Court Opinion

ID: 9707963
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 02:26:06.256823+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:22:40.702711
License: Public Domain

Liacos, J.
These consolidated cases are appeals pursuant to G. L. c. 58A, § 13, from the decisions of the Appellate *482Tax Board (board) granting abatements to the appellees, taxpayers, from real estate taxes levied in the years 1977 through 1979. The appellant board of assessors of the city of Boston (city) challenges the board’s ruling that the lowest substantial class of real property in the city of Boston was the so called R-l single family residential, or single dwelling unit residential class. The city contends that the board’s ruling is erroneous (1) because the board failed to state its reasons or make findings of fact in support of its determination that the R-l class, as opposed to the class of all residential property, is a separate and distinct class for the purpose of real property classification; (2) because the selection of the R-l class has no rational basis in law or fact; and (3) because the board’s determination is inconsistent with the policy underlying the recently approved classification Amendment to the Massachusetts Constitution2 and the legislative responses to that amendment.3
The determination whether single family residences constitute a “class” for tax abatement purposes is a mixed question of fact and law. As the board is a State agency charged with administering the tax abatement process, its determination is due some deference. See Henry Perkins Co. v. Assessors of Bridgewater, 377 Mass. 117, 121-122 (1979). We have long recognized the board’s expertise in tax matters. See Assessors of Quincy v. Boston Consol. Gas Co., 309 Mass. 60, 72 (1941). The board has adequately set forth and the record supports the factual predicates for its determination.*4834 Cf. G. L. c. 58A, §§ 10 and 12C. Moreover, this determination is in no respect inconsistent with our past declarations of the appropriate remedy available to a taxpayer whose real estate taxes have been disproportionately assessed. See, e.g., Tregor v. Assessors of Boston, 377 Mass. 602, 611-612, cert, denied, 444 U.S. 841 (1979); Beardsley v. Assessors of Foxborough, 369 Mass. 855 (1976); Shoppers’ World, Inc. v. Assessors of Framingham, 348 Mass. 366, 377 n.10 (1965). “[A] taxpayer has a right to have his assessment reduced so that it is ‘proportional to the assessments of the class of property valued at the lowest percentage of fair cash value.’” New Boston Garden Corp. v. Assessors of Boston, ante 456, 458 n.3 (1981), quoting from cited cases. Cf. Chomerics, Inc. v. Assessors of Woburn, 6 Mass. App. Ct. 394 (1978). Finally, the board’s ruling is not inconsistent with the Massachusetts Constitution or any legislation as in effect during the tax years in question.5
The decisions of the Appellate Tax Board are therefore affirmed. Costs of the appeal are to be awarded to the taxpayer in each case.

So ordered.

Justice Kaplan participated in the deliberation on this case, but retired before the opinion was issued.

 Article 112 of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution, approved and ratified by the people November 7, 1978, and inserted in the first paragraph of Part II, c. 1, § 1, art. 4, of the Constitution, provides in pertinent part that the Legislature “may classify real property according to its use in no more than four classes and to assess, rate and tax such property differently in the classes so established, but proportionately in the same class . . . .”

 Statute 1979, c. 797, § 11, codified as G. L. c. 59, § 2A, provides that property shall be assessed according to four classifications: residential, open-space, commercial, and industrial. Residential property is defined to include single as well as multiple dwelling unit residences.

 The board found: “the R-l class of property is one of the two or three largest classes of real property in the City of Boston in terms of its total area, number of parcels, total assessed value, and total estimated full valuation” and it “is assessed at a lower percentage of fair cash value than any other class of property in the City of Boston.”

 Statute 1979, c. 797, § 25, provides that § 10 of that chapter applies to “classification of all property for the fiscal years commencing on or after July first, nineteen hundred and eighty.” Moreover, we recently held that retroactive application of St. 1979, c. 797, prior to fiscal 1980 would be unconstitutional in so far as it would alter the previous state of the tax abatement law as relied upon by the taxpayers. See Keniston v. Assessors of Boston, 380 Mass. 888, 903-906 (1980).