60 Ohio St. 2d 50 | Ohio | 1979
The only issue before this court is whether the Board of Tax Appeals properly dismissed these appeals for reason of appellants’ failure to join each subdivision and taxing unit within Cuyahoga County as necessary parties. The city of Cleveland contends that only those subdivisions and taxing authorities which overlap the subdivision filing an appeal need be named as appellees. The boards, in their appeals, would further limit necessary parties to those subdivisions and taxing units which would be directly affected by a successful appeal.
The substantive dispute in the causes herein concerns the allocation of property tax millage between the appellant subdivisions. The property tax scheme bases a subdivision’s taxing power upon its revenue needs, but subject to a ten-mill limitation imposed by R. C. 5705.02 upon unvoted taxes. Where subdivisions overlap, as here, the total unvoted millage cannot exceed ten mills and the rate at which each particular subdivision taxes its property must be uniform throughout. Thus, R. C. 5705.31 requires the budget commission to reduce unvoted levies where necessary so that the ten-mill limit is not exceeded, particularly in the areas of subdivision overlap. In the appeals before us, the budget commission increased the city of Cleveland’s property tax rate and was thus forced under R. C. 5705.31 to reduce the millage rate of overlapping subdivisions so as to comply with the ten-mill limitation. The boards, as representatives of the overlapping subdivisions, objected to the decreased millage; the city of Cleveland contended that the increase was inadequate.
The Board of Tax Appeals dismissed these appeals on the basis of this court’s opinion in Brooklyn v. Cuyahoga County Budget Comm. (1965), 2 Ohio St. 2d 181. In Brooklyn an appeal was brought to the Board of Tax Appeals challenging the Cuyahoga County Budget Commission’s allocation of the un
This court would be inclined to follow the rationale of Brooklyn in the instant cause were it not for the General Assembly’s explicit rejection of the rule in R. C. 5747.55, effective in 1971. That statute provides, in relevant part:
“The action of the county budget commission under section 5747.51 of the Revised Code may be appealed to the board of tax appeals***in accordance with the following rules:
(( * * *
“(C) There shall also be attached to the notice of appeal a statement showing:
a * **
“(3) The name of each participating subdivision, as well as the name and address of the fiscal officer thereof, that the complaining subdivision believes received more than its proper share of the allocation, and the exact amount in dollars of such alleged over-allocation.
“(D) Only the participating subdivisions named pursuant to division (C) of this section are to be considered as appellees before the board of tax appeals and no change shall, in any amount, be made in the amount aloocated to participating subdivisions not appellees.
“(E) The total of the undivided local government fund to be allocated by the board of tax appeals upon appeal is the*54 total allocated by the budget commission to those subdivisions which are appellants and appellees before the board of tax appeals.”
Consequently, no longer must an appellant to the Board of Tax Appeals in cases involving the allocation of local government funds designate each subdivision within the county as an appellee. Rather, under R. C. 5747.55, only those subdivisions which the appealing party believes were allocated an excessive share of the fund need be named as parties. The factual similarities between appeals of local fund allocations and the instant appeals lead us to conclude that the legislative rejection of Brooklyn, supra, should be acknowledged and followed in these appeals.
Even under the rationale of Brooklyn, however, the necessary parties herein to an appeal to the Board of Tax Appeals would be those subdivisions which collectively exceed the ten-mill limit by reason of their overlap and thus are subject to millage reduction based on their individual and relative needs. It would not be necessary under the rationale of Brooklyn, as the Board of Tax Appeals believed, to name all other subdivisions and taxing authorities within Cuyahoga County as parties, since there is no need under the substantive law for the budget commission to assess their particular needs relative to the appealing party. But, even this application of Brooklyn to the instant causes requires more parties than the General Assembly indicated are necessary under R. C. 5747.55.
R. C. 5747.55 states that only those parties which a subdivision believes were allocated an excessive share of the undivided local government fund can be made a party to an appeal. This is so despite the fact that the Board of Tax Appeals hears these appeals de novo and must reach a decision based on the relative needs of all subdivisions within a county. Where, as here, the relative needs of those subdivisions which overlap must be assessed in order to allocate the un-voted levies within the ten-mill limitation, the legislative policy expressed in R. C. 5747.55 should be equally applicable. A party appealing an order of the budget commission should be required to name only those subdivisions as ap-pellees which were allegedly allocated a disproportionate
For the foregoing reasons, the decisions of the Board of Tax Appeals are reversed.
Decisions reversed.