The Honorable Donna Hutchinson State Representative
24 Rillington Drive Bella Vista, Arkansas 72714-3204
Dear Representative Hutchinson:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on whether, under Amendment 79, an older or disabled person's homestead assessment may rise when newly discovered property is added to the assessment.
Amendment
The amendment also provides that a homestead assessment generally cannot rise at all if the taxpayer is 65 or older, or disabled. By its structure and terms, the freeze does not prevent an assessment increase when a new residence is constructed on the assessed property. See Ark. Const. amend.
While the answer to your question is not entirely clear, it is my opinion that an older or disabled person's homestead assessment may rise when newly discovered property is added to the assessment. *Page 2
The same rules are used to interpret statutes and the constitution.See, e.g., Gazaway v. Greene County Equalization Bd.,
Applying these rules might lead one to conclude that an older or disabled person's homestead assessment cannot rise with property's discovery. The reasoning might be as follows: The constitution freezes homestead assessments for older and disabled people, and caps other assessments' growth rates. The freeze has two exceptions (new construction and substantial improvements), while the caps have three exceptions (newly discovered property, new construction, and substantial improvements). The caps' newly-discovered-property exception is proof that the General Assembly, which drafted Amendment 79, knew that property is sometimes discovered and added to an assessment. But the General Assembly provided no such express exception to the freeze. The intent of the drafters and the voters therefore must have been to disallow an increase in a frozen assessment even though property is discovered and added.
In my opinion, however, that is a mechanical, ill-considered analysis that ignores both Amendment 79's readily apparent ambiguities and a persuasive interpretation of the provision by an agency responsible for its execution. Prohibiting an assessment increase when property is discovered and added would also lead to absurd and unjust results, and elevate the law's letter over its spirit.
The language of Amendment 79 is unquestionably ambiguous in several respects. It provides, for example, that "[t]his subsection (d) [i.e., the freeze] does not apply to substantial improvements to real property." Ark. Const. amend.
Another example of the internal ambiguities that characterize Amendment 79 is illustrated by Op. Att'y Gen.
The omission from the freeze's language of the phrase "newly discovered real property," the issue here, creates yet another ambiguity.
Particularly where a provision is ambiguous, its interpretation by an agency charged with its administration and execution is "highly persuasive" and not reversed by the courts unless "clearly wrong."Citifinancial Retail Servs. Div. of Citicorp Trust Bank, FSB v.Weiss,
A mechanical application of the rules of statutory and constitutional construction referred to above would lead to absurd and unjust results. Consider two older homeowners living next-door to one another in substantially identical tract houses on substantially identical lots. One's assessment includes all homestead property while the other's omits the large back porch (a feature of both houses), significantly lowering the owner's tax bill. In my opinion, permanent continuation of the tax break, after the assessor's discovery of the error, would be unjust and absurd. The result would be that much more unjust and absurd if the assessor's omission of the porch was the result of fraud, but it is not clear whether or how, under a mechanistic, literal interpretation of the freeze, there could be any remedy for such a fraud. I do not believe a court would interpret Amendment 79 to permit that result. *Page 4
In cases like this, the Supreme Court of Arkansas gives effect to the constitution's underlying spirit even where "the true intention, though obvious, has not been expressed by the language employed when given its literal meaning. . . ." Berry v. Gordon,
The court has also stated that "expressio unius est exclusioalterius is not to be applied with the same rigor in construing a State constitution as a statute. . . ." State v. Martin,
While a court will not "arbitrarily supply words merely to give the effect . . . lawmakers might have intended . . . courts can supply obvious omissions, in order to carry out the legislative intent." Snowden v. Thompson,
Amendment 79 was adopted to mitigate the effects of substantial increases in assessments and taxes that were expected to arise from newly mandated statewide reappraisals. See Thiel v. Priest,
An assessment increase caused by adding newly discovered property is not an increase that arises from the correction of the sort of error or condition that inspired the General Assembly to mandate statewide appraisals. Mitigation or prohibition of such an increase is therefore not within the spirit or purpose of Amendment 79. Instead, an assessment increase caused by adding newly discovered property occurs because the property's true nature and extent have at last been discovered, and an error has been corrected, exactly the sort of condition sought to be corrected through the reappraisal mandate.
I do not take the omission of a few words from the freeze's language as evidence of an intent to extend permanent tax breaks on the basis of inaccurate assessments, particularly where such an intent would be inconsistent with the spirit of the *Page 6 constitution. While Amendment 79's language prevents an unequivocal conclusion, it is my opinion that Amendment 79 permits an older or disabled person's homestead assessment to rise when newly discovered property is added.
Assistant Attorney General J. M. Barker prepared this opinion, which I approve.
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL Attorney General *Page 1
