This case presents the question of whether property tax relief under Minnesota’s equalization relief statute should be calculated based on a property’s actual market value or its limited market value. The Minnesota Tax Court concluded that equalization relief is based on a property’s limited market value. We reverse.
The legislature has provided various mechanisms to alleviate the property tax burdens on certain classes of property. One form of relief is designed to alleviate the impact of unequal assessment among similarly situated, comparable properties, otherwise known as equalization relief. Under Minn.Stat. § 278.05, subd. 4 (2002), even where a property has not been valued in excess of its actual market value, the property owner can obtain relief if the property is valued unequally in comparison with other property in the taxing district. 1
Another kind of property tax relief is designed to alleviate the impact of rapidly increasing market values. Under Minn. Stat. § 273.11, subd. la (2000), known as the limited market value statute, a cap is placed on the rate at which a taxpayer’s property tax assessment can increase from one year to the next. 2
James S. Harris, III, taxpayer-respondent, owns a residence in the town of Minnetrista with an estimated market value in 2001 of $4,788,000. 3 The parties agree that Harris is entitled to equalization relief under Minn.Stat. § 278.05, subd. 4. 4 The parties also agree that Harris is entitled to limited market value relief under Minn.Stat. § 273.11, subd. la.
The issue presented requires this court to determine in what order the two types of property tax relief are to be applied. Harris claims that he should be allowed to take his equalization reduction from the limited market value of his property in the amount of $4,479,900.
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This interpretation of the law would yield an assessed value of $4,229,100. Hennepin County (the county) and the Department of Revenue disagree, arguing that Harris’s equalization reduction should first be taken from the actual market value of his property and that the limited market value relief should then be applied. This interpretation of the law
The dispute between Harris and the county was submitted to the tax court on stipulated facts. The court granted summary judgment for Harris, concluding that applying equalization to the limited market value of property was the only way to give effect to both the equalization relief statute' and the limited market value statute. The county appealed to this court, alleging that the tax court erred by granting Harris an equalization reduction from limited market value rather than actual market value.
This is a case of first impression. We have not previously determined the proper interplay between the limited market value and equalization relief statutes. We review this summary judgment ruling on stipulated facts to determine 'whether the tax court erred in its application of the law.
Brookfield Trade Center, Inc. v. County of Ramsey,
The equalization relief - statute, Minn. Stat. § 278.05, subd. 4, provides that in the trial of an equalization case, “sales ratio studies” published by the Department of Revenue “shall be admissible in evidence as a public record.” “Sales ratio studies” are then referenced in Minn.Stat. § 127A.48 (2002 & Supp.2003), wherein the methodology for conducting the studies by the Department of Revenue is set forth in some detail. Reference to “sales ratio studies” is also found in Minn.Stat. § 273.11, subd. la, as follows:
For purposes of the assessment/sales ratio study conducted under section 127A.48, and the computation of state aids paid under chapters 122A, 123A, 123B, 124D, 125A, 126C, 127A, and 477A, market values and net tax capacities determined under this subdivision and subdivision 16, shall be used.
Harris argues that the plain language of section 273.11, subdivision la, states that limited market values are to be used in an equalization proceeding. Harris reads the phrase “and the computation of state aids” as a conjunction, indicating the legislature’s intent to employ limited market values in both assessment/sales ratio studies
and
state aid calculations. We believe that an equally plausible interpretation of the statute is that the legislature intended limited market values to be used “[f]or purposes of the assessment/sales ratio study”
as it relates to
the computation of state aids.
See id.
This interpretation acknowledges that there is more than one purpose for the study and that limited market values should only be used for one of those purposes, the calculation of state aids. Furthermore, the maxim
expressio unius est exclusio alterius,
the expression of one thing indicates the exclusion of another, supports the proposition that the absence of section 278.05 equalization proceedings in the list of enumerated chapters in section 273.11 indicates that the legislature did not intend for limited market values calculated under section 273.11 to apply to equalization relief. Minnesota Statutes § 273.11, subdivision la, does not
We look to other sections of the law and our canons of statutory construction to determine the intent of the legislature. We may examine, among other considerations, the “occasion and necessity for the law” and “the circumstances under which it was enacted.” Minn.Stat. § 645.16 (2002). We may also look to the state of the law before a statute was enacted.
Id.
In doing so, we will attempt to read statutes in a way that gives effect to all their provisions.
Id.
Statutes should be read as a whole with other statutes that address the same subject.
See State v. Chambers,
It is helpful to examine equalization relief as it existed before the passage of Minn.Stat. § 278.05 in order to understand the occasion and necessity for the passage of the statute. Property tax assessors in Minnesota have historically “assessed] property systematically and uniformly at a percentage of its true value.”
