Twentieth Century Investment Co. v. City of Juneau

359 P.2d 783, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 71
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 1961
Docket42
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 359 P.2d 783 (Twentieth Century Investment Co. v. City of Juneau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twentieth Century Investment Co. v. City of Juneau, 359 P.2d 783, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 71 (Ala. 1961).

Opinion

DIMOND, Justice.

The Twentieth Century Investment Company sued the City of Juneau to recover property taxes paid under protest for the years 1955, 1956 and 1957. It was contended (1) that the assessments were so lacking in uniformity as to deny the Company the equal protection of the laws; and (2) that the tax assessments were so grossly in excess of actual value of the property taxed as to constitute a constructive fraud and a taking of the taxpayer’s property without due process of law. The district court found that the property involved was properly assessed at its true value within reasonable limits, and judgment was entered for the City. This appeal followed.

The property involved is the Twentieth Century Building, a steel and concrete structure containing a moving picture theater, some stores and offices, and a number of apartments. It was constructed in 1940 at an approximate cost of $237,300, but was valued for tax purposes that year at less than $75,000.

Real property in the City was revalued in 1945 using a method which contemplated the actual replacement cost of a structure less depreciation. Replacement cost was estimated by measuring the cubic capacity of a 'building and multiplying this by a certain rate per cubic foot depending upon the type of construction involved. The Twentieth Century Building was found to contain 400,000 cubic feet and the rate applied was fifty cents a cubic foot, resulting in a gross assessment value of $200,000. A twenty per cent depreciation factor was allowed, and the value was thus reduced to $160,000. Then, after a protest from the taxpayer, the City’s Board of Equalization further reduced the assessment value to $89,000. This remained unchanged for the next nine years.

In 1955 the City directed its assessor to reappraise all property in the City in order to remove alleged disparities in property valuations. The cost method was utilized by the assessor for buildings — i. e., reconstruction cost in 1955 less depreciation to a maximum of fifty per cent depending upon the type of construction, age, and condition of the building.

The assessor’s first valuation of the Twentieth Century Building was not based solely on the cost method. In appraising the theater area of this building, he applied what was called a “modified capitalization of income technique”, which took into consideration anticipated revenues based on theater admission prices and seating capacity. The result of this was that the theater area was valued at $103,676, and the remainder of the building (utilizing the cost method), at $261,655 — for a total assessed value of $365,331.

By letter to the assessor the Company protested this valuation as being excessive. The assessor responded by stating that he had rescinded the original appraisal and had revalued the building. He abandoned the modified capitalization of income method, and utilizing the cost less depreciation approach, arrived at a total building valuation of $681,500, with the theater area being assessed at $347,800. He gave as his-reason for the change that the previous-method of valuing the theater area was a. controversial issue, that it constituted a deviation from the established building valuation formula based on reconstruction cost less depreciation, and that it constituted an usurpation of the prerogative of the Board of Equalization. He also pointed out in the answer to the Company’s objections as to excess valuation that the assessment of' the building prior to 1954 had been based on an estimate that the building contained 400,000 cubic feet, whereas in fact it measured 561,593 cubic feet, and that as a result the Company had experienced a tax *785 saving and the city a tax loss,, since 1945, of over $7,000.

The Company applied for relief to the City’s Board of Equalization, and it reduced the assessed value of the building to $603,200. This was final. In 1957 the Company’s protests again were heard by the Board, but no further reduction was allowed.

1. Uniformity

The Company argues that the tax valuation placed on its property violates the uniformity requirements of the Alaska Organic Act 1 , an act of the Territorial Legislature empowering cities to assess, levy and collect property taxes 2 , and the applicable taxing ordinance of the City of Juneau. 3

It bases this argument on a comparison between the Twentieth Century Building theater area and that portion of the First National Bank Building containing the Capitol Theater, the Company’s sole competitor in Juneau. The Twentieth Century Theater, containing slightly in excess of 339,000 cubic feet, was assigned a reconstruction cost rate of $1.35 a' cubic foot. Twenty-five per cent depreciation was allowed, and the net assessed value was in excess of $347,000. The Capitol Theater contained 126,714 cubic feet, and the rate used was $1.08 a cubic foot. Fifty per cent depreciation was allowed, resulting in a net assessed valuation of $68,425. The Company contends that factors such as respective seating capacity (600 for the Capitol and 1,000 for the Twentieth Century), cost of operation, and average gross income ought to have been considered by the assessor, and that if they had been, that from the standpoint of actual value the two theaters would be found to be identical and therefore ought to have been accorded equal and uniform treatment. It is thus proof of an unlawful discrimination, the Company asserts, to assess its theater area in an amount approximately five hundred per cent higher than that of its competitor.

It has been determined that the uniformity clause of the Organic Act required the same measure of uniformity and equality that is required by the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as applied to state taxing laws. 4 The equal protection clause does not prohibit inequality in taxation which is not shown to be the result of an intentional or systematic undervaluation of some but not all of the taxed property in a single class. 5

Assuming that the Company is correct in contending that the two theaters are subjects of the same class for taxation purposes, it has not sustained the burden 6 of *786 proving that the method of assessment and valuation employed was adopted with the purpose of taxing the Twentieth Century Theater at more than its true value or the Capitol Theater at less than its true value. In fact, the exact opposite is shown. Not only was the general mode of assessment the same for each property, i. e., reconstruction cost less depreciation, but the assessor testified that in conducting the overall 1955 revaluation of the City he was striving for one hundred per cent full and true value. Thus, there is evidence to support a finding that the assessor’s method of valuation was adopted for the purpose of arriving at the actual or true value of each property.

Nor is it proof of unlawful discrimination that the assessor assigned a lower reconstruction cost rate and a higher rate of depreciation to the Capitol Theater.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kelley v. Municipality Anchorage
442 P.3d 725 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2019)
Teton Valley Ranch v. State Board of Equalization
735 P.2d 107 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1987)
Kline v. McCloud
326 S.E.2d 715 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1985)
Winegardner v. Greater Anchorage Area Borough
534 P.2d 541 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1975)
Hoblit v. Greater Anchorage Area Borough
473 P.2d 630 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1970)
Bailey v. Fairbanks Independent School District
370 P.2d 526 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
359 P.2d 783, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twentieth-century-investment-co-v-city-of-juneau-alaska-1961.