The St. Louis County Assessor (“County Assessor”) and the City of St. Louis Assessor (“City Assessor”) respectively appeal from the judgments of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County and of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis. The county circuit court ordered that the sixty-six cases set out in Appendix A to its judgment (“Appendix A cases”) be remanded to the State Tax Commission (“Commission”) with directions to enter decisions in favor of Westwood Partnership et al. (“taxpayers”) classifying the properties listed in Appendix A as “residential property” for tax purposes. The county circuit court also ordered that the cases set out in Appendix B to its judgment be remanded to the Commission to consider all evidence of discrimination based on lack of uniformity and equalization of property taxes. 1 The city circuit court ordered that the decisions of the Commission and the Commission hearing officer relating to taxpayers’ properties in the City of St. Louis (“City”) at issue be reversed, and remanded the cases to the Commission with directions to reassess those properties as residential for purposes of levying property taxes thereon.
These cases represent the vestiges of the so-called “rule of four,” which refers to the definition of “residential property” contained in Section 137.016.1(1) RSMo 1994.
2
The Missouri Supreme Court in
Associated Industries v. State Tax Commission,
In 1989 the Supreme Court held that the State Tax Commission could not instruct county assessors to consolidate structures on a single parcel of land or contiguous parcels of land owned by the same owner in order to classify the property as commercial.
Rothschild v. State Tax Commission of Missouri,
Several years later, the Supreme Court held that buildings that were physically connected were separate structures for purposes of Section 137.016.1(1) when they were not interdependent.
Morton v. Brenner,
In the last major case involving Section 137.016.1(1), the Supreme Court held that apartment complexes held in the condominium form of ownership were “residential property” under Section 137.016.1(1), even if one party owned all of the condominium units and operated the property “in a manner typical of an income-generating apartment complex.”
Alpha One Properties, Inc. v. State Tax Commission of Missouri,
Taxpayers are the owners of apartment buildings in the City and in St. Louis County. For the period from 1989 through 1994 certain properties of taxpayers were classified as commercial property under the “rule of four” definition contained in Section 137.016.1(1), rather than as residential property. For each year in the period, taxpayers appealed the classifications of their properties to the appropriate Boards of Equalization (“Boards”) of St. Louis County and of the City. Following the decisions from the Boards, taxpayers then appealed the assessments and classification of their properties to the Commission.
In sixty-two of the cases heard by the St. Louis County Board of Equalization, a majority of the members of the Board attended each hearing, as taxpayers had requested. In those sixty-two cases a majority of the Board wrote, signed, and issued a decision, but it was a different majority from that present at the respective hearings. Of the two Board members that issued the decision, one had attended the hearing and the other had not. Due to the lack of recordkeeping, the latter Board member had no written or recorded account of the hearing to consider in making his or her decision. In four additional cases involving taxpayers that were heard by the Board, only one member wrote, *157 signed, and issued the decision on the case, so that the decision was not issued by a majority of the Board. 3 These sixty-six cases (“Appendix A cases”) were among those appealed to the Commission.
Taxpayers asserted several general grounds to the Commission for reversing the St. Louis County Board of Equalization’s decisions: First, they claimed that they were entitled to prevail in the Appendix A cases because the Board’s decisions had not been made by the same majority of the Board that heard each case; second, they asserted that some of the properties should have been classified as residential rather than commercial under Section 137.016.1(1) due to them structure; and third, they argued that all of the properties of taxpayers should be classified as residential due to unconstitutional discrimination resulting from the lack of uniformity of assessment. Discovery took place and various pre-hearing proceedings were held. The Commission denied taxpayers’ motion for summary judgment regarding the alleged procedural errors in the Appendix A cases. The Commission ordered taxpayers to make an offer of proof. The Commission hearing officer reviewed taxpayers’ proposed evidence at a pre-hearing conference, and concluded that taxpayers had no admissible evidence, and excluded the evidence proffered by taxpayers. The Commission subsequently affirmed the decisions of the Boards.
