The Honorable Tim Wooldridge State Senator Post Office Box 339 Paragould, AR 72451
Dear Senator Wooldridge:
I am writing in response to your request, posed on behalf of the Senate and House Interim Committees on Revenue and Taxation, for my expedited opinion on two questions arising from the following reported facts:
This request involves § 1(b), § 1(c) and § 1(d) of Amendment
79 to the Arkansas Constitution and Ark. Code Ann. §26-26-1120 . Ark. Const. amend.79 , § 1(b) provides that the assessed value of parcels that are not a taxpayer's homestead are subject to a 10% annual cap on the increase in assessed value following a reappraisal. Ark. Const. amend.79 , § 1(c) provides that the assessed value of the parcel used as a taxpayer's homestead is subject to a 5% annual cap on the increase in assessed value following a reappraisal. Ark. Const. amend.79 , § 1(d) states that for taxation purposes the assessed value of homesteads owned by the disabled and individuals over the age of 65 cannot be increased.Ark. Code Ann. §
26-26-1120 (b) provides that when a disabled person or a person 65 years of age or older sells the homestead, the purchaser is not entitled to any reduction in the property's assessed value. The next tax year following the date of sale the property will be assessed at its full market value, and the assessment limitations in Ark. Const. amend.79 do not apply.Certain county assessors have requested that legislation be considered to remove all caps on assessed value when property is sold or changes use. They propose that on January 1 following the transfer of property, the taxable value of the property would increase to its full assessed value and not be subject to the 5% or 10% annual cap on the increase in assessed value.
Against this backdrop, you have posed the following questions:
1. Do the 10% cap and 5% cap provided for in Ark. Const. amend.
79 , § 1(b) and (c) apply until the reappraised value of the parcel is reached, regardless of the number of times the parcel is sold?2. If the answer to question 1 is no, may the General Assembly enact legislation allowing the taxable value of the parcel to increase to full assessed value on January 1 following the transfer or sale of the property?
RESPONSE
I cannot answer your first question with a "yes" or "no." The provisions of Amendment 79 are ambiguous with respect to the question of whether the conveyance of property subject to either of the referenced caps would warrant lifting the cap on the purchaser's assessments until, possibly, the next reappraisal warrants reimposing a cap. With respect to your second question, assuming a court would agree with my conclusion that Amendment 79 is ambiguous on this issue, the court would attach some weight to a legislative conclusion that the constitution supports, even if it may not necessarily mandate, lifting the cap when property changes hands pending the next reappraisal. However, given the ambiguity in Amendment 79, I cannot opine unequivocally that a reviewing court would uphold the constitutionality of the proposed legislation.
Question 1: Do the 10% cap and 5% cap provided for in Ark. Const. amend.
In my opinion, the answer to this question is unclear. I cannot determine from considering either the text or the historical context of Amendment 79 whether the voters intended (1) that the 10% or 5% annual limit on an increase in assessments applies only to an individual who owned the subject property at the time of the reappraisal that prompted the cap, meaning that the cap would be lifted upon any conveyance of the property until the next reappraisal; or (2) that irrespective of any conveyance of the property in between reappraisals, depending upon the current classification of the property (i.e., either homestead or non-homestead), the appropriate cap will apply until the next reappraisal.
Section 1 of Ark. Const. amend.
(a) After each county-wide reappraisal, as defined by law, and the resulting assessed value of property for ad valorum [sic] tax purposes and after each Tax Division appraisal and the resulting assessed value of utility and carrier real property for ad valorem tax purposes, the county assessor, or other official or officials designated by law, shall compare the assessed value of each parcel of real property reappraised or reassessed to the prior year's assessed value. If the assessed value of the parcel increased, then the assessed value of the parcel shall be adjusted pursuant to this section.
(b)(1) If the parcel is not a taxpayer's homestead used as the taxpayer's principal place of residence, then for the first assessment following reappraisal, any increase in the assessed value of the parcel shall be limited to not more than ten percent (10%) of the assessed value of the parcel for the previous year. In each year thereafter the assessed value shall increase by an additional ten percent (10%) of the assessed value of the parcel for the year prior to the first assessment that resulted from reappraisal but shall not exceed the assessed value determined by the reappraisal prior to adjustment under this subsection. For utility and carrier real property, any annual increase in the assessed value of the parcel shall be limited to not more than ten percent (10%) of the assessed value for the previous year.
(2) This subsection (b) does not apply to newly discovered real property, new construction, or to substantial improvements to real property.
(c)(1) Except as provided in subsection (d), if the parcel is a taxpayer's homestead used as the taxpayer's principal place of residence then for the first assessment following reappraisal, any increase in the assessed value of the parcel shall be limited to not more than five percent (5%) of the assessed value of the parcel for the previous year. In each year thereafter the assessed value shall increase by an additional five percent (5%) of the assessed value of the parcel for the year prior to the first assessment that resulted from reappraisal but shall not exceed the assessed value determined by the reappraisal prior to adjustment under this subsection.
