OPINION OF THE COURT
Black and poor residents in urban areas across the country have evinced in recent years a growing concern that property tax assessments discriminate against them.
1
Litigation against this discrimination has been notably unsuccessful, primarily due to the bar of the federal Tax Injunction Act of 1937.
2
See, e. g., Bland v. McHann,
463
*65
F.2d 21 (5th Cir. 1972),
cert. denied,
I.
Since this case comes to us from a jurisdictional dismissal granted on defendants’ motion pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1), the only “facts” are the allegations of the complaint. These must be taken as true for the purposes of our review.
Walker, Inc. v. Food Machinery,
The named plaintiffs 3 are one non-white and two white homeowners residing in a predominantly non-white area of the City of Reading, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Named as individual defendants are members of the Board of Assessment Appeals of Berks County; the Board is also named as a defendant. Defendants are responsible for assessing the homes of plaintiffs and others residing in Berks County. The gravamen of the complaint is that the method of assessing the value of plaintiffs’ property, on which real estate and school taxes are based, is intentionally racially discriminatory in violation of 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983 (1970), and the Fourteenth Amendment.
Plaintiffs allege that their properties are assessed at values which are higher than the values assigned to similar properties in predominantly or exclusively white areas of Berks County. They further contend that their assessments constitute a greater percentage of their properties’ actual value than do the assessments of properties in white areas generally. They claim that the result of the discriminatory assessments is tííat plaintiffs bear a disproportionately/ heavy burden in their city and county real estate and school taxes. Plaintiffs aver that this discrimination is systematic and intentional.
4
Cf. Washington v. Davis,
- U.S. -,
The chief method of accomplishing this discrimination, according to plaintiffs, is defendants’ failure to make annual assessments of property values as required by state law. See 72 P.S. § 5344(a) (Supp. 1975). Plaintiffs claim that property values in non-white areas of the county are declining, while values in white neighborhoods are increasing. Failure to make the annual assessments thus results in a tax based on higher than actual value in non-white areas and one based on lower than actual values in white neighborhoods. Accordingly, the principal relief plaintiffs seek is an injunction requiring defendants immediately to cause the assessment of all residential property within the county on a non-discrimina *66 tory basis, and to make an annual assessment with proofs submitted to the court to demonstrate that the assessment is uniform and non-discriminatory.
II.
Problems such as those presented in this case did not become part of our jurisprudence until the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in
Ex parte Young,
A. Legislative History
The Congressional materials revealing the purposes of the Tax Injunction Act are brief but clear. Congress became concerned with the practice of large out of state corporations’ using diversity jurisdiction to litigate the validity of state taxes in federal courts. The foreign corporations thus gained an advantage over state citizens who generally, under state law, had to pay the tax and then sue for a refund. Furthermore, federal litigation was time consuming and costly; municipalities often became strapped for funds and the corporations were able to reach extremely favorable settlements. Local financing was disrupted and foreign corporations escaped a large part of their tax burdens. 6
It thus appears that the statute had a twofold purpose: eliminating unfair advantage of foreign corporations over citizens of the state and eliminating the ability of foreign corporations interminably to withhold payment of local taxes and to disrupt local financing.
See Tramel
v.
Schrader,
An additional point is worthy of note. In his Senate floor discussion of the Tax Injunction Act, its chief sponsor, Senator Bone, introduced portions of the Judiciary Committee report on the prior Johnson Act, 7 which applied similar restraints to federal injunctions against orders of state administrative agencies. Senator Bone stated that the following quotation was “applicable to [the Taf Injunction Act] in the same manner that [it was] applicable to the Johnson bill.” 81 Cong.Rec. at 1416 (1937).
The wealthy individual or corporation is thus often enabled to wear out his opponent and compel him to settle or submit to an unjust judgment for the very reason that his opponent is not financially able to follow him through the tortuous and expensive route through the Federal court to the Supreme Court of the United States at Washington. And all the time in this dispute there is no Federal question involved. There is a dispute arising under a State statute or law of other origin and nothing more.
Id. at 1417 [emphasis supplied]. This excerpt from the Congressional Record, cou *67 pled with Congress’ apparent concern to limit the ability of foreign corporations to use the diversity jurisdiction, at least suggests that Congress did not intend the Tax Injunction Act to bar federal courts from entertaining challenges to state taxes when such challenges were based on federal law.
B. Federal Equity Practice
Before the passage of the 1937 Act, the Supreme Court had announced that federal courts of equity would not grant relief against state taxes, even when challenged on constitutional grounds, as long as the state provided an adequate remedy.