Taxpayers thereafter appealed the decisions of the Commission to the appropriate circuit courts. The St. Louis County Circuit Court found that the St. Louis County Board of Equalization did not comply with the statutory requirements of Section 138.135.3 RSMo and Section 138.040 RSMo regarding Board hearings and decision-making. The court further determined that as a consequence of the Board’s failure to comply with the procedural requirements of these statutes that taxpayers automatically should have prevailed in their appeals to the Board pursuant to Section 138.135.3, and there was no need for taxpayers to appeal to the Commission. The court remanded the Appendix A cases to the Commission with directions that it enter decisions in favor of taxpayers and to classify the properties as residential. In examining the constitutional challenges, the court determined that St. Louis County was the authority levying the taxes, but that the Commission had to consider intra-county uniformity and inter-county equalization as well, and that taxpayers had a right to present evidence regarding both. The court considered taxpayers’ offer of proof, which consisted of the evidence excluded by the Commission, and found that taxpayers “adequately present claims of discrimination due to lack of uniformity and equalization[,]” which the Commission should have considered. The court also found that County Assessor had the burden of proof regarding the classification of taxpayers’ properties as commercial. The court remanded the non-Appendix A cases to the Commission for consideration of all evidence of discrimination.
In the cases before the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, the court found that the Commission “had no administrative discretion to exercise, but was limited to determining whether in fact assessment practices differed between similarly situated counties in Missouri, with regard to property containing more than four dwelling units.” The court determined that the State of Missouri was the territorial taxing jurisdiction, that the Commission knew that there was a lack of uniformity in assessment standards among the various *158 counties of Missouri resulting in discrimination towards a large class of property-owners over a long period of time and did not correct it, such that the Commission intentionally discriminated against taxpayers. The court ordered that taxpayers were entitled to prevail on the basis of their Equal Protection claims, reversed the Commission’s previous orders, and remanded to the Commission with directions to reassess taxpayers’ properties at issue in the City as residential for the purposes of levying real property taxes thereon.
The County Assessor and the City Assessor appeal from these judgments, which have been consolidated on appeal.
To facilitate analysis, we address the County Assessor’s points on appeal out of order. In his second point, County Assessor asserts that the trial court erred in reversing the Commission’s decision and determining that taxpayers should have automatically prevailed in the Appendix A cases based on violation of the majority requirements of Sections 138.135.3 and 138.040.2 because the quorum requirements had been met in that a majority of the Board heard each case and because application of the majority requirement of Section 138.135.3 “would violate the constitutional requirement of uniform assessment by allowing same-class properties to be assessed differently.”
The facts relating to this point are undisputed. All of the Appendix A cases apparently were heard by a majority of the St. Louis County Board of Equalization. The hearings were not transcribed or recorded. In all of the Appendix A cases, only one member of the Board that was present at the respective hearings actually participated in determining each case. In sixty-two of the cases, a Board member that was not present at the hearings also participated in the determination. Only one Board member made the determination in the other four Appendix A cases. The issue is the construction and application of Sections 138.135.3 and 138.040.2.
In reviewing a bench-tried case, we will sustain the judgment of the trial court unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it erroneously states or applies the law.
Murphy v. Carron,
A statute is not to be interpreted narrowly if such an interpretation would defeat the purpose of the legislation. Id. Moreover, it is presumed that every word, clause, sentence, and provision of a statute have effect; conversely, it is presumed that idle verbiage or superfluous language was not inserted into a statute. Id.
Section 138.135.3 states that if the Board conducts a hearing pursuant to Chapter 138 RSMo and the property owner requests that he be heard by a majority of the Board, and a majority is not in attendance “for any reason” then the property owner “shall prevail without further action.” Section 138.040.2 states that a majority of the Board constitutes a quorum, “and a majority of the members present shall determine all matters of appeal or revision.”
A majority of the St. Louis County Board of Equalization was present at all of the hearings of the Appendix A cases when taxpayers presented their evidence. However, taxpayers contend that “hearing” also includes the administrative tribunal’s “consideration” of the evidence and arguments, and “determinative action” by the agency, and therefore they should have
*159
automatically prevailed under Sections 138.135.3 and 138.040.2. Taxpayers rely on
City of Richmond Heights v. Bd. Of Equalization of St. Louis County,
Given that a hearing before a board of equalization and the determination based on that hearing are discrete events, it follows that if a property owner requests a hearing before a majority of a board of equalization pursuant to Section 138.135.3, and a majority of the board attends the hearing, then the provision that the “property owner shall prevail without further action[,]” is not applicable.
