Court Opinion

ID: 4224874
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-11-30 17:02:22.012945+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:26:18.567855
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2017 Ark. 329
                SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
                                     No.   CV-16-1000

                                               Opinion Delivered: November   30, 2017

 USAC LEASING, LLC, AND USAC
 LEASING 2, LLC                  APPEAL FROM THE FAULKNER
                     APPELLANTS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
                                 [NO. 23CV-13-1008]
 V.
                                 HONORABLE MICHAEL MURPHY,
 ANGELA HILL, FAULKNER           JUDGE
 COUNTY ASSESSOR; FAULKNER
 COUNTY BOARD OF
 EQUALIZATION; FAULKNER          AFFIRMED.
 COUNTY TREASURER; AND
 FAULKNER COUNTY TAX
 COLLECTOR
                       APPELLEES

                   COURTNEY HUDSON GOODSON, Associate Justice

       Appellants USAC Leasing, LLC, and USAC Leasing 2, LLC (collectively, “USAC”)

appeal from the Faulkner County Circuit Court’s order granting the motion to dismiss filed

by appellees Angela Hill, in her official capacity as Faulkner County Assessor; the Faulkner

County Board of Equalization, Faulkner County, Arkansas; the Faulkner County Treasurer;

and the Faulkner County Tax Collector (collectively, “Hill”). For reversal, USAC argues

that (1) the circuit court erred by finding that USAC’s representative committed the

unauthorized practice of law by signing a petition to appeal its ad valorem tax assessment to

the county court; (2) even if the unauthorized practice of law occurred, USAC’s appeal

petition to the county court was not null and void because no objection to the company’s
representation was made in the county court; and (3) even if the objection to USAC’s

representation was timely made, the decision should have only prospective application. We

affirm the circuit court’s dismissal.

        USAC, which owns and leases gas compressors that are subject to ad valorem

property tax in Faulkner County, Arkansas, challenged the Faulkner County Assessor’s 2013

and 2014 ad valorem tax assessments before the Faulkner County Board of Equalization

(“BOE”). The BOE affirmed the assessments, and USAC appealed to the Faulkner County

Court. The letters and/or petitions to appeal, filed on October 7, 2013, and October 6,

2014, were signed by Ashley Clark (now Ashley Griggers), USAC’s corporate tax

representative, who is not an attorney. The county court upheld the assessments in each of

the cases, and USAC then appealed the county court’s decisions to the Faulkner County

Circuit Court. The two cases were eventually consolidated by the circuit court in August

2015.

        On November 5, 2015, Hill filed a motion to dismiss USAC’s appeals of the 2013

and 2014 assessments. Hill argued that Clark, by signing the petitions for appeal to the

county court on behalf of USAC, had committed the unauthorized practice of law under

Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-22-211 because a corporation or its nonattorney

officers or employees on its behalf are not authorized to practice law in Arkansas. Hill

asserted that due to Clark’s actions in signing the petitions for appeal, the petitions were null

and void and that USAC had failed to perfect valid appeals to the county court.

Furthermore, Hill contended that because the county court never had jurisdiction of the ad

valorem appeals, the circuit court did not have jurisdiction to hear the appeals.

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       USAC responded that Hill’s argument was contrary to the provisions in Arkansas’s

tax code authorizing a property owner to challenge ad valorem tax assessments and to the

longstanding practice by counties and taxpayers to treat county court proceedings as

administrative and informal in nature, such that it did not commit the unauthorized practice

of law by having Clark sign the appeal petitions to county court. USAC also argued that

Hill’s objection was untimely and had been waived because it was not raised in the county

court proceedings.

       A hearing on the motion to dismiss was held on December 9, 2015, and on August

16, 2016, the circuit court entered an order granting Hill’s motion and dismissing the ad

valorem appeals. The court, relying on the court of appeals’ decision in Stephens Production

Co. v. Bennett, 2015 Ark. App. 617, found that USAC’s petitions to appeal to the county

court constituted the unauthorized practice of law and that it therefore lacked jurisdiction

to hear the appeals currently before it. The court rejected USAC’s argument that Hill had

waived her argument by failing to raise her objection before the county court, stating that

subject-matter jurisdiction is always open to challenge and cannot be waived. USAC filed

a timely notice of appeal from the circuit court’s order of dismissal.

       On appeal, USAC argues that the circuit court erred by finding that USAC had

committed the unauthorized practice of law by having a nonlawyer sign its petitions to

appeal to county court. Furthermore, USAC contends that even if the unauthorized

practice of law occurred, Hill failed to timely object to the unauthorized practice. Finally,

USAC asserts that, even if this court concludes that Hill’s objection was timely and that the

appeal petitions were a nullity, our decision should only be applied prospectively. For the

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reasons expressed in our opinion issued today in DeSoto Gathering Co., LLC v. Hill, 2017

Ark. 326, we disagree with USAC’s arguments, and we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal.

       Affirmed.

       HART, J., dissents.

       JOSEPHINE LINKER HART, Justice, dissenting. I dissent for the reasons set forth

in Desoto Gathering Co., LLC v. Hill, 2017 Ark. 326.

       Elias, Books, Brown & Nelson, P.C., by: William K. Elias, for appellants.

       Taylor & Taylor Law Firm, P.A., by: Andrew M. Taylor and Tasha C. Taylor, for

appellees.

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