See, e. g., Matthews v. Rodgers,
The scrupulous regard for the rightful independence of state governments which should at all times actuate the federal courts, and a proper reluctance to interfere by injunction with their fiscal operations, require that such relief should be denied in every case where the asserted federal right may be preserved without it. Whenever the question has been presented, this Court has uniformly held that the mere illegality or unconstitutionality of a state or municipal tax is not in itself a ground for equitable relief in the courts of the United States. If the remedy at law is plain, adequate, and complete, the aggrieved party is left to that remedy in the state courts ....
After passage of the 1937 Act, the Court rejected efforts to have federal courts issue declaratory judgments on the validity of state taxes.
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v. Huffman,
Interference with state internal economy and administration is inseparable from assaults in the federal courts on the validity of state taxation .
In
Steffel v. Thompson,
From this review of the legislative history of the 1937 Act and federal equity practice, it appears that, as a general rule, injunctive or declaratory relief against state taxes can be sought in federal court only when the forums provided by the state are inadequate to the task. We turn then to an examination of the remedies provided these plaintiffs under Pennsylvania law.
III.
Under the 1937 Act, the inquiry into state remedies seeks to ascertain whether the state, in this case Pennsylvania, provides plaintiffs with a “plain, speedy and efficient remedy” for adjudicating the claims alleged in their complaint. Supreme Court decisions construing this statutory language offer two essential points of guidance. First, although it can be argued that Congress meant to establish a more stringent standard for federal intervention, the decisions indicate that “plain, speedy and efficient” means no more than the prior equity standard of “adequacy.” Second, it is sufficient for a finding of inadequacy that the availability of the state remedy be merely uncertain. Hart and Wechsler,
supra
note 5, at 979.
Spector Motor Service, Inc. v. O’Connor,
*68 A. Pennsylvania Equity Practice
If plaintiffs could bring this action in Pennsylvania courts of equity, they would have an adequate remedy. We must initially determine, then, whether Pennsylvania equity courts would entertain this challenge to the practices in Berks County assessments.
In recent years, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has frequently had the opportunity to consider the question of equity jurisdiction to hear challenges to local taxes. In
Lynch v. Owen J. Roberts School District,
Two years later Justice Cohen’s view appeared to become the law. Writing for a four-justice majority in
Rochester & Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Board of Assessment,
what is required to confer jurisdiction on an equity court is the existence of a substantial question of constitutionality (and not a mere allegation) and the absence of an adequate statutory remedy.
Most recently, Justice Pomeroy made a concerted effort to reconcile these divergent eases,
8
but failed to carry a majority of the Court.
Borough of Green Tree v. Board of Property Assessments,
Justice Pomeroy’s opinion attracted only one adherent. Chief Justice Jones and Justices Eagan and Nix dissented without opinion. Justice Manderino was noted as concurring in the result. Only Justice O’Brien joined Justice Pomeroy, but Justice O’Brien also joined the concurring opinion of Justice Roberts, who adhered to the teaching of Lynch and criticized Justice Pomeroy’s balancing analysis as confusing and unnecessary.
This review of Pennsylvania decisions illustrates the degree to which the Justices of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court have differed on the reach of equity jurisdiction in tax matters. Fortunately, we need not divine the ultimate outcome of their analytical labors. The latest Pennsylvania decision on equity jurisdiction over a constitutional challenge to a property tax that com
*69
manded a majority of the Court,
Rochester & Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Board of Assessment, supra,
appears to govern this case. There plaintiffs sought “to enjoin application of a revised
method
of taxation.”
[i]n the real estate tax area most of the grave constitutional questions have already been decided, and most of the actions, including this one, question not the underlying statute but rather its application. In such a situation, the administrative body which has responsibility for applying the statute on a day-by-day basis should have the first opportunity of studying and ruling on any new application.
Id. at 79. This language suggests that any challenge, as in the case before us, to the method of application of a taxing statute will not find an equity forum in Pennsylvania.
Nothing in
Greentree
suggests that
Rochester
would not govern this case.
10
Nor is there language in any of the other Pennsylvania decisions we have reviewed which would mitigate the application of
Rochester
to this case.
Lynch,
for example, recognized an exception to eqüity’s traditional abstention from tax cases “where the controversy involves a challenge to the constitutional validity of a
taxing statute
...”
*70 This analysis of Pennsylvania decisions creates substantial uncertainty as to the availability of a Pennsylvania equity forum for the instant complaint. Following Township of Hillsborough v. Cromwell and the two Spector Motor Service cases, supra, we conclude that plaintiffs do not have a “plain, speedy and efficient” remedy in Pennsylvania equity courts.
