Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2003 )


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  •                                ATTORNEYGENERAL                     OF   TEXAS
    GREG       ABBOTT
    August 20,2003
    The Honorable Mike A. Stafford                              Opinion No. GA-009 1
    Harris County Attorney
    Appraisal District Section                                  Re: Valuing repairs made to a residence
    Post Office Box 920975                                      homestead necessitated by flood, wind, fire, or
    Houston, Texas 77292-0975                                   other damage under sections 11.26 and 23.23
    of the Tax Code (RQ-0023-GA)
    Dear Mr. Stafford:
    On behalf of the Harris County Appraisal District (the “District”), you ask how, under
    sections 11.26 and 23.23 of the Tax Code, the District should value repairs made to a residence
    homestead that were necessitated by floods, hurricanes, “fire, earthquake, wind, hail, ground shifts,
    termites, environmental contamination, or any other similar event.“*
    I.      Backmound
    You indicate that in June 2001 approximately 40,000 Harris County homes were damaged
    as a result of Tropical Storm Allison and that many of the same homes were flooded again in 2002.
    See Memorandum Brief, supra note 1, at 1. The District is uncertain how it should value the restored
    homes under section 23.23 of the Tax Code, which limits a residence homestead’s appraised value
    for a tax year, and section 11.26 of the same code, which limits the amount of tax that a school
    district may impose on homesteads of adults who are sixty-five or over (“seniors”). See 
    id. at 2-4.
    II.     Relevant Statutes
    Section 11 .Ol of the Tax Code directs that “[a]11real and tangible personal property” located
    in this state is taxable unless other law exempts the property. TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 8 11.01(a)
    (Vernon 2001). Generally, an appraisal district must appraise all taxable property in the district “at
    its market value as of January 1.” 
    Id. 8 23.01(
    a) ; see also 
    id. $0 1.04(7)
    (defining the term “market
    value”), 23 .O101 -.013 (setting forth methods for calculating market value). Your questions concern
    the valuation of certain improvements made to a residence homestead during the year under sections
    23.23 and 11.26. See Memorandum Brief, supra note 1, at 3.
    ‘Letter from Honorable Mike Stafford, Harris County Attorney, to Honorable Greg Abbott, Texas Attorney
    General (Mar. 6, 2003) (on file with the Opinion Committee); Memorandum Brief attached to Request 
    Letter, supra, at 3
    [hereinafter Memorandum Brief].
    The Honorable Mike Stafford      - Page 2        (GA-0091)
    Section 23.23(a) limits a residence homestead’s      appraised value:
    The appraised value of a residence homestead for a tax year may
    not exceed the lesser of:
    (1) the market value of the property; or
    (2) the sum of:
    (A) 10 percent of the appraised value of the property
    for the last year in which the property was appraised
    for taxation times the number of years since the
    property was last appraised;
    (B) the appraised value of the property for the last
    year in which the property was appraised; and
    (C) the market value of all new improvements         to
    the property.
    TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 8 23.23(a) (Vernon 2001).        For the sake of brevity, we refer to the amount
    defined in subsection (a)(2) as the “capped value.” See Memorandum Brief, supra note 2, at 2-3.
    Subsection (e) restricts the meaning of the phrase “new improvement”:
    In this section, “new improvement” means an improvement
    to a residence homestead that is made after the appraisal of the
    property for the preceding year and that increases the market value of
    the property. The term does not include ordinary maintenance of an
    existing structure or the grounds or another feature of the property.
    TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 6 23.23(e) (Vernon 2001).
    All or part of a certain homestead’s appraised value may be eligible for an exemption from
    taxation or for a restriction on the permissible tax. See generally 
    id. ch. 11
    (“Taxable Property and
    Exemptions”).     You mention, in particular, section 11.26, which freezes the amount of ad valorem
    tax a school district may impose on a senior’s residence homestead at the amount the school district
    imposed in the first tax year in which the individual qualified as a senior. See 
    id. 9 11.26(a).
    Thereafter, improvements to the senior’s residence homestead, “other than improvements required
    to comply with governmental requirements or repairs,” permit the school district to increase the tax
    to reflect the improvements’ value in the first year the homestead’s value is increased on the
    appraisal roll. 
    Id. 8 11.26(b).
