Chs v. Dor , 2013 MT 100 ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                                                  April 16 2013
    DA 12-0378
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2013 MT 100
    CHS, INC.,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    MONTANA STATE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
    Defendant and Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM:          District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Yellowstone, Cause Nos. DV 10-133, DV 10-2080
    Honorable Susan P. Watters and Honorable Gregory R. Todd, Presiding
    Judges
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Jared M. Le Fevre, Jon Dyre, James P. Site, Crowley Fleck PLLP, Billings,
    Montana
    For Appellee:
    Derek R. Bell, Brendan R. Beatty, Special Assistant Attorneys General,
    Montana Dept. of Revenue, Helena, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs:   February 6, 2013
    Decided:    April 16, 2013
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Chief Justice Mike McGrath delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1    CHS, Inc., asked the Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County, for a
    declaratory judgment that the Montana Department of Revenue (DOR) used improper or
    illegal methods of assessing CHS’s Montana properties for property tax purposes in 2009
    and 2010. The court granted summary judgment for DOR on CHS’s claims, ruling that
    the substantive arguments must be presented to the appropriate administrative tax appeal
    boards. CHS appeals. We affirm.
    ¶2    CHS sets forth three issues on appeal:
    ¶3    1. Is the CHS challenge to the methods and procedures of assessment used by
    DOR to assess CHS’s property within the scope of declaratory judgment actions that may
    be brought directly in a Montana district court under § 15-1-406, MCA, without first
    appealing to administrative tax appeals boards?
    ¶4    2. Is the CHS claim that DOR violated state law when it failed to equalize its
    valuation of CHS’s property with similar properties within the scope of declaratory
    judgment actions that may be brought directly in a Montana district court under § 15-1-
    406, MCA, without first appealing to administrative tax appeal boards?
    ¶5    3. Was DOR’s assessment of CHS’s property made too late for tax year 2009?
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶6    CHS is a Minnesota corporation licensed to do business in Montana. This case
    relates to state property taxes assessed on CHS’s coking refinery in Laurel, Montana, and
    on its petroleum marketing terminals in Gallatin and Missoula Counties.
    2
    ¶7     As part of Montana’s state property tax appraisal process, CHS must submit an
    annual Property Reporting Form to DOR.            In 2009, CHS requested two separate
    extensions of time to return its Property Reporting Form, and DOR granted those
    extensions. On May 29, 2009, two months after the second agreed-upon extension
    deadline, CHS notified DOR that certain figures it had reported were in error and
    required adjustment.
    ¶8     DOR issued its original 2009 assessment of CHS’s property on or about August
    22, 2009. CHS requested an informal review of the 2009 assessment notice, which is the
    first step in protesting a tax assessment under § 15-7-102(3), MCA. Following the
    informal review, DOR issued a revised assessment in January of 2010.
    ¶9     CHS remained dissatisfied with the 2009 assessment of its property. An aggrieved
    taxpayer who is not satisfied by the results of informal review with DOR may continue
    the administrative appeal process by appealing to the county tax appeal board, the State
    Tax Appeal Board (STAB), and, eventually, petitioning for judicial review of the
    administrative decisions. See §§ 15-2-301 through -303, 15-7-102(3) and (6), and 15-15-
    101 through -104, MCA. In addition, § 15-1-406(1)(a), MCA, allows an aggrieved
    taxpayer to bring a declaratory judgment action directly in a district court to establish that
    an administrative rule or method or procedure of assessment or imposition of tax adopted
    or used by DOR is “illegal or improper.”
    ¶10    CHS paid its 2009 property taxes under protest and then pursued both
    administrative review and the declaratory judgment option for challenging its property
    tax assessment. It filed this declaratory judgment action and, contemporaneously, filed
    3
    appeals with the county tax appeal boards in Yellowstone, Gallatin, and Missoula
    Counties.     In 2010, CHS again requested an informal review of its property tax
    assessment with DOR, and then later filed a second declaratory judgment action,
    challenging DOR’s assessment of its property taxes for tax year 2010.                          The two
    declaratory judgment actions are consolidated for purposes of this appeal. The county tax
    appeal boards have stayed the administrative proceedings before them, pending the
    outcome of this action.
    ¶11     DOR filed a motion asking the District Court to grant it summary judgment. DOR
    argued that CHS had failed to present facts stating a claim under § 15-1-406, MCA, and
    that the types of challenges being made by CHS must first be presented to the
    administrative tax appeal boards provided for under Montana statutes. In addition, DOR
    requested summary judgment on CHS’s claims that DOR had failed to equalize CHS’s
    properties with similar properties or to timely assess the property under the statutory
    deadline contained in § 15-8-201, MCA.
