6 Mass. App. Ct. 394 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1978
These are consolidated actions for declaratory and injunctive relief, both brought by taxpayers of the city of Woburn (city) against the city’s board of assessors (board) and tax collector. The Chomerics case was brought on March 23,1973, and the Globe Ticket case was brought on March 14,1974. Both actions seek relief from allegedly disproportionate and discriminatory assessment of the taxpayers’ real estate.
In June, 1973, a judge of the Superior Court ordered that a third case (Clifford J. Martin & others us. Leo C. Keating & others, Superior Court, Middlesex County, Eq. 35141 [1973]), also attacking the assessment practices by the board, be consolidated with the Chomerics case. In September, 1973, a final decree (which apparently has not been appealed and which is not before us) was entered in the Martin case. That decree declared that the board had a constitutional and statutory duty to assess taxable real property in Woburn at its full and fair cash value and ordered the board to "file in the Superior Court within thirty days ... a comprehensive plan for the revaluation at full and fair cash value ... of all taxable property in Woburn in an orderly manner and with all deliberate speed, such revaluation to take effect as of July 1, 1975.”
The plaintiffs have no quarrel with this analysis so far as it goes. They argue, however, that vacant residential property in the city comprises a third class of property for assessment purposes with a lower level of assessment than that of built upon residential property and that note 10 of the Shoppers’ World case (348 Mass. at 377-378) requires reduction to the level of assessment for that class.
The issue is thus quite narrow. The plaintiffs’ contention cannot succeed unless the medians are representative of the level of assessment. But neither we nor the trial judge has, so far as the record appendix indicates, been given any statistical analysis of these series of ratios of assessed valuation to sale price which might demonstrate their representative character or the representative character of the medians. We have been told nothing of the number of parcels of vacant residential property in the city and so cannot tell whether (and certainly cannot say as a matter of law that) the number of sales was adequate to yield a representative sample. See Sudbury v. Commissioner or Corps. and Taxn., 366 Mass. 558, 560-561 (1974). Nor have we been given any expert analysis of the pattern of the ratios of assessed valuation to sale price contained in the two series which might shed light on whether those ratios cluster about the medians to a sufficient extent to warrant a finding that vacant residential properties constitute a most favored class of the kind referred to in footnote 10 of the Shoppers’ World case.
Nor is this a case where the plaintiffs remain without any remedy if these series are not utilized. Cf. Appeals of Kents 2124 Atlantic Ave. Inc., 34 N.J. at 30. The reduction of the plaintiffs’ assessed valuations to the 25% and 23% medians of the assessment ratios of residential property sold in 1972 and 1973 (see note 5, supra) — also the medians, as computed in the plaintiffs’ brief, of the assessment ratios for all property sold in those years — would seem to be an equitable remedy, since adjustment on this basis ”assure[s] that each taxpayer [will] bear ... his proportionate share of the tax burden” (Coomey v. Assessors of Sandwich, 367 Mass. at 837) more nearly than if his taxes
We need not decide whether note 10 of the Shoppers’ World case, supra, would require such a result if we were bound to accept the 9% % and 10% % medians as representative of a common level of assessment arising from action taken by the assessors intended to circumvent the constitutional and statutory requirements or from the natural and probable consequence of action by the assessors (Leto v. Assessors of Wilmington, 348 Mass. 144, 148 n.5 [1964]; Shoppers’ World, Inc. v. Assessors of Framingham, 348 Mass. at 377) and if, as here, the result would collide with the principle that each piece of property should so far as possible bear an equal share of the tax burden and the city’s "taxpayers ... should not be compelled to suffer in effect a forfeiture to ... [the plaintiffs] of tax revenues to which the city is entitled.”
Judgments affirmed.
According to the plaintiffs’ brief, the July 1,1975, deadline for the revaluation of all property in Woburn has, on the board’s motion, been extended "so as to delay the revaluation until issuance of the tax bills for the 1976-1977 tax year.”
The parties have stipulated to the full and fair cash value of certain of the plaintiffs’ properties but the determination of the remainder has been referred to a master. They have also stipulated that the percentage to be used in determining the plaintiffs’ subsequent assessed valuations at issue shall not exceed the percentage used to calculate their 1973 assessed valuations.
