Court Opinion

ID: 9375781
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-28 20:07:17.001698+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:01.700511
License: Public Domain

[J-52-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.]
                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                   MIDDLE DISTRICT

 GM BERKSHIRE HILLS LLC AND GM                      :   No. 16 MAP 2022
 OBERLIN BERKSHIRE HILLS LLC,                       :
                                                    :   Appeal from the Order of the
                       Appellants                   :   Commonwealth Court at No. 930 CD
                                                    :   2020 dated July 8, 2021 Affirming
                                                    :   the Order dated August 18, 2020 by
                v.                                  :   the Berks County Court of Common
                                                    :   Pleas, Civil Division, at No. 18-
                                                    :   18627.
 BERKS COUNTY BOARD OF                              :
 ASSESSMENT AND WILSON SCHOOL                       :   ARGUED: September 15, 2022
 DISTRICT,                                          :
                                                    :
                       Appellees                    :

                          OPINION IN SUPPORT OF REVERSAL

JUSTICE DOUGHERTY                                          DECIDED: February 28, 2023
       I join Justice Donohue’s Opinion in Support of Reversal and write separately to

explain my slightly different rationale. Also, to the extent the propriety of a school district’s

selection method of property assessment appeals under the Uniformity Clause continues

to be an issue in future cases, I write to suggest a legislative remedy for what is, in my

view, the underlying problem in many — if not most — matters challenging individual

property reassessments, i.e., stagnant, artificially low overall property values in a taxing

district resulting from infrequent, sometimes decades old, countywide property

assessments.

       In 2017, appellants GM Berkshire Hills, LLC and GM Oberlin Berkshire Hills, LLC

(“Berkshire”) purchased 47 residential buildings containing 408 rental units (“the

property”) for a combined sales price of $54,250,000. The assessed value of the property
at the last countywide assessment conducted in 1994 was $10,448,700.               In 2018,

appellee Wilson School District (“WSD”) used reports by the State Tax Equalization Board

(“STEB”) listing recent property sales including sales prices as representative of current

property value, then multiplied that value by Berks County’s common level ratio (“CLR”)

minus the 1994 assessed value. Under that formula, the property had a reassessed value

of $37,161,300, and WSD filed the assessment appeal because that value exceeded a

pre-determined $150,000 cost-benefit threshold considered to justify the cost of litigating

an appeal.

      I am of the opinion this methodology for choosing properties for reassessment

violates the Uniformity Clause, and disagree with the characterization of the method as

“neutral” because it employs the CLR which, according to the Opinion in Support of

Affirmance (“OISA”), is fundamentally aimed at “equalizing the targeted property’s

assessment ratio with those otherwise prevailing in the district[,]” and because

“assessment appeals tending to enhance uniformity do not otherwise violate the

Uniformity Clause so long as they are undertaken based on neutral factors such as those

used by [WSD] in this matter.” OISA at 16-17. In my view, the method and factors

employed here are not neutral, but are unreasonably discriminatory.

      Regarding taxation generally, this Court has observed:

      The Uniformity Clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution provides that “[a]ll
      taxes shall be uniform, upon the same class of subjects, within the territorial
      limits of the authority levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under
      general laws.” PA. CONST. art. VIII, §1. As we have interpreted it, the
      Uniformity Clause requires that every tax “operate alike on the classes of
      things or property subject to it.” Commonwealth v. Overholt & Co., 200 A.
      849, 853 (Pa. 1938). “While reasonable and practical classifications in tax
      legislation are justifiable and often permissible, when a method or formula
      for computing a tax will, in its operation or effect, produce arbitrary, unjust,
      or unreasonably discriminatory results, the uniformity requirement is
      violated.” Clifton v. Allegheny Cty., 969 A.2d 1197, 1211 (Pa. 2009).

                            [J-52-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 2
Mt. Airy #1, LLC v. Pa. Dep’t of Revenue, 154 A.3d 268, 272-73 (Pa. 2016).