    The tax is then frozen at the increased level unless further
    improvements are made. See 
    id. Neither section
    23.23 nor section 11.26 appear to use the term “improvements” consistently
    with the general definition stated in section 1.04 of the Tax Code: “(A) a building, structure, fixture,
    The Honorable Mike Stafford        - Page 3    (GA-0091)
    or fence erected on or affixed to land”; or “(B) a transportable structure that is designed to be
    occupied for residential or business purposes.” 
    Id. 9 1.04(3)(A)-(B).
    Section 23.23’s exclusion of
    “ordinary maintenance of an existing structure” would be unnecessary if improvements included only
    new buildings, structures, fixtures, fences, or transportable structures. See 
    id. $5 1.04(3),
    23.23(e).
    Similarly, section 11.26, which excludes “improvements required to comply with governmental
    regulations or repairs,” suggests a definition of the term “improvements” other than section 1.04
    provides. See 
    id. 59 1.04(3),
    11.26(b). In each case, the specific statutes vary from section 1.04’s
    general definition. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 5 3 11.026 (Vernon 1998) (stating that a specific
    provision prevails as an exception to a general provision where the two cannot be harmonized).
    III.    Hypothetical   Scenarios
    You set out four scenarios to which you ask us to apply either section 23.23 or section 11.26.
    See Memorandum Brief, supra note 1, at 2-3. For each, you ask us to assume “that the properties
    were appraised in 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2003.” 
    Id. at 2.
    In all four scenarios, you describe a
    homestead with a market value for 2001 of $100,000, which, because of the ten percent cap set by
    section 23.23(a)(2), had an appraised value of $70,000 in 2001. See 
    id. at 2-3.
    Scenario One: The home suffered $15,000 in damage from
    [Tlropical [S]torm Allison.    The damage was not repaired as of
    January 1, 2002.       The appraisal district determined that the
    [property’s] market value . . . was $85,000 for 2002. [Taking the
    lesser of the homestead’s market value and the capped valued
    ($70,000 + $7,000)’ in accordance with section 23.23(a),] . . . the
    2002 appraised valued would be $77,000, a ten percent increase even
    though the district had reduced the market value. As of January 1,
    2003, the damage was fully repaired[,] and the district estimates that
    the repairs add $15,000 to the [home’s] value . . . . The 2003 market
    value will be $100,000, back to its pre-flood value. . . . Had there
    been no damage to the home, [its] appraised value would have been
    $84,700 for 2003.
    Scenario Two:      [T]he home in this scenario . . . was
    completely destroyed by the storm in June 2001. Its 2001 market
    value was $100,000, of which $20,000 was attributable to the land
    and $80,000 to the improvement. . . . [T]he capped appraised value
    for 2001 was $70,000. On January 1, 2002, repairs had not been
    made[, and t]he appraisal district determined the [property’s] market
    value . . . to be $20,000. [Under section 23.23, the homestead’s
    market value is less than the 2002 capped value ($77,000), so the]
    appraised value for 2002 [is $20,000]. As of January 1, 2003, a
    completely new home had been built on the property. The appraisal
    district estimates that the market value of the new improvement is
    $80,000 and that the [land’s] market value . . . is $20,000. The total
    market value is $100,000 for 2003. . . . Had [the home not been
    The Honorable Mike Stafford    - Page 4       (GA-0091)
    damaged], the 2003 appraised value would have been $84,700 . . . .
    [The capped value is the sum of the preceding year’s value plus ten
    percent plus the value of the new improvements: $20,000 + $2,000 +
    $80,000 =$102,000.]
    Scenario Three: Assume that in Scenarios One and Two
    . . . the property owner also qualified for the over-65 “ceiling” on
    school taxes [under slection 11.26. Each owner’s school tax levy was
    fixed at $500 prior to 2001. For 2002, there would be no change in
    the maximum levy amount, even though the tax for that year might be
    lower.     Unlike the ten percent homestead cap [under section
    23.23(a)(2)], reductions in value do not change a frozen school tax
    levy. The question again concerns how 2003 will be handled.