    ¶12     In support of its motion for summary judgment, DOR filed a 10-page affidavit by
    its appraiser, Seth Carlson. Carlson averred that he used a cost approach to valuation of
    the property, making substantial deductions for physical depreciation and functional
    obsolescence, but that he could not identify any economic obsolescence. He considered
    performing an income approach to valuation, but ultimately did not do so because he
    lacked the necessary income and expense information from CHS.1                            Carlson also
    1
    The Property Reporting Form did not require disclosure of income or expense information, and CHS declined
    DOR’s requests that it provide such information.
    4
    considered employing a market data approach to valuation, but he did not identify any
    particular sales that were comparable or useful. Carlson stated that, upon CHS’s request
    for informal review with DOR, he reviewed and considered information that CHS
    provided from its outside appraisers, Duff and Phelps. However, “[f]or a variety of
    reasons,” Carlson determined the Duff and Phelps analysis could not serve as a legitimate
    basis to modify or adjust the market value of CHS’s property.
    ¶13    In response to the motion for summary judgment, CHS provided the District Court
    with an affidavit from a new outside consultant, Michael Remsha, who had analyzed the
    values of CHS’s properties for purposes of this action. Remsha opined that DOR had not
    taken into account all items of depreciation and obsolescence, resulting in an excessive
    assessment. Remsha further stated that he had identified sales of comparable refineries
    and used them to value the Laurel refinery, and that he also had identified applicable
    revenues, expenses, and capitalization and discount rates to appraise the refinery under
    the income approach.
    ¶14    Following briefing and a hearing, the District Court granted summary judgment
    for DOR as to all of the CHS claims. The court determined that DOR had established the
    nonexistence of material facts as to the illegality of the tax imposed on CHS, and that
    CHS then had failed to meet its burden of presenting evidence that the method or
    procedure of assessment was illegal or improper. The court ruled that Remsha’s affidavit
    went to valuation, and not to illegal taxation. The court deferred to the appropriate tax
    appeal boards the merits of the equalization argument, and it ruled that CHS had
    established no prejudice as a result of the “late” assessment notice in 2009.
    5
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶15     We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. In re Estate of
    Harmon, 
    2011 MT 84
    , ¶ 14, 
    360 Mont. 150
    , 
    253 P.3d 821
    . In so doing, we apply the
    same standards used by the district court under M. R. Civ. P. 56: summary judgment
    should be rendered if the pleadings, discovery, and other materials on file with the court
    establish that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    ¶16     The interpretation and application of a statute to a particular set of circumstances
    are questions of law subject to de novo review for correctness. Ramsey v. Yellowstone
    Neurosurgical Assocs., 
    2005 MT 317
    , ¶ 18, 
    329 Mont. 489
    , 
    125 P.3d 1091
    .
    DISCUSSION
    ¶17 Issue One: Is the CHS challenge to the methods and procedures of assessment
    used by DOR to assess CHS’s property within the scope of declaratory judgment actions
    that may be brought directly in a Montana district court under § 15-1-406, MCA, without
    first appealing to administrative tax appeals boards?
    ¶18     As indicated above, § 15-1-406, MCA, allows an aggrieved taxpayer to bring a
    declaratory judgment action seeking a declaration that a “method or procedure of
    assessment” is “illegal or improper.” Section 15-1-406(4)(a), MCA, further provides
    that:
    The remedy authorized by this section may not be used to challenge the . . .
    market value of property under a property tax unless the challenge is to the
    legality of a particular methodology that is being applied to similarly
    situated taxpayers[.]
    The parties agree that Albright v. State, 
    281 Mont. 196
    , 
    933 P.2d 815
     (1997), is the
    foundation for discussion of which “methods or procedures of assessment” may be
    6
    challenged directly in a district court under § 15-1-406, MCA.
    ¶19    Albright was a challenge to the constitutionality of the statewide reappraisal of all
    residential and commercial property in Montana between 1987 and 1992, pursuant to
    § 15-7-111, MCA. The case involved application of two statutory requirements. Section
    15-8-111(1)-(2)(a), MCA, required that “[a]ll taxable property must be assessed at 100%
    of its market value except as otherwise provided. Market value is the value at which
    property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller[.]” Section
    15-7-112, MCA, required that “[t]he same method of appraisal and assessment shall be
    used in each county of the state to the end that comparable property with similar true
    market values and subject to taxation in Montana shall have substantially equal taxable
    values at the end of each cyclical revaluation program[.]”
