Petitioners appeal by right an order of the Michigan Tax Tribunal (MTT) affirming respondent’s assessment of their real property. We affirm. This appeal has been decided without oral argument. MCR 7.214(E).
Petitioners are two husband-and-wife couples, Roy and Susan Hackert and Theodore and Joan Schwass. All the real estate at issue was owned by two partnerships, Tero Farms and KaJo Farms, of which Roy Hackert and Theodore Schwass were the only partners. The partnerships deeded the real estate parcels to one or the other of the individual partners and their respective spouses. Following these conveyances, respondent reassessed the parcels and raised the taxable values of the property beginning with tax year 2006. Petitioners asserted that the conveyance of property from the partnerships to the individual partners was not a transfer that would operate to remove the cap on the property’s taxable values. The MTT initially adopted the hearing referee’s proposed opinion in its final order affirming the assessment. However, after petitioners filed their claim of appeal in this Court, the MTT issued a “Corrected Final Opinion and Judgment” in which it concluded that the hearing referee’s statutory basis for deciding the matter was erroneous, but that the error was harmless because the conveyances were not within
We review de novo legal questions decided by the MTT. See Cowles v Bank West,
The Michigan Constitution and Michigan statutory law permit the taxable value of real property to be reassessed upon the sale or transfer of the property according to the following year’s state equalized value. Const 1963, art 9, § 3; MCL 211.27a(3); Signature Villas, LLC v Ann Arbor,
We disagree. The statutory scheme unambiguously identifies the types of conveyances that do not trigger uncapping, and conveyances involving tenancies in partnership are not among those listed. See MCL 211.27a(7). Nor can we assume that the Legislature intended to include tenancies in partnership when it used the term “joint tenancy” in the exception provided by MCL 211.27a(7)(h). In Wengel v Wengel,
Affirmed. No taxable costs pursuant to MCR 7.219, a public question having been involved.
Notes
Because the incorrect statutory basis of the original final order has been vacated, we need not address petitioners’ argument that the decision contained erroneous legal reasoning.
