiff to collect its taxes by asserting that the plaintiff's assessment of the property was improper.
The plaintiff argues that the proper vehicle for challenging an assessment of property is through a tax appeal pursuant to General Statutes
"It is not to the advantage of the State that those whom it seeks to tax should refuse to pay their taxes in order to test their validity . . . The more orderly course is compliance with the law by a payment, reserving the right to contest the validity of the required payment." (Citation omitted.) Hartford v. Faith Center Inc.,
The claim that a property had been wrongfully or excessively assesses can be appealed in one of two ways: (1) to the board of tax review and from there, within two months, to the superior court pursuant to General Statute
12-111 and12-118 ; or (2) by direct action to the court within one year from the date when the property was last evaluated for the purposes of taxation pursuant to General Statute12-119 .
(Footnote omitted.) Norwich v. Lebanon,
Given that the statutory procedures provide a `convenient and effective opportunity' to procure `complete relief' from an illegal assessment we see no reason to allow a taxpayer who has failed to utilize the available statutory remedies to assert, in an action to collect a tax . . . that the tax has not been properly assessed.
(Internal quotation marks omitted; citations omitted.) Hartford v. Faith Center, Inc., supra, 491.
The defendant's claim of unlawful assessment raised in his answer and special defense should have been redressed through an appeal to the tax board under General Statutes
The motion for summary judgment is granted.
SYLVESTER, J.
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