The various stipulations, which we have examined, and the failure of the defendants to appeal the overruling of their demurrer and the denial of their motion to dismiss (see Leto v. Assessors of Wilmington, 348 Mass. 144, 148-149 [1964]) have eliminated any question whether the claim for reduction of1972 taxes by the plaintiffs in the Chomerics case brought in March, 1973, and the claim for reduction of1973 taxes by the plaintiffs in the Globe Ticket case brought in March, 1974, were moot or otherwise barred (see Carr v. Assessors of Springfield, 339 Mass. 89, 92 [1959], Second Church in Dorchester v. Boston, 343 Mass. 477, 478-479 [1962], and Gallo v. Division of Water Pollution, 374 Mass. 278, 287-288 [1978]), and whether claims for reductions in taxes for other years should more appropriately have been brought before the Appellate Tax Board pursuant to G. L. c. 59, §§ 59,64, and 65. See Shoppers’ World, Inc. v. Assessors of Framingham, 348 Mass. 366, 377-378 (1965); Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Somerville, 363 Mass. 756 (1973). Cf. Bettigole v. Assessors of Springfield, 343 Mass. 223, 237 (1961); Coan v. Assessors of Beverly, 349 Mass. 575, 577 (1965). Cf. also Sydney v. Commissioner of Corps. and Taxn., 371 Mass. 289, 293-294 (1976) (citing Squantum Gardens, Inc. v. Assessors of Quincy, 335 Mass. 440, 443 [1957]), and S.J. Groves & Sons v. State Tax Commn., 372 Mass. 140, 142 (1977), holding that in the tax field a judge may exercise discretion as to whether to entertain a declaratory action in spite of the plaintiff’s failure to exhaust his administrative remedies.
The judge’s finding appears to be with reference to all residential property both built upon and vacant. The tables in the appendix to the plaintiffs’ brief indicate the same medians for built upon residential property. Any discrepancy thus appears to be immaterial. We note that the median ratios for all property sold during 1972 and 1973 are also 25% and 23% respectively.
This rule rests on the principle, established by Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Dakota County, Nebraska, 260 U.S. 441, 446 (1923), that "where it is impossible to secure both the standard of the true value, and the uniformity and equality required by law, the latter requirement is to be preferred as the just and ultimate purpose of the law.”
Note 10 of the Shoppers’ World case states: "If, as in the Bettigole case, 343 Mass. 223, 227 [1961], it should be shown that several different percentages of full, fair cash value were employed in valuing different classes of property, the principle discussed in the Sioux City Bridge Co. case [see n. 6] would logically require reduction of the assessment of a taxpayer against whom there had been discrimination so that such taxpayer’s assessment would be proportional to the as
A. The series of ratios of assessed valuation to sale price for 1972 and 1973 which the plaintiffs ask us to accept are set out in an appendix to their brief. The 1972 series contains 10 ratios; the 1973 series contains 28 ratios. The two series may be summarized as follows:
Ratio of assessed valuation Percent of vacant resident-in year of sale to sale ial properties sold in price 1972 and 1973 having the indicated ratios
1972 sales 1973 sales
1% - 5% 20% 7.1%
6% -10% 40% 42.9%
11% -15% 0 17.9%
16%-20% 20% 0
21% - 25% 0 10.7%
26% - 30% 10% 0
31% - 35% 10% 3.6%
36%-40% 0 7.1%
over 40% 0 10.7%
B. For comparison purposes the corresponding series of ratios of assessed valuation to sale price for all properties sold in 1972 and 1973 may be summarized as follows:
Ratio of assessed valuation Percent of all properties sold in year of sale to sale in 1972 and 1973 having price the indicated ratios
l%-5% 4.3% 5%
6% -10% 2.4% 4.3%
11% -15% 2.2% 5.8%
16%-20% 17.5% 19%
21% - 25% 26.8% 27.1%
26% - 30% 22.7% 12.8%
31%-35% 9.1% 11.3%
36% - 40% 3.6% 5.5%
over 40% 11.5% 9.3%
The 1972 series contains 418 ratios; the 1973 series contains 399 ratios.
The general statement by a witness who qualified as a statistician that "the median is normally a better definition of central tendency
See Siegal v. Newark, 38 N.J. 57, 60-64 (1962), and Bade v. Drachman, 4 Ariz. App. 55, 63-65 (1966), holding that the taxpayers against whom there had been discrimination were entitled to have the assessed valuations of their properties reduced to a percentage of their full and fair cash value equal to the average of the percentages of full and fair cash value at which all properties were ¿ssessed rather than to the assessment ratio applicable to the most favored class. See also Rick Appeal, 402 Pa. 209, 210-211 (1961); Deitch v. Board of Property Assessment, 417 Pa. 213, 218-221 (1965); Kays, Inc. v. Board of Tax Review of New Haven, 170 Conn. 477 (1976).
In this connection the plaintiffs point to the depositions of the assessors as evidence that vacant land was treated as a special class in 1970 or 1971. We cannot say that the trial judge was clearly wrong in refusing to accept this testimony as determinative of the establishment of such a class. At best the depositions indicate that something was done about "homes” and presumably nothing was done about vacant land, business or commercial property or any other kind of property for that matter. Further, just what was done is not clear. One of the assessors did indeed testify that "the homes in the whole city were reassessed by the previous board” in 1970 and 1971 but he did not know in what way. Another testified that in 1970 and 1971 "I know that the whole city was supposed to have been reassessed, that is the homes.” In later testimony he seems to be referring to the action of the previous board as "a survey of the city.” He also did not know just what was done. In any event the judge did not find that whatever was done was reflected in any particular uniformity of increased assessment ratios.