(2) This subsection (c) does not apply to newly discovered real property, new construction, or to substantial improvements to real property.
(d)(1)(A) A homestead used as the taxpayer's principal place of residence purchased or constructed on or after January 1, 2001 by a disabled person or by a person sixty-five (65) years of age or older shall be assessed thereafter based on the lower of the assessed value as of the date of purchase or construction or a later assessed value.
(B) When a person becomes disabled or reaches sixty-five (65) years of age on or after January 1, 2001, that person's homestead used as the taxpayer's principal place of residence shall thereafter be assessed based on the lower of the assessed value on the person's sixty-fifth birthday, on the date the person becomes disabled or a later assessed value.
(C) If a person is disabled or is at least sixty-five (65) years of age and owns a homestead used as the taxpayer's principal place of residence on January 1, 2001, the homestead shall be assessed based on the lower of the assessed value on January 1, 2001 or a later assessed value.
This excerpt from Amendment 79 provides that increases in the assessed value of non-homestead property in any given year, excluding newly discovered real property, new construction or substantial improvements to real property, will be limited to 10% of the assessed value of the property in the year preceding the first post-Amendment 79 reappraisal, and to 5% on a homestead. The amendment further precludes increasing the assessed value of the homesteads of the disabled or persons over the age of 65.
Subsection
(b)(1) When a disabled person or a person sixty-five (65) years of age or older sells his or her real property, the purchaser shall not be entitled to claim any reduction to the property's assessed value.
(2) On or after January 1 of the year following the date of the sale, the county assessor shall assess the property at its full market value, unadjusted for assessment limitations required by Arkansas Constitution, Amendment
79 .
This statute lifts the prohibition against increasing the assessment on the homestead of a senior citizen or a disabled person when the individual at issue sells his or her property, directing that the property be assessed at its full market value commencing January 1 of the year following the sale.1
Neither Amendment 79 nor the legislature by statute has addressed what effect a sale of property might have on the 10% and 5% caps on annual increases in assessed value for purposes of taxation. The question arises, then, whether one might infer from the text of Amendment 79 what tax consequences should ensue upon a sale of property.
Subsection 1(a) of Amendment 79 initially addresses the issue of adjusting assessments purely with reference to the reappraised value of the parcel, mandating that the formula for adjusting assessments set forth in the rest of section 1 will apply if the assessed value of the parcel increased as a result of the reappraisal. Subsection 1(a) at no point addresses what happens if an individual owner transfers the property to another taxpayer. This subsection only directs that if the reappraisal reflects that the value of the parcel has increased, "the assessed value of the parcel shall be adjusted pursuant to this section." This directive thus leaves open the question of whether a conveyance of ownership might matter in determining what adjustment, if any, will occur.
On the other hand, subsections 1(b)(1) and 1(c)(1), which impose the 10% cap and the 5% cap respectively, both preface their formulas for computing assessed value for purposes of taxation by noting that the test for determining which formula will apply is whether the property is "a taxpayer's homestead." Unfortunately, these subsections fail to specify whether the reference in these sections to "a taxpayer" is specific or generic — i.e., whether "a" means "one" or "a" means "any" in identifying the "taxpayer" entitled to the benefit of the caps on a particular parcel following a reappraisal.2 If it is the former, the caps might be deemed to apply only so long as the owner of the property at the time of the last preceding reappraisal maintains possession, following which the assessment applied to a purchaser will reflect true market value pending a new reappraisal. If it is the latter, regardless of how often the property changes hands, its assessed value will be determined by applying the applicable cap to the parcel in question.
Unfortunately, the text of Amendment 79 provides little guidance regarding whether the voters intended the specific or the generic reading of the term "a" in referencing the "taxpayer" entitled to a tax benefit between reappraisals.3 The only arguable textual support for one reading over the other is indirect. In support of the proposition that one should read the term "a" as designating any taxpayer who owns property, whether as a homestead or not, during the period between reappraisals, it may be significant that the listed varieties of property not subject to an annual cap in assessments — namely, newly discovered real property, new construction and substantial improvements to real property — do not include property conveyed following the most recent reappraisal. See Ark. Const. amend.
Amendment 79 at no point mentions a purchase of property as either triggering or foreclosing application of a 10% or a 5% cap.4 This omission might be offered as support for the conclusion that the only inquiry that matters in any given tax year is the class to which any given piece of property belongs in that year — i.e., homestead or non-homestead. However, one might again characterize any such argument as begging the question, given that if "a" taxpayer is read to mean "one" taxpayer — namely, the owner at the time of the most recent reappraisal — the fact that a sale would result in an assessment at full value might be considered so self-evident as to require no acknowledgment.5
Lacking clear guidance from the text of Amendment 79 itself, I am authorized to consider the historical context in which the voters adopted the amendment for evidence of their intent. As the court noted in City ofLittle Rock v. ATT Communications of the Southwest, Inc.,
Question 2: If the answer to question 1 is no, may the General Assemblyenact legislation allowing the taxable value of the parcel to increase tofull assessed value on January 1 following the transfer or sale of theproperty?