Renneke v. County of Brown,
In 1980, the legislature enacted Minn. Stat. § 278.05, subd. 4, to simplify the procedure for taxpayers to make out claims for equalization relief.
See
Act of Apr. 3,1980, ch. 443, § 3, 1980 Minn. Laws 270, 272. Section 278.05, subdivision 4, states that the Department of Revenue’s assessment/sales ratio study shall be “pri-ma facie evidence of the level of assessment” in a given taxing district. The legislature incorporated the assessment/sales ratio study conducted under Minn.Stat. § 127A.48 (2002 & Supp.2003),
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which was
In light of the purposes for statutory equalization and its constitutional underpinnings, we conclude that the legislature intended for equalization relief to be based on actual market value rather than limited market value. Since
Hamm
and
Renneke,
Minnesota courts have recognized a constitutional right for taxpayers to be assessed at a percentage of fair market value that is similar to other taxpayers in the same taxing district.
See Ploetz v. County of Hennepin,
Furthermore, applying equalization relief to the fair market value of property is the only way to give effect to both Minn. Stat. § 278.05, subd. 4, and Minn.Stat. § 273.11, subd. la. Direct equalization is intended to guarantee that localities assess property at a uniform percentage of its true value.
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See Renneke,
The purpose of Minn.Stat. § 273.11, to cap annual increases in assessed property value, is better served by first applying equalization relief to fair market value. If
We therefore hold that, when a taxpayer qualifies for both equalization relief under Minn.Stat. § 278.05, subd. 4, and limited market value relief under Minn.Stat. § 273.11, subd. la, the taxpayer’s equalization reduction must first be applied to the property’s actual market value before its limited market value is determined.
Reversed.
Notes
. The practice of assessing some properties in a taxing district at higher percentages of actual market value relative to other properties in that taxing district is referred to as "unequal assessment.”
Weyerhaeuser Co. v. County of Ramsey,
. The only tax year at issue in this case is the year 2001; therefore, we refer to the 2000 statute.
. The estimated market value is the value established by the assessor before any adjustments are made to the value of the property. See Minn.Stat. § 127A.48, subd. 5 (2002). This value reflects the assessor’s estimation of the property’s actual market value, the price at which it would sell on the open market. See Minnesota Tax Court, Presenting Property Tax Appeals to the Minnesota Tax Court, available at http://www.taxcourt.state.mn.us/Pro-SePPY.htm (last modified Sept. 24, 2003).
. Pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 278.04 (2002), the Department of Revenue conducted a nine-month ''assessment/sales ratio study” to determine whether property in various taxing districts would qualify for equalization relief. According to a formula set forth in section 278.05, Harris was entitled to reduce the taxable value of his property by 5.6 percent.
. The parties stipulated before the tax court that the limited market value provisions of Minn.Stat. § 273.11, subd. la, applied to the subject property and pursuant to the statute the assessor established a limited market value of $4,479,900 for the property.
. Minnesota Statutes § 127A.48, subdivision 1 (Supp.2003), located in the education code, instructs the Department of Revenue to prepare an assessmenVsales ratio study to “determine an aggregate equalized net tax capacity for the various classes of taxable property in each [school] district.” The statute requires the department to complete the study using a "methodology consistent with the most recent Standard on Assessment Ratio Studies published by the assessment standards committee of the International Association of Assessing Officers” ("IAAO Standards”). Minn.Stat. § 127A.48, subd. 2 (2002). The statute further states that the Commissioner of Revenue “shall supplement this general methodology with specific procedures necessary for execution of the study in accordance. with other Minnesota laws impacting the assessment/sales ratio study.” Id.
The IAAO Standards refer to both “direct” and "indirect” equalization. IAAO Standards § 2.3.2 (1999). The IÁAO makes clear, however, that constrained market values, such as limited market values in Minnesota, are appropriate only for indirect equalization, which estimates the aggregate tax base in various school districts or localities and, therefore, must account for statutory constraints on those tax bases. IAAO Standards §§ 2.3.2.2; 6.5.7. Similarly, the Department of Revenue refers to two distinct types of sales ratio studies that mirror the IAAO distinctions. The first, intended for use in equalization, matches sale prices against the
. This contrasts with indirect equalization, which seeks to equalize the differences in tax capacities between different taxing districts. Because indirect equalization requires a determination of a taxing district’s aggregate tax capacity, it is appropriate to consider that capacity as it is affected by limited market value and other constraints on taxable value.