However, this does not mean that the St. Louis County Board of Equalization made a proper, final determination of the Appendix A cases. Section 138.040.2 plainly requires that “a majority of the members present shall determine all matters of appeal[.]” It is presumed that every word, clause, sentence, and provision of a statute have effect; conversely, it is presumed that idle verbiage or superfluous language was not inserted into a statute.
B.A.P., Inc.,
If the language of Section 138.040.2 were construed to mean that a decision could be made by a majority of those Board members who were present when the determination was formally made without regard to which members of the Board physically attended the hearing, then it could produce an anomalous result. A single member of the board could determine an appeal if he or she were the sole mem *160 ber present at the formal determination, even if the entire board had been present at the hearing and a majority of the board at the hearing was opposed to the result of the formal determination by the sole member. Under this interpretation, a single board member could determine an appeal even if he or she was not present for the hearing,, and even though no transcript was made of such hearings. This would make meaningless the requirements of Section 138.135.3 that a majority of the board had to be present for the hearing, if requested by the property owner. Construing Section 138.040.2 in light of Section 138.135.3, this Court concludes that the former requires that the determination of all matters of appeal in which a hearing is held under Chapter 138 must be made by a majority of the members of the board of equalization present at the hearing. Consequently, the St. Louis County Board of Equalization failed to make a final determination of the appeals in any of the Appendix A cases, and the Commission had no jurisdiction over those cases. Section 138.430.1. Point sustained.
In his third point on appeal, County Assessor contends that the trial court erred in overruling the determination of the Commission’s hearing officer that taxpayers failed to make a submissible case that they suffered unconstitutional discrimination under Section 137.016.1(1) as applied, because taxpayers presented no relevant evidence that would support a claim of intentional discrimination, and taxpayers’ proffered evidence of unconstitutional discrimination concerned assessors and counties outside of St. Louis County, the territorial limits of the authority levying the property tax.
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that no State shall “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” During the relevant period, the Missouri Constitution, art. X sec. 3 required that “[t]axes ... shall be uniform upon the same class or subclass of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax.” County Assessor contends that St. Louis County is the correct territorial limit, not the State of Missouri. We agree. The ad valorem real property tax is levied by the governing body of the county, which is the taxing authority.
Beatty v. State Tax Commission,
The Commission hearing officer properly excluded the proffered evidence concerning the practices of assessors outside of St. Louis County. Taxpayers failed to make a submissible case that they suffered unconstitutional discrimination, and the trial court erred in overruling the determination of the Commission hearing officer. Point sustained.
In his first point on appeal, County Assessor argues that the Commission de- *161 cisión affirming the County Board classifications of taxpayers’ properties as commercial was supported by competent and substantial evidence because taxpayers failed to present any competent evidence that the properties were residential under Section 137.016.1(1) as being structures with four or fewer dwelling units, and taxpayers thereby failed to meet their burden of proof.
There is no longer an automatic presumption regarding the correctness of an assessor’s valuation. Section 138.431.3. This statutory change from the previous situation in which the assessor’s valuation was presumed to be correct does not mean that there is now a presumption in favor of taxpayer. The taxpayer in a Commission tax appeal still bears the burden of proof and must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the property was improperly classified or valued.
Industrial Development Authority of Kansas City v. State Tax Commission of Missouri,
We turn to the appeal of City’s assessor. The first point on appeal does not set out a claim of error. Rather, it asserts what City Assessor believes to be the proper standard of review for this Court for all of the points on appeal, which is more properly a matter for the argument portion of her brief.
As a general rule, on appeal from a circuit court’s review of an administrative decision, this Court reviews the decision of the administrative agency, not the judgment of the circuit court.
Daly v. P.D. George Company,
To facilitate analysis, we address City assessor’s remaining points on appeal out of sequence. In her fourth point on appeal, City assessor argues that the trial court erred in finding that there were unconstitutional inter-county discriminatory practices because it lacked jurisdiction over that issue, which was not before it as the Commission only had jurisdiction over alleged intra-county discriminatory practices in this case.
