210 Conn. 233 | Conn. | 1989
This appeal involves two cases, Stop & Shop Cos. v. East Haven, Docket No. 13405, and Stop & Shop Cos. v. New Haven, Docket No. 13428, that arrived in this court by different routes, but which involve the same issue on appeal. The procedural and factual background of each case is as follows.
In Stop & Shop Cos. v. East Haven, 13 Conn. App. 393, 536 A.2d 991 (1988), the plaintiff owned real and personal property in the town of East Haven on October 1, 1985. On that date, East Haven assessed the plaintiff’s real property at the rate of 70 percent of its true and actual value as of October 1, 1981, the date of the town’s last decennial revaluation. The assessors, however, assessed the plaintiff’s personal property at 70 percent of its true and actual value as of October 1,
The second case, Stop & Shop Cos. v. New Haven, concerns the plaintiffs personal property assessment on the grand list of October 1,1986. The assessors valued real estate in New Haven at 70 percent of its fair market value as of October 1,1978, the last decennial revaluation in New Haven.
General Statutes § 12-62, titled “Periodic revaluation of real estate,” provides: “(a) Commencing October 1, 1978, the assessors of all towns . . . shall, no later than ten years following the last preceding revaluation of all real property and every ten years after each such revaluation, view all of the real estate of their respec
The plaintiff stresses that it does not attack the manner in which the assessors in East Haven and New Haven assessed real estate in the pertinent years. In its brief it quotes with approval the statement in Stop & Shop Cos. v. East Haven, supra, 394, that “[t]he plain
Instead, “|t]he plaintiff contends that the language of General Statutes § 12-71 (b) and its legislative history require that towns value real and personal property on the same date so that the two are taxed at the same effective rate, not merely at the same percentage of their assessed value.” Id., 394-95. To put it another way, the plaintiff claims that the statute requires the assessment of real and personal property at the same ratio of true value. In support of its position, the plaintiff relies on our oft-cited statement that, in construing a statute, courts may consider its plain language, its legislative history, its purpose and the circumstances surrounding its enactment. Peck v. Jacquemin, 196 Conn. 53, 64, 491 A.2d 1043 (1985); Dukes v. Durante, 192 Conn. 207, 214-15, 471 A.2d 1368 (1984).
The plaintiffs claim is not plainly supported by the language of § 12-71 (b), which states that personal property “shall be valued at its same percentage of its then actual valuation as the assessors have determined with respect to the listing of real estate for the same year . . . . ” Clearly, the tax assessors did apply the same nominal percentage rate to the “actual valuation” of the plaintiffs personal property as they applied to real estate. The plaintiffs claim, however, is that this nominal equivalency masks an underlying disparity arising out of differences in the time of “actual valuation.” In order to determine whether the statute is latently ambiguous in this manner, and should be construed as the plaintiff contends, we must turn to the pertinent legislative history and our clear-cut decisions concerning decennial revaluations.
The plaintiff’s claim that the legislative history of No. 673 of the 1957 Public Acts supports its position begs the question. That history does not concern in any way the issue in this case as to the same effective tax rate for real estate and personalty. It merely concerns uniformity of fractional valuations for real estate and personalty. Such uniformity is not questioned in this case since all parties agree that the assessors in each case applied the statutorily mandated factor of 70 percent to the valuations on which they relied.
The main thrust of the plaintiff’s argument is that upon a proper showing on the date of assessment of its personalty; of an average ratio of assessed fair market value of real estate to its assessed value which ratio is lower than 70 percent, the plaintiff is entitled to have its personalty assessed at such lower ratio. With due regard for the plaintiff’s status as an operator of supermarkets, we note that it is mixing apples and oranges in its attempt to establish a linkage between the sales assessment ratio of realty and that of personalty. For, no matter how stylishly the package may be wrapped, this argument is clearly no more than another way to produce a reading of § 12-71 (b) that, when properly read in the light of our case law, flies in the face of the statutory language.