Although my answer to question 1 was not a clear-cut "no," I will address this question to the extent of exploring the General Assembly's possible authority to resolve through legislation the ambiguity discussed in my response to your previous question.
You indicate in your factual recitation that certain assessors propose enacting legislation that would declare lifted, upon the conveyance of property or change in its use, the restrictions set forth in Amendment 79 limiting annual increases in the assessed value of non-homestead property to 10% and annual increases in the assessed value of homestead property to 5%.6 In effect, such legislation would extend the principle enacted in A.C.A. §
In considering whether or not the legislature might permissibly enact the proposed legislation declaring a limitation on caps, I am guided by various principles of statutory and constitutional construction. First, as noted in Bunch v. State,
Statutes are presumed constitutional, and the burden of proving otherwise is on the challenger of the statute. Ford v. Keith,
338 Ark. 487 ,996 S.W.2d 20 (1999); ACW, Inc. v. Weiss,329 Ark. 302 ,947 S.W.2d 770 (1997). If it is possible to construe a statute as constitutional, we must do so. Jones v. State,333 Ark. 208 ,969 S.W.2d 618 (1998). In construing a statute, we will presume that the General Assembly, in enacting it, possessed the full knowledge of the constitutional scope of its powers, full knowledge of prior legislation on the same subject, and full knowledge of judicial decisions under preexisting law. McLeod v. Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co.,205 Ark. 225 ,168 S.W.2d 413 (1943). We must also give effect to the legislature's intent, making use of common sense and giving words their usual and ordinary meaning. Kyle v. State,312 Ark. 274 ,849 S.W.2d 935 (1993).
Moreover, the legislature has the absolute power to legislate, unless prohibited from doing so by the constitution, either expressly or by necessary implication. Black v. Cockrill,
In matters relating to constitutional amendments the intent of the people is controlling. Bailey v. Abington,
With respect to the question of what deference, if any, to accord the legislature's interpretation of a constitutional amendment, the Arkansas Supreme Court has observed: "Legislative interpretation of constitutional provisions is never binding on the courts, but, if there is any doubt or ambiguity, it is persuasive and entitled to some consideration." Mears,County Judge v. Hall,
Although you do not mention A.C.A. §
I am not persuaded that the constitutional issue with respect to A.C.A. §
The question remains, then, whether under the principles of statutory and constitutional construction recited above, the General Assembly might constitutionally enact the legislation described in your request. Should the General Assembly choose to do so, it will in effect mean they interpret Amendment 79 as reflecting only the people's impulse to attenuate the "sticker shock" that a homeowner might experience in the year following a reappraisal if he were obliged to pay taxes on the full newly assessed value. This intention would suggest that the term "a taxpayer" refers only to the taxpayer who owns the property at issue at the time of the reappraisal, meaning that any purchaser of the property could be taxed at the full newly assessed value. However, given the ambiguities contained in Amendment 79, including its reference to adjusting the assessed value of "the parcel," I am unable confidently to opine that the people in fact intended this reading. As noted above, the General Assembly has wide discretion to legislate within constitutional parameters; its legislation will be presumed constitutional; and its interpretation of constitutional provisions will be given some weight by a reviewing court when the provisions are ambiguous, as are the pertinent provisions of Amendment 79. Based on these principles, a reviewing court might well reject a constitutional challenge to the proposed legislation. However, I cannot predict without reservation that a court would do so.
Assistant Attorney General Jack Druff prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
MB:JD/cyh
A homestead used as the taxpayer's principal place of residence purchased or constructed on or after January 1, 2001 by a disabled person or by a person sixty-five (65) years of age or older shall be assessed thereafter based on the lower of the assessed value as of the date of purchase or construction or a later assessed value.
(Emphasis added.) It appears clear on the face of this provision that if a person who is disabled or over 65 buys a homestead from a seller who is likewise disabled or over 65, the buyer will be entitled to the same reduction as was the seller. Notwithstanding the statute's silence on this issue, I do not believe that the legislature intended to include such a buyer within the scope of the statute.
According to Mr. Webster, "a" means one or any, but less "emphatically than either." It may mean one where only one is intended, or it may be any one of a great number. That is the trouble. Of itself, it is in no sense a term of limitation. Mr. Webster also says: "It is placed before nouns of the singular number, denoting an individual object, or quality individualized." Quality is defined as (1) "the condition of being of such a sort as distinguished from others; (2) special or temporary character, profession, occupation."
See Ark. Op. Att'y Gen. No.
Although you have not inquired about the effect of a change in use of property, you note in your factual recitation that the legislation proposed by the assessors would completely lift a cap not only if a property owner sells the property, but also if he changes its use. Amendment 79 is likewise silent on the question of what will be the effect of a change of use.
