Weyerhaeuser Co. v. County of Ramsey
This text of 461 N.W.2d 922 (Weyerhaeuser Co. v. County of Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Certiorari on the relation of Weyerhaeu-ser Company to review a decision of the tax court determining that its property was not unfairly or unequally assessed in comparison with similar property in the City of St. Paul. Relator had petitioned for review of the real estate tax assessment of January 2, 1987, claiming that its property at 700 Emerald Street in the City of St. Paul, County of Ramsey, had been both overvalued and unfairly and unequally as *924 sessed. The district court transferred the petition to the tax court, which determined that the assessor had indeed overvalued relator’s property in estimating its market value at $1,600,000. The relator estimated the market value of its property at $1,050,-000 while Ramsey County introduced evidence of a market value of $1,875,000. The tax court found that the fair market value of the property was $1,100,000 and directed that the assessor’s estimated market value for the subject property be reduced on the books and records of Ramsey County and that the real estate taxes due and payable in 1988 be recomputed. The tax court found, however, that the subject property was not unfairly or unequally assessed in comparison with similar property in the City of St. Paul. Not content with the reduction thus obtained, relator contends before this court that it is entitled on constitutional grounds to have its industrial property equalized with residential property in Ramsey County pursuant to the 1987 assessment/sales ratio study issued by the department of revenue. We reject the relator’s contention and affirm the tax court’s decision.
The relator argues that the assessor’s estimated market value of $1,600,000 represents a valuation equal to approximately 145% of the market value determined by the tax court and is, therefore, clearly an unequal assessment because the median assessment for residential property in Ramsey County was only 89.7% of the actual market value of those properties. The argument is misconceived. By statute, assessors are required to value all property (with certain exceptions not material here) at its market value, and a tax levied against property assessed at a valuation greater than its real or • actual value is illegal. Minn.Stat. §§ 273.11, subd. 1 and 278.01, subd. 1 (1988); Kuiters v. County of Freeborn, 430 N.W.2d 461, 463 (Minn.1988). Therefore, once overvaluation has been demonstrated, the taxpayer is entitled to have the estimated market value of the property reduced to the market value determined by the tax court. When estimated market value has been reduced to the amount set by the tax court, the taxpayer has established the first requirement in proving a claim of unequal assessment: the taxpayer has proved an assessment level of 100% of the value of its property. United National Corp. v. County of Hennepin, 299 N.W.2d 73, 75-76 (Minn.1980). At that point, however, the inquiry shifts to the assessment levels of other properties within the taxing district, for “[t]o determine whether a property has been unequally assessed, its actual market value and real estate tax assessment must be compared with the market value and real estate tax assessments of other properties.” Id. at 76. We have previously approved the use of assessment/sales ratio studies to make that comparison. In Re Objections to Real Property Taxes, 353 N.W.2d 525, 532-33 (Minn.1984). These studies involve a comparison of the adjusted sales prices of properties recently sold with the assessor’s estimated market value of those same properties. Note, Grounds and Procedures for Attacking Real Property Tax Assessments in Minnesota, 4 Wm. Mitchell L.Rev. 371, 392 (1978). If there is a “substantial disparity” between the taxpayer’s assessment level and the assessment level of other properties in the taxing district, then the taxpayer has demonstrated an unequal assessment, and the appropriate measure of relief is a reduction of the property assessment to the assessment level of the other properties. Real Property Taxes, 353 N.W.2d at 530.
The Department of Revenue’s 9-month assessment/sales ratio study for 1987 includes these ratios:
Ramsey County 91.7% City of St. Paul 92.5%
Residential 89.7% Residential 90.3%
Commercial/ Commercial/
Industrial 92.5% Industrial 94.3%
The taxpayer contends that it is entitled to have its property assessed at the county residential median assessment level of 89.7%. It seems to us, however, that the city in which the subject property is located may properly be designated as the taxing district for purposes of comparing assessment levels when the city assessment level ratios are based, as they are here, on a number of sales that is large enough to *925 validate the study. 1 Moreover, the taxpayer is not entitled to step outside the applicable class of property and to insist upon relief.
The taxpayer also complains of the tax court’s long-standing policy of denying relief if the assessment level evidenced by the assessment/sales ratio study exceeds 90%. 2 That estimating the market value of real property is, at best, an imprecise science is reflected in the United States Supreme Court’s observation that “the constitutional requirement is the seasonable attainment of a rough equality in tax treatment of similarly situated property owners.” Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. County Comm’n, 488 U.S. 336, 343, 109 S.Ct. 633, 638, 102 L.Ed.2d 688, 697 (1989). We have stated the concept somewhat more formally:
Assessment practices which result in a taxpayer’s property being valued ‘at a substantially higher percentage of its market value than is other property in the taxing district’ violate the uniformity requirements of the state and federal constitutions.
Kuiters v. County of Freeborn, 430 N.W.2d at 463, and cases cited therein.
The 1987 assessment/sales ratio studies disclose that one-half of all the property sold in Ramsey County was assessed at a level of more than 91.7% and that sold in the City of St. Paul at more than 92.5%, and they demonstrate also that one-half of all the commercial/industrial property sold in Ramsey County and St. Paul were assessed at levels in excess of 92.5% and 94.3% respectively. We agree with the tax court that these median assessment levels, when compared to the assessment level of the taxpayer’s property, do not reflect a substantial disparity violative of either state or federal constitution.
Finally, the relator argues that the tax court erred in taking judicial notice of the assessment ratios for 1986 and 1988 without first notifying the parties. See In re Objections to Real Property Taxed,
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461 N.W.2d 922, 1990 Minn. LEXIS 337, 1990 WL 171348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weyerhaeuser-co-v-county-of-ramsey-minn-1990.