    ¶20    In Albright, we concluded the legislature intended DOR to use both the cost
    approach and the market data approach to valuation of property, depending on the
    available market data. We also concluded that DOR’s use of various approaches to
    valuation does not contravene the mandate that appraisals be done by the same “method”
    statewide.
    [T]he term “method” refers to a consistent process for arriving at market
    value, the details of which may vary from place to place, depending on
    available data, and which will necessarily include a number of different
    approaches—e.g., the market data approach, the income approach, the cost
    approach—or some combination of these approaches, depending on the
    market in the area where appraisals occur.
    Albright, 281 Mont. at 208-09, 
    933 P.2d at 823
    . Ultimately, we concluded that DOR’s
    market-based method utilizing a combination of approaches--the market data approach,
    7
    the income approach, and the cost approach--did not violate Article VIII, Section 3, of
    the Montana Constitution. We went on to advise property owners who feel that fair,
    accurate, and consistent valuations have not been achieved to avail themselves of the
    administrative property tax appeal process set forth at §§ 15-15-101 through -104, MCA.
    Albright, 281 Mont. at 213-14, 
    933 P.2d at 826
    .
    ¶21   Acknowledging that Albright is a controlling precedent, CHS relies on Devoe v.
    Department of Revenue, 
    263 Mont. 100
    , 
    866 P.2d 228
     (1993), to argue that using the cost
    approach to valuation alone, without consideration of any market factors, is inadequate as
    a matter of law because it does not take into account market influences on property
    values. CHS also cites Devoe and Albright for the holding that DOR is obliged to assess
    property at 100% of its market value and that the courts have the power to determine
    whether the methods used by DOR are adequate to meet that obligation. CHS’s position
    is that Albright and Devoe require that all three ways of determining market value--cost
    approach, income approach, and comparable sale or market data approach--can and
    should be used, depending on the context, rather than only the cost less depreciation
    approach.
    ¶22   “Depending on the context” is key. The clear language of Albright set forth above
    indicates that, while the “method” of appraisal requires consideration of more than one
    approach to valuation, use of these approaches may be limited by “available data” and the
    “market in the area where appraisals occur.” Albright, 281 Mont. at 209, 
    933 P.2d at 823
    ; see also PacifiCorp v. State, 
    2011 MT 93
    , ¶ 48, 
    360 Mont. 259
    , 
    253 P.3d 847
    .
    8
    ¶23    CHS asserts repeatedly that it is not asking the courts to make detailed findings of
    valuation of its property, but instead is asking them to rule on how to assess property.
    But method of assessment necessarily varies with the situation.         See Albright and
    PacifiCorp. Where, as here, the record reveals that the property owner is unwilling to
    provide DOR with income information, DOR will not be able to use the income
    approach. Where DOR is unable to locate comparable sales, and the property owner
    offers DOR no evidence of any, DOR will be unable to use the comparable sales or
    market data approach.
    ¶24    DOR appraiser Carlson stated in his affidavit to the District Court that he
    considered using an income approach to value in 2009 and 2010, and that he asked CHS
    for the type of information he needed to come up with a valuation using an income
    approach, and explained why it was necessary. CHS did not, however, provide the
    information necessary for Carlson to perform an income approach to value using
    generally acceptable appraisal principles.
    ¶25    Carlson further averred that he had tracked developments in the oil and gas
    industry and researched whether sales of comparable properties might have occurred
    during the relevant time period.      In Carlson’s opinion, there simply did not exist
    sufficiently comparable sales to calculate an opinion of value under that approach.
    Notably, CHS has not identified any particular sale that it believes should be considered
    under a market data approach.
    ¶26    As stated above, CHS presented to the District Court an affidavit of its appraisal
    expert Michael Remsha concerning the proper methods to insure that a refinery is
    9
    assessed properly at market value. CHS contends Remsha’s affidavit states a valid
    challenge to the “method or procedure of assessment” under § 15-1-406(1)(a), MCA.
    The District Court, however, largely disregarded Remsha’s affidavit, correctly
    concluding that “the only subject matter to which an expert appraiser may speak with any
    expertise are matters of valuation; not the legality or impropriety of the method under
    Montana law.” And, to the extent that Remsha’s affidavit contains opinions regarding
    valuation, those opinions are speculative and conclusory, such as “the Department of
    Revenue did not take into account all items of depreciation and obsolescence,” and do not
    create a genuine issue of material fact to survive summary judgment.