This issue has already been discussed in our review of County assessor’s third point on appeal, and what we stated there applies equally to the City, the City Board, and taxpayers’ appeal to the Commission of the cases on properties in the City. The Missouri Constitution, art. X sec. 3 requires that taxes be uniform on the same class or subclass within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax, which in this case is the City.
Beatty,
We address City Assessor’s second and third points on appeal jointly. In her third point on appeal, City Assessor contends that the Commission hearing officer properly excluded taxpayers’ proffered evidence because said evidence “was irrelevant, lacked foundation, contained hearsay, involved unqualified expert opinions, and was inadmissible.” In her second point on appeal, City Assessor states that the Commission “correctly and properly applied the correct legal standard to the claims of the property owners because prevailing ‘rule of four’ judicial standards disqualify the properties in question from ‘residential’ treatment and because prevailing ‘burden of proof standards require a party seeking to prosecute a discriminatory classification claim to establish intentional discrimination or an assessment ‘so grossly excessive’ as to be ‘entirely inconsistent with an honest exercise of judgment.’”
In reviewing the decision of an administrative agency, this Court is limited to a determination of whether the decision is supported by competent and substantial evidence, or whether it is arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, unlawful, an abuse of discretion, or in excess of the agency’s jurisdiction.
Nance,
As for the remainder of the excluded evidence, assuming
arguendo,
that such rejections were indeed error by the Commission, such error would constitute harmless error, as the admission of that evidence would not have materially affected the merits of the action.
Whitworth v. Jones,
Missouri courts have recognized that it is impossible to avoid all discriminatory impact in tax classifications, and that absolute uniformity of tax classifications and assessments is an unattainable ideal, while practical uniformity is the constitutional goal.
Savage v. State Tax Commission of Missouri,
[M]ere errors of judgment by officials will not support a claim of discrimination. There must be something more,— something which in effect amounts to an intentional violation of the essential principle of practical uniformity. The good faith of such officers and the validity of their actions are presumed; when assailed, the burden of proof is upon the complaining party.
Sperry Corp. v. State Tax Commission,
Taxpayers cite
Hopkins v. Odom,
The judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County is reversed and remanded with directions to affirm the Commission’s decision regarding the non-Appendix A cases involving the County Assessor, and with further directions to remand the Appendix A cases to the Commission with instructions to remand those cases to the Board for further proceedings in accordance with statute and consistent with this opinion. The judgment of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis is reversed and remanded with directions to affirm the decisions of the Commission.
Notes
. The county circuit court stated that taxpayers were entitled to have the properties set out in Appendix B classified entirely as residential rather than as commercial, but noted that the County Assessor and other respondents had not had an opportunity to present evidence on the issue of discrimination based on lack of uniformity and equalization, and so remanded the cases to the Commission.
. Section 137.016.1(1) defined residential property as:
"all real property improved by a structure which is used or intended to be used for residential living by human occupants and which contains not more than four dwelling units or which contains single dwelling units owned as a condominium or in a cooperative housing association or an independent living facility for the elderly.”
RSMo (1994). This definition of residential property became effective in 1985. The "rule of four” was eliminated in 1995 by the legislative amendments to Sections 137.016.1(1) and 137.016.3 RSMo (Supp.1995). All other statutory citations are to RSMo (1994) unless noted otherwise.
. There is no evidence as to how many of the St. Louis County Board of Equalization members were present at the hearings in these four cases.
. The Missouri Supreme Court stated that ''hearing” as it applied in Section 536.010(2) concerning the definition of “contested case” carried a sense which
presupposes a proceeding before a competent tribunal for the trial of issues. Between adversary parties, the presentation and consideration of proofs and arguments, and determinative action by the tribunal with respect to the issues; it also requires that the parties be apprised of all evidence offered or considered, with the opportunity to test, examine, explain, or refute such evidence; it contemplates an opportunity to be heard, not only the privilege to be present when the matter is being considered, but the right to present one’s contentions and to support the same by proof and argument. ... Thus, there is no "hearing” when the party does not know what evidence is offered or considered, and is not given an opportunity to test, explain, or refute.
City of Richmond Heights,