B. Administrative Appeal with Judicial Review
The statutory remedy referred to in the foregoing Pennsylvania cases is contained in the assessments legislation for counties of the third class, 72 P.S. § 5342 et seq. (Supp.1975). 13 The statute creates a three-member Board of Assessment Appeals, 72 P.S. § 5342 (Supp.1975), which must cause annual assessment of property within its jurisdiction. 72 P.S. § 5344 (Supp.1975). Assessments must be completed by the fifteenth of August of each year, 72 P.S. § 5347 (1968), and property owners must be duly notified. 72 P.S. § 5348 (1968). “Any person aggrieved by any assessment, whether or not the value thereof shall have been changed since the preceding annual assessment . . . may appeal to the board for relief.” 72 P.S. § 5349(c) (Supp. 1975). Parties must be notified of hearings and the board has “the power to compel the attendance of witnesses and the furnishing of documents.” 72 P.S. § 5349(d) (Supp.1975). A final decision of the board may be appealed to the court of common pleas, which may proceed de novo. 72 P.S. § 5350 (Supp.1975).
In the case of real property, the court shall determine, from the evidence submitted at the hearing, what ratio of assessed value to actual value was used generally in the taxing district, and the court shall direct the application of the ratio so found to the value of the property which is the subject matter of the appeal . .
Id. Decisions of the court of common pleas may be appealed. Id.
This statutory remedy is clearly designed for an individual taxpayer to appeal his individual assessment.
See Narehood
v.
Pearson,
In the instant case, the plaintiffs claim that their property and the property of members of the class they represent has been assessed at values higher than comparable property in white neighborhoods and that the ratios of their assessed value to actual value is higher than in all-white neighborhoods. The lack of a class action mechanism would impose substantial expense on plaintiffs’ efforts to prove their case before the board and the common pleas court. Each individual taxpayer would have to produce evidence of the fair market value of his property before he could establish the ratio of assessed value to actual market value. “The determination must be ultimately made, on the basis of competent testimony, as to the worth of the property in the market at a fair sale.”
Deitch Company v. Board of Property Assessment,
Gathering this evidence and hiring the necessary expert witnesses can be very expensive. The members of the class plaintiffs claim to represent probably could share the cost of gathering the evidence, as they could do in a class action. However, because the Pennsylvania procedure requires each person to bring a separate review action, each would have to pay his own filing fees, attorney’s fees, and expert witness’ fees; these costs could not be consolidated as they could be in a class action.
These duplicative costs might be avoided if class-wide relief could be obtained from an individual review action. However, Sharkey v. Showers, by holding that each individual must first exhaust his administrative remedy before seeking review from the courts, indicates that each person would have to bear the expense of proceeding before the Board. Furthermore, there is no indication in the Pennsylvania statute or decisions construing it that the relief granted by the Board or the reviewing courts can extend beyond the individual taxpayer.
Thus, the litigational expense of the Pennsylvania statutory review procedures can be forbidding, if not insurmountable, for the individual taxpayer. Since, according to the allegations of the complaint, many of the putative class members are in the lower economic brackets, the totality of these costs could effectively bar any attack on the allegedly discriminatory tax structure. This is precisely the kind of situation — where courts and multiple parties must endure the expense, inconvenience, and inefficiency of separate actions at law involving the same issue and a common defendant, which might deter large groups of individuals from seeking judicial relief— that prompted equity to develop the forerunner of today’s class action mechanism. See Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil § 1751.
Where legal remedies require multiple suits involving identical issues against the same defendant, federal equity practice has recognized the inadequacy of the legal remedy and has provided a forum.
Matthews v. Rodgers,
Moreover, adjustment of plaintiffs’ taxes in one year will not necessarily prevent repetition of disparate assessments in succeeding years. If, as plaintiffs have al
*72
leged, the Board’s discriminatory assessment pattern is intentional and systematic, the discrimination could be repeated. Plaintiffs may be required to undergo the administrative appeal route again, expending additional time, effort, and money.
In futuro
relief is not available from the statutory procedure; it acts only for the current year and for the individual taxpayer.
15
Where a state remedy for an allegedly unlawful tax requires repetitive suits year after year, “[r]esort may be had to equity . to avoid the multiplicity of suits . .”
Graves v. Texas Company,
We conclude that the Pennsylvania statutory review procedure does not provide these plaintiffs with the “plain, speedy and efficient remedy” required by section 1341 or federal equity principles. Combining this conclusion with our previous determination of the inadequacy of Pennsylvania equitable remedies, we believe that Pennsylvania law does not provide a “plain, speedy and efficient remedy” for plaintiffs’ complaint. 16 Its rigid statutory procedures are not designed to protect the federal constitutional rights of taxpayers — “especially freedom from racial discrimination — from violation by state officials.” Clement, supra note 1, at p. 279. 17
IV.