       Regarding uniformity of taxation upon property specifically, this Court has many

times noted, “[p]roperty taxation . . . is different. With property taxation, real property is

the classification.” Clifton, 969 A.2d at 1212 (emphasis in original), citing McKnight

Shopping Ctr., Inc. v. Bd. of Prop. Assessment, Appeals & Review, 209 A.2d 389, 392

(Pa. 1965). Thus, all property is treated as a single class regardless of any further sub-

classification such as residential, commercial, farmland, etc. This interpretation supports

the fundamental, underlying concept that, “in property taxation, the uniformity requirement

is based on ‘the general principle that taxpayers should pay no more or less than their

proportionate share of government.’” Id., quoting Downingtown Area Sch. Dist. v. Chester

Cty. Bd. of Assessment Appeals, 913 A.2d 194, 199 (Pa. 2006). By using the term

“government,” we recognized that property taxes, in years past, provided funding for

public schools, police departments, fire departments, and sanitation services. “Today in

Pennsylvania, property taxation is primarily used to raise revenue for the maintenance of

the counties’ public school systems[.]” Id. at 1202.

       In endorsing WSD’s method of choosing which parcels of real property to

selectively appeal for reassessment, the OISA relies on principles of uniformity and

equitable valuation generally applicable to base year methods of valuation. See id. at

1214-17 (explaining differences between the established predetermined ratio (EPR)

method, the STEB method which calculates each county’s CLR, and the coefficient of

dispersion (COD) method).          The OISA endorses the STEB method for spot

reassessments in part by reliance on the CLR. After reiterating that “the subject property’s

valuation has been raised so that its assessment ratio conforms with the CLR[,]” OISA at

14, the OISA notes the validity of the CLR is not in dispute. The OISA recognizes any

data which might suggest the CLR “deviates from the average assessment ratio in the

                             [J-52-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 3
[s]chool [d]istrict” could be “problematic” as regards uniformity, but “[a]ny difficulty along

these lines is beyond the scope of the questions presented[,]” as no such data is part of

the record. Id. at 15 n.9. Then, the OISA ultimately concludes “[a]s long as the fair market

value as determined by the court is multiplied by the CLR before the millage rate is

applied, the [assessment] appeal is fundamentally aimed at equalizing the targeted

property’s assessment ratio with those otherwise prevailing in the district.” Id. at 16

(internal citation omitted).

       I cannot agree. This Court has recognized that “the CLR is not indicative of

uniformity.” Clifton, 969 A.2d at 1216. 1 Rather, the CLR may be a “useful tool for a

taxpayer to demonstrate that his property has been over-assessed, as it allows him to

compare the assessed-to-market value ratio of his property to the average ratio

throughout the district.” Id. WSD’s use of the CLR as a tool for demonstrating under-

assessment is not so simple. WSD’s multiplication of the presumed fair-market value of

any property by the CLR, in conjunction with WSD’s additional computational parameters

such as setting a monetary sum-certain for recoupment of appeal costs to only newly-

purchased real property for determining which assessments to appeal, permits individual

taxation to be determined by a method that, in my view, is not uniform or neutral. 2

1 The OISA criticizes my use of a quoted sentence fragment. See OISA at 16 n.11. The
entire quoted sentence reads, “Like the EPR, the CLR is not indicative of uniformity.”
Clifton, 969 A.2d at 1216. The EPR is an assessed-to-market-value measurement
system not at issue in this matter. Moreover, the OISA cites Downingtown to support the
notion this Court has repeatedly affirmed the use of the CLR to enhance uniformity and
suggests where a school district’s policies are aimed at conforming outlying assessment
ratios to the CLR, the process emphatically promotes uniformity. I note Downingtown
preceded Clifton in terms of our exegesis of these matters, and the process of choosing
targeted properties for appeal precisely because their difference in actual to assessed
value is huge can be characterized as self-serving as easily as it can be seen as
promoting uniformity.
2 I find it ironic that WSD’s budget, made up of and relying exclusively on real estate tax
dollars for implementation, presumably already includes funds earmarked for WSD’s legal
(continued…)

                               [J-52-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 4
Although the OISA notes WSD’s criteria identified properties of all types to appeal, it does

not note whether any of the other appeals involved a tens of millions of dollars difference

in assessed to reassessed value. Clearly, the difference here is huge, and in my view,

Berkshire’s resulting increased tax burden may stick out like the proverbial sore thumb

precisely because WSD wields the hammer of a self-serving selection process.

       Yet, the OISA appears to endorse the selection process precisely because it

identifies outliers. The OISA repeatedly insists WSD’s selection process does not create

a prohibited subclass, but simply tends to “enhance uniformity by selecting for appeal the

most non-uniform properties about which reliable information is readily available[,]” OISA

at 11; the OISA states “the selection policy does not solely target recently-sold properties,

but further limits such properties to those whose assessments are the most non-uniform.”