Contrary to the plaintiffs argument, its proffered construction of § 12-71 (b) is not supported by Kays, Inc. v. Board of Tax Review, 170 Conn. 477, 365 A.2d 1207 (1976). In that case, the plaintiff sought a reduction in the assessment of its real property on the ground that it was disproportionately high because the majority of assessments, which were based upon 60 percent of 1969 values, were substantially less than 60 percent
Our holding in Kays, Inc., was subsequently clarified in another case discussing the limitations on the use of the average ratio technique in challenging tax assessments. In Uniroyal, Inc. v. Board of Tax Review, supra, we pointed out that “[i]n Connecticut, the procedure for taxation of real property is set forth in General Statutes § 12-64, which provides that all non-exempt real estate ‘shall be liable to taxation at a uniform percentage of its present, true and actual valuation to be determined by the assessors . . . . ’ The three steps necessary to carry out the mandate of § 12-64 are: ‘(a) The fair value of property as of the assessment date must be determined, (b) A percent, not exceeding 100 percent, of the fair value, must be determined by the assessing authority for uniform application to all property within the town, (c) The assessment value, i.e., the value for the purpose of taxation, for any given piece of property in the town, must be ascertained by applying the determined uniform percent to its fair value as of the assessment date.’ ” Id., 623, quoting Lemer
“Because the remedy for changing market values is set forth in General Statutes § 12-62, we conclude that use of the average ratio approach is not applicable to discrepancies in valuation which arise during the ten-year period between valuations. See Burritt Mutual Savings Bank v. New Britain, 146 Conn. 669, 678-79, 154 A.2d 608 (1959).” Uniroyal, Inc. v. Board of Tax Review, supra, 629-30.
In each of the cases before us, the plaintiff specifically did not challenge the last decennial revaluation of its real estate. Thus, even if the plaintiff had sought to challenge its present real estate valuation, this approach would be denied to it by our ruling in Uniroyal, Inc., cited above. Despite being blocked at
Concerning the core issue in these cases, we cannot improve upon either the language or reasoning of the Appellate Court in Stop & Shop Cos. v. East Haven, supra, 399: “There is nothing in either the language of General Statutes § 12-71 (b) or its legislative history which calls into question the practice of revaluing real property every ten years but valuing personal property annually. This conclusion is consistent with the legislature’s decision to give tax assessors the authority to increase or decrease the ‘valuation of property’ which appears on the town’s annual grand lists. [See] General Statutes § 12-55.” The Appellate Court concluded: “[T]his language provides for a permissive valuation of property in the years between the decennial revaluations, without requiring it. . . . There is nothing in this language which requires that the assessors carry out interim revaluation of all classes of property if they revalue one class of property.
“Rather, § 12-55 allows towns to engage in voluntary tax relief when property has decreased in value. ... If we were to conclude, as the plaintiff argues, that real property and personal property must be valued on the same date, we would vitiate the express language of § 12-55 because we would then be requiring that assessors treat real property and personal property in an identical fashion during the years between the decennial revaluation. We note that the nature of personal property lends itself to an annual valuation, often completely losing its useful value in
In Stop & Shop Cos. v. East Haven, Docket No. 13405, the judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed; in Stop & Shop Cos. v. New Haven, Docket No. 13428, there is no error.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
There is no significance to the fact that the court in Stop & Shop Cos. v. New Haven referred to “fair market value” of personal property, while in Stop & Shop Cos. v. East Haven the court referred to its ‘ ‘true and actual valuation.” These terms are interchangeable. “The terms actual valuation, market value, actual value, fair market value, market price and fair value are synonymous in the valuation of property for assessment purposes.” Uniroyal, Inc. v. Board of Tax Review, 182 Conn. 619, 623 n.3, 438 A.2d 782 (1981).
In its appeal to the Appellate Court, the plaintiff presented the following issue in its preliminary statement of issues: “Whether the trial court erred in dismissing the instant appeal, and in so doing, holding that the City of New Haven properly assessed the appellant’s property pursuant to Connecticut General Statutes § 12-71 (b).”