    ¶27    CHS contends it is proper for a court to make a legal ruling on DOR’s method of
    assessment. In Department of Revenue v. Grouse Mountain Dev., 
    218 Mont. 353
    , 
    707 P.2d 1113
     (1985), owners of golf course property near Whitefish, Montana, sought
    judicial review of STAB’s valuation of their property. The only issue on review was
    whether a district court may reverse a STAB valuation determination if there was
    substantial evidence in the record to support STAB’s decision. CHS states this Court did
    not defer to STAB’s findings in Grouse Mountain, and gave no deference to its method
    of assessment. That is something of a misstatement. We did affirm the district court’s
    finding, based on the administrative record, that STAB had abused its discretion in
    approving an appraisal based on a cost of replacement approach only, without
    consideration of the effect on the property’s value of a public use restriction. But we also
    stated, “[t]ax appeal boards are particularly suited for settling disputes over the
    appropriate valuation of a given piece of property, and the judiciary cannot properly
    10
    interfere with that function.” Grouse Mountain, 218 Mont. at 355, 
    707 P.2d at 1115
    .
    Notably, we remanded the case to STAB with instructions. Grouse Mountain, 218 Mont.
    at 358, 
    707 P.2d at 1116
    .
    ¶28    In his affidavit, Remsha opined that the one method of assessment used by DOR
    was done improperly, because DOR failed to take into account all items of depreciation
    and obsolescence, resulting in an improper or illegal method of assessment. But § 15-8-
    111(2)(b), MCA, does not require DOR’s appraisers to simply accept a taxpayer’s
    assertions concerning depreciation or obsolescence. See PacifiCorp, ¶¶ 37-48.
    ¶29    CHS cites PacifiCorp and Department of Revenue v. Burlington N., Inc., 
    169 Mont. 202
    , 
    545 P.2d 1083
     (1976), for the proposition that “[a] taxpayer’s right to submit
    new information on appeal is well-established.” Those cases involved appeals of STAB
    decisions, and the reference was to STAB’s statutory authority to hold a de novo hearing
    and receive new evidence. That procedural posture is very different from a declaratory
    judgment action such as this one.
    ¶30    This issue can be decided based on the undisputed material facts and the
    applicable law. Our review convinces us that DOR established that there are no genuine
    issues of material fact regarding illegal or improper methods or procedures of valuation.
    CHS did not meet its burden of establishing a genuine issue of material fact as to whether
    DOR used an illegal or improper method or procedure to assess CHS’s property. The
    District Court was correct in ruling that CHS’s claims of material issues of fact go to
    valuation, not illegal taxation, and thus must be raised in administrative proceedings.
    11
    ¶31 Issue Two: Is the CHS claim that DOR violated state law when it failed to
    equalize its valuation of CHS’s property with similar properties within the scope of
    declaratory judgment actions that may be brought directly in a Montana district court
    under § 15-1-406, MCA, without first appealing to administrative tax appeal boards?
    ¶32    Article VIII, Section 3, of the Montana Constitution requires the state of Montana
    to “appraise, assess, and equalize the valuation of all property which is to be taxed in the
    manner provided by law.” CHS states DOR’s appraised market value of CHS’s refinery
    is higher than those of refineries owned by Phillips 66 and ExxonMobil in Yellowstone
    County. CHS cites Department of Revenue v. State Tax Appeal Bd. (DOR v. STAB), 
    188 Mont. 244
    , 
    613 P.2d 691
     (1980), for the idea that a taxpayer is entitled to relief if he can
    show that his property was assessed at a higher proportion of its actual value than the
    ratio existing between the assessed and actual valuations of similar and comparable
    properties.
    ¶33    DOR v. STAB involved a request for judicial review of a STAB decision. In that
    case, we adopted the six-factor “Maxwell test” as a basis for determining equalization
    among like properties. The factors are: (1) that there are other similar properties within a
    reasonable area; (2) the amount of assessments on those properties; (3) the actual values
    of those properties; (4) the actual value of the subject property; (5) the assessment
    complained of; and (6) by comparison, the subject property is assessed at a higher portion
    of its actual value than the ratio existing between the assessed and actual values of the
    similar properties. The Maxwell test thus requires several valuation-related findings of
    fact. In DOR v. STAB, we remanded to allow the state tax appeal board to hold a hearing
    at which evidence of the true and assessed values of commercial and residential property
    12
    could be introduced.     We also noted that the burden is on the taxpayer to establish
    DOR’s failure to equalize. DOR v. STAB, 188 Mont. at 250, 
    613 P.2d at 694
    .