    Scenario Four: [T]he repairs . . . bring the property to a
    better than pre-flood state as worn or outdated components are
    replaced with new, up-to-date components.         For example, a flood-
    damaged kitchen might have new cabinets, counter tops, flooring, and
    appliances installed [, which may enhance] the value of the property
    over its pre-flood value. Similarly, if the property owner builds a new
    structure on an elevated foundation, its value may be significantly
    greater than that of the pre-flood property. The enhancement in
    value, however, is incidental to the repair; the homeowner . . . simply
    intend[s] to restore his home to a functional state. . . . Moreover, if
    the owner makes significant other enhancements, such as adding an
    extra bath or increasing the size of the home, should value added by
    these enhancements be treated differently?
    
    Id. at 2-3.
    IV.     First Issue: Whether Post-Flood Rehabilitation     is a “New Improvement”        for Purposes
    of Tax Code Section 23.23
    The pivotal issue in determining how to value recent reconstructive work on a homestead is
    to decide whether the work is a “new improvement,” which by definition “increases” the property’s
    market value, under section 23.23(e). See TEX. TAX CODEANN. 9 23.23(e) (Vernon 2001). “[Tlhe
    market value of all new improvements” is one of the three numbers that must be added together to
    determine a homestead’s capped value. 
    Id. 9 23.23(a).
    Section 23.23(e) excludes from the scope of work that is a new improvement “ordinary
    maintenance.”    Compare 
    id. 5 11.26(b)
    with 
    id. 8 23.23(e).
    We find no helpful case law defining
    the term “ordinary maintenance,” but the term “ordinary” by itself signifies “usual or common.” El
    Paso EZec. v. Real Estate Mart, Inc., 
    650 P.2d 12
    , 18 (NM. Ct. App. 1982); see also X OXFORD
    ENGLISH DICTIONARY 912 (2d ed. 1989) (defining the term “ordinary” as “[clommonly practi[c]ed
    or experienced; common, customary, usual” and “not exceptional”).           The term “maintenance”
    The Honorable Mike Stafford      - Page 5       (GA-0091)
    suggests “keeping” a building “in working order, in repair.” IX OXFORDENGLISHDICTIONARY225
    (2d ed. 1989); see TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 8 3 11 .Ol l(a) (Vernon 1998) (directing that words and
    phrases be construed according to the rules of grammar and common usage). A Louisiana court
    classified certain repairs as “ordinary”: painting; repairing leaks; removing glass mould; replacing
    one frame of glass; erecting an iron post around an electrical substation; removing a small tree;
    and repairing the air conditioning system. See Succession ofcrain, 
    450 So. 2d 1374
    , 1376 (La. Ct.
    App. 1984).
    Given its common meaning, the term “ordinary maintenance” does not include substantial
    repairs and reconstruction necessitated by an extraordinary event like a tropical storm or hurricane.
    Whether repairs necessitated by other causes, such as termite infestation, constitute ordinary
    maintenance is a question of fact that the opinion process cannot resolve. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op.
    No. GA-0003 (2002) at 1 (stating that the opinion process does not determine facts). Rather, the
    chief appraiser must determine the ordinariness of particular maintenance, subject to appraisal
    district board and judicial review. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. $5 6.03(a), 6.05(c) (Vernon 2001)
    (setting out appraisal board’s and appraiser’s authority).
    For those improvements that increase a property’s market value and that are not ordinary
    maintenance, we are compelled to read section 23.23(a)(2) to require the appraiser to include their
    value in the calculation of the residence homestead’s appraised value. See 
    id. § 23.23(a),
    (e).
    You suggest that the term “ordinary maintenance,” which is excepted from new
    improvements that increase a homestead’s appraised value, should be defined to mean “repairs,”
    which are excepted from improvements for purposes of section 11.26 of the Tax Code. See
    Memorandum Brief, supra note 1, at 4. Even if the terms “maintenance” and “repair” may be
    synonymous, section 23.23(e)‘s use of the adjective “ordinary” greatly limits the scope of the
    maintenance work that is excepted from new improvements for purposes of section 23.23. Thus, we
    cannot construe the phrases “ordinary maintenance” and “repairs” synonymously.