Applying our conclusion precisely to these proceedings, we hold that when plaintiffs allege systematic and intentional class-based racial discrimination in tax assessments, Pennsylvania law does not provide a “plain, speedy and efficient remedy.” Thus, a federal action seeking injunctive relief to alleviate the alleged discrimination is not barred by 28 U.S.C. § 1341. The district court, therefore, had jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ cause of action.
Our holding is fortified by our previous review of the legislative history of section 1341 and it is undiminished by the policy underlying federal comity doctrine in the state taxation area. The facts of this case do not present the problems Congress addressed in section 1341; indeed, a contrary situation is presented. As Section II of this opinion sets forth, Congress sought by section 1341 to attack out-of-state corporations’ use of the diversity jurisdiction to impose burdensome litigation on local governments and avoid paying local taxes. A denial of a federal forum in the instant case would allow a state to depend upon burdensome piecemeal review procedures as an effective defense to an allegedly unconstitutional tax structure. Such a result would stand the legislative intent of section 1341 on its head.
*73 We further note that a federal hearing on plaintiffs’ allegations will not produce the interference with state fiscal affairs that section 1341 and federal comity doctrine seek to avoid. If the district court finds that plaintiffs’ claim has merit, it can and should mold relief so that Berks County can continue to receive tax revenues. Indeed, a beneficial result of this suit may be that assessments in the entire taxing district will be raised, thereby increasing county treasury revenues.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court will be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. See Clement, Discrimination in Real Property Tax Assessment: A Litigation Strategy for Pennsylvania, 36 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 285 (1974) [hereinafter cited as “Clement”].
. 28 U.S.C. § 1341 (1970) provides:
The district courts shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, *65 speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.
. Plaintiffs sought to represent a class of similarly situated individuals. Because of the jurisdictional dismissal, the district court did not act on the class action question.
. Plaintiffs also claim that this discrimination violates state law and seek to invoke the district court’s pendent jurisdiction to adjudicate these counts. The exercise of pendent jurisdiction is within the district court’s discretion.
Hagans v. Lavine,
The complaint contained an additional count alleging that the discrimination was also “based upon the economic status and that of the areas in which [plaintiffs] live,” in violation of the federal Constitution and federal law. We express no view on whether this count is within the district court’s jurisdiction or states a cause of action; the district court may consider those questions on remand.
. See generally Wright, Law of Federal Courts, §§ 49-52, pp. 186-208 (2d ed. 1970); Bator, et al., Hart and Wechsler’s The Federal Courts and the Federal System, pp. 965-1050 (2d ed. 1973) [hereinafter cited as “Hart and Wechsler”].
.
See
81 Cong.Rec. 1415-1417 (1937) (remarks of Senator Bone); S.Rep.No.1035, 75th Cong., lst Sess. (1937); H.R.Rep.No.1503, 75th Cong., 1st Sess. (1937). The Supreme Court found these materials “convincing evidence of legislative purpose.”
Department of Employment v. United States,
. 48 Stat. 775 (1934), now codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1342 (1970).
. Some effort to reconcile
Rochester
and
Lynch
was made in
Crosson v. Downingtown Area School District,
. Pa.Const. art. 8, § 1 states:
All 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.
. Justice Pomeroy’s opinion noted that the case presented “a frontal attack on the constitutionality” of a taxing statute.
. Language in
Young Men’s Christian Ass’n v. City of Reading,
. Clement, supra note 1, at 302.
. Pennsylvania counties are divided into nine classes for the purposes of legislation and the regulation of their affairs. 16 P.S. § 210 (Supp. 1975). Berks County is a county of the third class.
. Plaintiffs argue, citing
In re Rick’s Appeal,
. We do not imply the precise relief plaintiffs request must be available to afford an adequate remedy. It is clear, however, that plaintiffs’ claims, if true, will require some form of continuing relief which is not available from the statutory review procedure.
. The district court reached a contrary result by speculating on the availability of Pennsylvania remedies. He recognized that the statutory procedure is designed to accommodate the “ordinary” situation of “individual appeals within a taxing district . . . ,” but relied on the “ingenuity” of assessment authorities and state courts to find a “realistic and non-technical construction” of the statute that would allow them to reach the issues tendered by plaintiffs.
. In his dissenting opinion in Rochester, supra, Justice Roberts also criticized the ineffectiveness of Pennsylvania’s statutory remedies in resolving constitutional challenges to taxing schemes, stating:
If a tax is inherently constitutionally defective, there is no reason to confine those affected to narrow statutory remedies. Why should every property owner in [the taxing district] have to assume the burden of appealing the propriety of his payment when the large questions could expeditiously and effectively be resolved in a single suit?