Id. at 12. The OISA also dismisses the suggestion “that [WSD] acted improperly by

targeting [Berkshire’s] property because of its high value, while electing not to appeal

other recently-sold properties within the [s]chool [d]istrict because they are of lower

value[,]” by noting the suggestion “would have greater force but for application of the

CLR.” Id. at 15-16. Thus, the OISA concludes use of the CLR results in “means [that]

are not discriminatory but neutral[,]” id. at 16, when, in fact, the accuracy of the CLR in

Berks County has not been established, the CLR is not indicative of uniformity, and the

selection process is admittedly designed to identify those properties with the highest

disparities between assessed to reassessed value. But a selection process so designed

violates uniformity, in my view.

       The reason for such great disparities in assessed to reassessed property values in

any taxing district employing the base year method is in large measure due to the

costs and thus, that budgetary line-item could well be increased the more successful
assessment appeals are litigated, even though the costs of those appeals have already
been recouped.

                             [J-52-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 5
infrequency with which county-wide property assessments are conducted. In Clifton,

supra, in connection with claims by property owners that their properties had been over-

assessed, we considered whether Allegheny County’s base year property taxation

scheme, “which permit[ted] a single base year assessment to be used indefinitely,”

violated the Uniformity Clause. Clifton, 969 A.2d at 1222. We held that particular base

year scheme was unconstitutional, as applied. See id. In so doing, we explained “the

real-life effect[s] of long-term use of a base year system without reassessment . . . prove

the lack of uniformity that has arisen over the years[.]” Id. at 1226-27. 3 This is so because

“[p]roperty values may change over time and at different rates, but when a taxing body

freezes values with, for instance, the prolonged use of a base year’s property values, the

resulting disparities throughout the taxing jurisdiction produce inequities, and those

inequities tend to increase over time.” Id. at 1225. “The lack of uniformity resulting from

prolonged use of an outdated base year assessment, caused by market forces or other

changes, cannot be characterized as a ‘classification’ in an effort to excuse the non-

uniformity. For the aggrieved taxpayer, the classification is akin to the arbitrariness of

being struck by lightning.” Id. at 1228. Thus, in Clifton, to remedy the inequity caused by

this constitutional infirmity, we agreed with the trial court that a county-wide reassessment

was required, and we remanded for that purpose. See id. at 1230.

       The same principles hold true for those situations in which a taxing district in an

assessment appeal claims a property is under-assessed based on an outdated base year

valuation, even where the CLR has been applied. Although the issue in Clifton was the

constitutionality of the base year method itself, the present matter is vexing precisely

because the base year assessment is outdated. The underlying inequity that arises by

3 In doing so, we expressly noted Allegheny County’s argument “that case-by-case,
corrective application of a county’s CLR, through the [assessment] appeal process,
adequately satisfies . . . the Uniformity Clause[,]” was “unpersuasive.” Id. at 1227.

                             [J-52-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 6
permitting clearly outdated, decades-old assessments to continue indefinitely for most

properties in a district, while identifying the greatest outliers from those assessments to

challenge, could be cured by more frequent county-wide assessments of all properties in

each taxing district. I am cognizant of the political unpopularity frequent and costly

county-wide property reassessments likely entail.        However, the Uniformity Clause

prohibits disparate treatment “in order to avoid political accountability.” Valley Forge

Towers Apartments N, LP v. Upper Merion Area Sch. Dist., 163 A.3d 962, 979 (Pa. 2017),

citing Downingtown Area Sch. Dist., 913 A.2d at 201.

       Pennsylvania is one of only two states that does not have statutorily mandated

reassessments on a fixed cycle. See Clifton, 969 A.2d at 1231 (“twenty-two of our sister

states require annual reassessments, while twenty-six permit reassessments to be

conducted at intervals over one year”). “Pennsylvania is the only state where legislation

allows the use of a base year indefinitely.” Id. (emphasis added). It is not this Court’s

role to decide, nor is it capable of fixing, a point in time at which a base year valuation is

so out-of-date it leads to unconstitutionally non-uniform spot reassessments. As we noted

in Clifton, it is the exclusive prerogative of the legislature to fashion a more comprehensive

and sound constitutional scheme. And, because an indefinite base year assessment

method obviously cannot capture and reflect market fluctuations and other trends

affecting future property values, in my view, the legislature would do well to repeal its

indefinite use, and enact an assessment period encompassing a sound interval of years.

       Accordingly, I would respectfully reverse.

       Justice Donohue joins this opinion in support of reversal.

                             [J-52-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 7