    Moreover, the legislature has evaluated property loss that occurs due to a natural disaster and
    has determined that the appropriate remedy is not to adjust the homestead’s appraised value in the
    way you suggest, but to allow a taxing unit to authorize the damaged property’s reappraisal
    immediately following the disaster. Section 23.02 of the Tax Code permits “[tlhe governing body
    of a taxing unit that is located partly or entirely inside an area declared to be a natural disaster area
    by the governor [to] authorize reappraisal of all property damaged in the disaster at its market
    value[,] immediately after the disaster.” TEX. TAX CODEANN. 5 23.02(a) (Vernon 2001). If a taxing
    unit authorizes a reappraisal, “the governing body [must] provide for prorating the taxes on the
    property for the year in which the disaster occurred.” 
    Id. 8 23.02(d).
    Although the statute does not
    define the term “natural disaster,” it must be a catastrophe officially declared a disaster by the
    governor. Seeid. ~23.02(a);seeaZsoT~~.G0~‘~C0~~AN~.~418.014(Vemon1998)(authorizing
    the governor to declare a state of disaster if he or she finds that a disaster has occurred or that a
    threatened disaster is imminent).
    A new subsection (f), added to section 23.23 in 2003 by the Seventy-eighth Legislature, does
    not apply to the homeowners in your hypotheticals, all of whom repaired or reconstructed their
    The Honorable Mike Stafford      - Page 6        (GA-0091)
    damaged homesteads by January 1, 2003. The new section 23.23(f) excludes from the class of
    improvements     that would otherwise constitute new improvements        under subsection (e) “a
    replacement structure for a structure that was rendered uninhabitable or unusable by a casualty or
    by mold or water damage.” Act of June 1, 2003’78th Leg., R.S., S.B. 340, 5 9 (to be codified at
    TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 8 23.23(f)). This new exclusion applies to property appraisals for tax years
    beginning on or after January 1,2004, even if the casualty, mold, or water damage occurred before
    that date. See 
    id. 8 12(a),
    (d).
    You also ask, in the fourth scenario, how improvements that increase the pre-flood value of
    the house, such as new countertops, new appliances, an extra bath, or additional square footage,
    affect a homestead’s valuation under section 23.23 when the improvements are made in the course
    of repairs from a tropical storm or similar disaster. Upgrades to the residence homestead that
    increase its market value are not ordinary maintenance and are plainly new improvements         for
    purposes of section 23.23(a). Their value must be included in the capped value calculation.
    v.      Whether Post-Flood      Rehabilitation   is an “Improvement”       for Purposes of Tax Code
    Section 11.26
    You similarly ask whether the restorations described in scenarios one and two trigger a
    school tax increase under section 11.26(b) of the Tax Code. See Memorandum Brief, supra note 1,
    at 3-4. Because “repairs” are not improvements for purposes of section 11.26, we must consider the
    meaning of the term “repair.” See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 5 11.26(b) (Vernon 2001).
    The term “repair,” which is not defined for purposes of section 11.26, must be defined
    consistently with its “common usage.” TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 5 3 11 .Ol 1(a) (Vernon 1998); see
    TEX. TAX CODE ANN. $5 1.04, 11.26 (Vernon 2001).                  Case law suggests that repairs are
    reconstructive work performed after partial, but not total, destruction. “To repair means to restore
    to a sound or good state, after decay, injury, dilapitation, or partial destruction.” GuZf City St. Ry. &
    Real Estate Co. v. City of Galveston, 
    7 S.W. 520
    , 521 (Tex. 1888) (citing Webster’s Dictionary).
    Thus, the term “repair” does not encompass rebuilding a structure that was totally destroyed by fire.
    See ReaZty & Rebldg. Co. v. Rea, 
    194 P. 1024
    , 1029 (Cal. 1920) (stating that the term “repair” does
    not mean “replace”: the first means “to mend an old thing,” while the second means “to make a new
    thing”).    In a patent case, a Michigan court described the difference between repair and
    reconstruction: “‘[I]f the new parts so dominate the structural substance of the whole as to justify
    the conclusion that it has been made anew, there is a rebuilding or reconstruction; and conversely,
    where the original parts, after replacement, are so large a part of the whole structural substance as
    to preponderate over the new, there has not been a reconstruction but only repair. “‘Micromatic Hone
    Corp. v. Mid- West Abrasive Co., 78 F. Supp. 641,645 (E-D. Mich. 1948) (quoting Automotive Parts
    Co. v. Wis. Axle Co., 8 
    1 F.2d 125
    , 127 (6th Cir. 1935))’ afld, 
    177 F.2d 934
    , 937 (6th Cir. 1949).
