Widger v. Arizona Department of Revenue

903 P.2d 604, 183 Ariz. 296
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 12, 1995
Docket1 CA-TX 93-0005
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 903 P.2d 604 (Widger v. Arizona Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Widger v. Arizona Department of Revenue, 903 P.2d 604, 183 Ariz. 296 (Ark. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

GARBARINO, Judge.

The appellants (Taxpayers) appeal from a signed minute entry order dismissing their action for a partial refund of property taxes for 1987 and 1988, and from a later order denying their motion for new trial. The appellees cross-appeal from the portion of the tax court’s opinion in Rio Rico Properties, Inc. v. Santa Cruz County, 172 Ariz. 80, 834 P.2d 166 (Tax 1992) 1 , that found the amending act of Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. (A.R.S.) section 11-506 unconstitutional to the extent it attempted to retroactively amend the statute.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The subject of this litigation is a 593-acre portion of a section of land located in Pinal County several miles west of Maricopa, Arizona, and immediately south of the southern boundary of the Ak Chin Indian Reservation.

In 1973 the land was being used for farming. In 1974 the previous owners recorded a *297 subdivision plat, intending to develop the land. Based on the recorded plat, the property was split into 186 parcels of 3.33 acres or less. At that time the assessor followed the policy that a parcel could not qualify as agricultural land unless it contained a minimum of twenty acres. 2 Additionally, the assessor did not recognize common ownership of contiguous pieces of property in determining parcel areas for assessment purposes. Accordingly, because each parcel that now made up the land in question was smaller than twenty acres, each parcel was deemed not to be agricultural property, and from at least 1986 through 1989 the parcels were assessed as vacant residential subdivision lots.

The previous owners abandoned their plan to develop the land shortly after they recorded their subdivision plat. The platted lots were never offered for sale. Although the plat remained of record, the use of the land did not change. From 1973 on, the land was always farmed and under cultivation.

In December 1986 the previous owners sold all their property in Pinal County to the Taxpayers, including the land at issue here. The Taxpayers leased it back to the previous owners, who farmed it through January 1988. The Taxpayers then leased the property and other lands acquired from the previous owners to other persons, who continued to farm it. Larry Fidler, Chief Deputy Pinal County Assessor, testified that he believed that if the Taxpayers’ property had not been subdivided, it would have been classified as agricultural from 1975 through the time of trial.

For 1987 and 1988 nearly all the parcels comprising the Taxpayers’ land were valued at $1,785 per acre. In those same years farm land in the immediate vicinity was valued at $411 per acre and $470 per acre, respectively. In the joint pretrial statement the parties agreed that those per-acre values would have been applied to the Taxpayers’ land had it been assessed as agricultural land for 1987 and 1988.

In 1988 the Taxpayers filed a valuation appeal on the subject property through an agent who was unaware that it was being farmed. The appeal sought a reduction of the market valuation of the land, but did not challenge the assessor’s failure to value the land as agricultural. The assessor adjusted the valuation of the parcels, and the appeal went no further.

The same agent appealed the valuation of the parcels for the Taxpayers in 1989. The appeal was again based on the contention that the property was overvalued as vacant land. Later that year, however, the agent discovered that the land was being farmed. The 1989 appeal was ultimately settled through a stipulated judgment in the tax court that classified and assessed the property as agricultural property.

In 1990 the property received an assessment as agricultural property from the county board of equalization to accord with the settlement of the 1989 appeal. In 1991 the assessor recognized the property’s agricultural status in his initial valuation.

The Taxpayers brought this statutory mandamus action in April 1990 seeking relief under A.R.S. section 11-506 for tax years 1986 through 1988. 3 See A.R.S. §§ 12-2021 *298 to -2030 (1994). As the issues were narrowed for trial, the Taxpayers sought a declaration that their parcels erroneously had been assessed as nonagricultural property for tax years 1987 and 1988, together with an order directing that appellees correct the classification and valuation for those years and refund overpayments of taxes made on the original nonagricultural assessments.

Following trial, the tax court held that retroactively applying the 1991 amendments limiting taxpayers’ relief under A.R.S. section 11-506 4 would unconstitutionally impair vested rights. Rio Rico Properties, 172 Ariz. at 91, 834 P.2d at 177. It nevertheless held that the Taxpayers had no claim for relief under pre-amendment section 11-506:

“[E]rroneous assessment” does not mean one the incorrectness of which is to be determined by either a judicial or quasi-judicial fact finding or law interpreting process. The scope of “erroneous assessment” as used in A.R.S. § 11-506 prior to the 1991 amendment included no more than an assessment that arises from a mistake in fact so indisputable when revealed that the existence of the mistake could not reasonably be denied. “Erroneous assessment” did not include within its scope an assessment that is determined to be incorrect by an interpretation by a court of law. Nor does it include an assessment the incorrectness of which arises from a deliberate misapplication of policy by an agent of a taxing authority.
In Widger, the Pinal County Assessor interpreted the law so that an agricultural classification was not available to land subdivided for sale as residential lots. The
Assessor further refused such a classification to lots of less than 20 acres, and, for assessment purposes, refused to group contiguous lots as one unit. Widger’s property, therefore, was not valued as being used for agricultural purposes.
The Assessor’s acts, whether right or wrong, were not mistakes. They were an implementation of policy. For that reason, the Taxpayers in Widger have no claim under A.R.S. § 11-506. If the Assessor’s interpretation of Department guidelines was incorrect, Widger’s remedy was in a valuation appeal in the relevant years. A.R.S. § 11-506 was never intended to be used as a vehicle to litigate valuation and classification appeals after the time had passed to litigate them under Title 42.

Id.

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Bluebook (online)
903 P.2d 604, 183 Ariz. 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/widger-v-arizona-department-of-revenue-arizctapp-1995.