    ¶34   The affidavit filed by DOR appraiser Carlson in the present case states Carlson
    relied on the cost approach to estimating value, in an identical manner for the three
    Yellowstone County refineries. DOR thus established its entitlement to judgment as a
    matter of law on the equalization question; according to the affidavit, each was treated
    the same. At that point CHS was required to meet its burden of establishing a genuine
    issue of material fact as to whether DOR acted illegally or improperly by failing to
    equalize its valuation of CHS’s property with similar properties. CHS’s submission of
    Remsha’s affidavit, with a conclusory statement that DOR failed to equalize, did not
    suffice to meet CHS’s burden of establishing a genuine issue of material fact.
    ¶35   Thus, we conclude the District Court was correct in granting DOR summary
    judgment on this claim, which was not within the scope of a declaratory judgment action.
    ¶36 Issue Three: Was DOR’s assessment of CHS’s property made too late for tax year
    2009?
    ¶37   Section 15-8-201(1), MCA, provides that, “between January 1 and the first
    Monday of August in each year, [DOR shall] ascertain the names of all taxable
    inhabitants and assess all property subject to taxation in each county.” The third claim in
    CHS’s complaint for declaratory judgment is that DOR’s 2009 assessment of its property
    was not timely.
    ¶38    In Albright, 281 Mont. at 218, 
    933 P.2d at 829
    , we ruled that a statutory
    requirement that property be “assessed” by a date certain did not equate to a requirement
    13
    that assessment notices be sent out by the date specified. The statutory language has been
    amended since our Albright decision, but a requirement that property be “assessed” by a
    date certain remains. See § 15-8-201(1), MCA.
    ¶39    In the present case, the District Court ruled that “there still remains no evidence
    that DOR failed to ‘assess’ CHS’s property by the statutorily prescribed deadline.” As
    CHS points out, however, DOR appraiser Carlson admitted by affidavit that DOR’s 2009
    assessment occurred shortly after the first Monday in August. Thus, the situation here is
    a step beyond that presented in Albright.
    ¶40    In applying the date certain requirement to the circumstances of this case, we
    observe the rule that we must adopt a statutory construction, if possible, that will give
    effect to all statutes the legislature has enacted on the subject. See § 1-2-101, MCA. We
    observe that §§ 15-7-102 (appeals) and 15-8-601 (assessment revision), MCA, address
    situations in which DOR is required to issue assessments after the conclusion of events
    that fall after the first Monday in August. Nothing in § 15-8-201, MCA, explicitly or
    implicitly grants an extension of time to accommodate revised assessments that must
    issue at the conclusion of revision or appeals under §§ 15-7-102 or 15-8-601, MCA. Yet
    CHS is not arguing that those assessments are invalid.
    ¶41    In addition, § 15-8-308, MCA, provides that “[n]o assessment . . . is illegal . . .
    because the same was not completed within the time required by law.” CHS says this
    statute applies only to DOR’s internal deadlines, not to substantive statutory deadlines.
    But the language of § 15-8-308, MCA, contains no such limitation. In addition, we
    observe that, for the year 2009, Chapter No. 483, Section 12, L. 2009, provided that “[a]s
    14
    a result of the changes . . . it may not be possible to comply with certain statutory
    deadlines relating to appraisals . . . . Therefore, for tax year 2009, all deadlines are
    extended as necessary and reasonable . . . .”
    ¶42    Finally, CHS claims DOR’s reasons for missing the statutory assessment deadline
    raise issues of fact, and therefore summary judgment on this issue was improper. But
    Albright created a prejudice test for invalidating a “late” assessment:        absent the
    possibility that a late assessment may impede a taxpayer’s ability to appeal a changed
    property valuation, missing the statutory deadline does not render those assessments
    invalid. See Albright, 281 Mont. at 217-18, 
    933 P.2d at 828-29
    . In the present case, as
    the District Court noted, CHS has raised no genuine issues of material fact that would
    demonstrate any prejudice it has suffered as a result of the assessment notice being issued
    to it on August 22 instead of by the first Monday in August in 2009.
    ¶43    We conclude the District Court did not err when it granted DOR summary
    judgment on CHS’s claim that the 2009 assessment of its property was “illegal or
    improper” because it was not completed by the first Monday in August of that year.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶44    The CHS challenges to the methods and procedures of assessment used by DOR to
    assess CHS’s property must be raised through the administrative tax appeal process.
    Similarly, the CHS claim that DOR failed to equalize its valuation of CHS’s property is
    the type of challenge that must be pursued administratively. As a result, the District
    Court did not err in granting DOR summary judgment on those claims. Finally, the court
    did not err when it granted DOR summary judgment on the CHS claim that the 2009
    15
    assessment of its property was illegal or improper because it was “late.”
    ¶45    Affirmed.
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    We concur:
    /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    /S/ PATRICIA COTTER
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    16