    In a particular case, an appraiser must determine in the first instance whether work done on
    a particular structure constitutes repair. In the two scenarios you have set out, one residence suffered
    $15,000 in damage, while the other was completely destroyed. In accordance with the definition of
    the term “repair,” the latter cannot be repaired; it must be rebuilt, and the rebuilt structure is an
    improvement for purposes of section 11.26(b). According to section 11.26’s plain language, the tax
    The Honorable Mike Stafford      - Page 7      (GA-0091)
    may be increased accordingly. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 5 11.26(b) (Vernon 2001). On the other
    hand, whether the former residence can be repaired or must be reconstructed is a question that
    requires the weighing of facts, which is not a function of this office. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No.
    GA-0003 (2002) at 1 (stating that the opinion process does not determine facts). Moreover, the
    statute does not suggest how an appraiser should determine whether a homestead was partially
    destroyed, and therefore may be repaired, or totally destroyed and may not be repaired. Because the
    value of the damage totaled less than half of the homestead’s original value, an appraiser reasonably
    could find that the homestead was repaired, although the ultimate determination is for the appraiser.
    If an appraiser determines that a particular residence has indeed been repaired, section 11.26 of the
    Tax Code compels the conclusion that the homestead has not been improved, and the tax may not
    be increased. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 4 11.26(b) (Vernon 2001).
    You also ask about those situations in which a homeowner “bring[s] the property to a better
    than pre-flood state as worn or outdated components are replaced with new, up-to-date components”
    or makes significant other upgrades, above and beyond replacing old components with new, modem
    components. Memorandum Brief, supra note 1, at 3. In either case, you state that the residence’s
    post-restoration value exceeds its pre-flood value. See 
    id. Ultimately, the
    decision regarding whether a residence homestead has been repaired or
    improved for purposes of section 11.26 involves fact determinations that the appraiser must resolve
    in the first instance. We provide only guidance in this regard.
    In the first situation you posit, upgrading fixtures and appliances constitutes repair for
    purposes of section 11.26 so long as the components of the original structure “preponderate.” See
    Micromatic Hone 
    Corp., 78 F. Supp. at 645
    (quoting Automotive Parts Co., 
    8 1 F.2d at 127
    ). Section
    11.26(c) refers to improvements      and repairs “to the . . . residence homestead,” not repairs to
    individual components. TEX. TAX CODE ANN. 8 11.26(b) (Vernon 2001). ~ Thus, although a
    dishwasher, for example, may be damaged beyond repair and require replacement, the residence
    homestead itself is repaired by installing a new dishwasher.
    On the other hand, building a new structure on an elevated foundation is not a repair because
    the structure is new; you tell us that the original structure was completely destroyed. See GuZfCity
    St. Ry. &Real Estate 
    Co., 7 S.W. at 521
    (defining the word “repair” to mean restoration after “partial
    destruction”) (quoting Webster’s Dictionary).
    Adding an extra bath or increasing the size of the home, which you list as examples of
    “significant other enhancements” that a senior homestead owner may make in the course of restoring
    the residence, are not repairs under section 11.26. The term “repair” does not include enhancements
    to a residence’s value. Consequently, a school district may increase the tax proportional to the
    increase in value. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 11.26(b) (Vernon 2001).
    The Honorable Mike Stafford    - Page 8      (GA-0091)
    SUMMARY
    For purposes of section 23.23 of the Tax Code, which caps the
    market value of a residence homestead’s appraised value, the term
    “new improvement” includes repairs made following a natural
    disaster because the repairs are not “ordinary maintenance.”
    Enhancements that increase a homestead’s market value are new
    improvements for purposes of section 23.23(a)(2), and their value
    must be included in the calculation of a homestead’s          capped
    appraised value.
    For purposes of section 11.26(b) of the Tax Code, which
    permits a school district to increase the tax on a senior’s residence
    homestead if the homestead has been improved, an appraiser must
    determine whether a homestead damaged by a natural disaster has
    been repaired or improved.
    BARRY R. MCBEE
    First Assistant Attorney General
    DON R. WILLETT
    Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
    NANCY S. FULLER
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Kymberly K. Oltrogge
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
    

Document Info

Docket Number: GA-91

Judges: Greg Abbott

Filed Date: 7/2/2003

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017