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IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Henrietta Beattie, Gertrude Ellis, :
Karen Rummel, Sandra Walls,

:
Kenneth Pierce and Mon Valley

:
Unemployed Committee, on their

:
own behalf and on behalf of all others
:
similarly situated,


:

Appellants


:





:

v.


:





:
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania,

:
James Roddey, its Chief Executive

: No. 1008 C.D. 2003
and Manatron, Inc.


: Argued: February 4, 2004
BEFORE: HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, President Judge
HONORABLE
BERNARD
L. McGINLEY, Judge
HONORABLE
DAN
PELLEGRINI, Judge
HONORABLE
ROCHELLE
S. FRIEDMAN, Judge

HONORABLE RENÉE L. COHN, Judge

HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
HONORABLE
MARY
HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge
OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE COLINS FILED: April 15, 2004


The members of this class action (Taxpayers) appeal an order of the
Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County that sustained preliminary objections
filed by Allegheny County, its former Chief Executive, James Roddey, and
Manatron, Inc. The class members aver that they are homeowners whose houses
have actual values of $50,000 or less, and contend that the County's assessment
system has caused approximately 80,000 such homes to be over-assessed, and also
caused a significant number of high-value homes to be under-assessed. Their

complaint1 filed in equity challenges the constitutionality of the County's property
assessment, and seeks declaratory, injunctive, and monetary relief.


Taxpayers asserted that the County had failed to follow a standard
adopted by the County in its Assessment Standards and Practices Ordinance.
Taxpayers contend that this standard required the County assessment to produce
Price Related Differentials (PRDs)2 no greater than 1.033 on a county-wide and
inter-municipality basis, and that the County's assessment in 2002 failed to satisfy
this standard. In their pleadings Taxpayers have asserted that the County's method
of determining the market value of homes has resulted in an unconstitutional lack
of uniformity under Article VIII, Section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
Taxpayers do not allege that the County has inappropriately applied disparate
ratios to valid home values, but rather the converse --- that the method the County
used to determine value of homes has lead to over-valuation of 80,000 homes that
have a true value below $50,000, and an under-valuation of homes that have higher
actual values. Complaint, paragraph 53.


Taxpayers raise the following issues: (1) whether the trial court erred
in concluding that Taxpayers must avail themselves of the statutory remedies
available; (2) whether the trial court erred in dismissing Taxpayers' claim under 42
U.S.C. §1983; (3) whether the County's 2002 assessment failed to comply with the

1 The complaint before the trial court was actually the second amended complaint.
2 "PRDs are determined by dividing the mean ratio of sales to assessed values in the
jurisdiction by the weighted mean, an average in which, each individual value is adjusted
according to its relative importance in the whole." Taxpayers brief, p. 7.
3 PRDs above 1.0 are alleged to be indicative of tax regressivity.
2

County's Assessment Standards and Practices Ordinance because the assessment
produced PRDs greater than 1.03; and (4) whether the trial court erred in
concluding that Taxpayers' challenge to the 2001 assessment is moot.

1. Equity Jurisdiction over Uniformity Clause Challenge


Taxpayers first argue that the trial court erred in granting the County's
preliminary objections because they have raised a substantial constitutional
question regarding the uniformity of the 2001 and 2002 assessments, and there is
no adequate statutory remedy to address the harm caused by the assessments.

However,
in
Jordan v. Fayette County Board of Assessment Appeals,
782 A.2d 642 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2001), this Court addressed a challenge brought by a
group of taxpayers who sought to have a common pleas court exercise equity
jurisdiction over their claim that a county's assessment methods violated their
rights under the uniformity clause. In concluding that those taxpayers must
exhaust their statutory remedy, we were guided by the Supreme Court's statements
in Borough of Green Tree v. Board of Property Assessment, 459 Pa. 268, 328 A.2d
819 (1974), wherein that Court noted the distinction between frontal attacks on
taxing statutes and those that challenge the methods used to implement taxing
authority. The purpose of requiring strict compliance with the statutory remedy is
to ensure that the "foundation upon which the administrative process was founded"
is not undermined." Jordan, 782 A.2d at 646 (quoting Shenango Valley
Osteopathic Hospital v. Department of Health, 499 Pa. 39, 47, 451 A.2d 434, 438
(1982)). "The premature interruption of the administrative process restricts the
3

agency's opportunity to develop an adequate factual record, limits the agency in
the exercise of its expertise and impedes the development of a cohesive body of
law in that area." Id. See also, Annenberg v. Commonwealth, 686 A.2d 1380 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 1996).


In this case, the trial court correctly concluded that Taxpayers are not
presenting a frontal attack on the underlying taxing statute, but rather, as in Jordan,
challenging the County's assessment methods. The trial court then recognized
that, despite the direction of Borough of Green Tree, distinguishing facial
constitutional challenges from constitutional challenges to the application of a
taxing provision, this Court has nevertheless approved of courts exercising equity
jurisdiction over uniformity clause challenges involving the latter variety of
constitutional claims in limited circumstances.


The reason for this divergence may be that this Court perceived that,
while the Supreme Court recognized that an administrative agency should be
allowed to exercise its role of specialized fact-finder and apply "its administrative
expertise," Borough of Green Tree, 459 Pa. at 281, 328 A.2d at 825, there are
times when, despite the absence of a facial constitutional challenge, the balance
between an administrative agency's exercise of its expertise and its ability to offer
complete redress for an alleged wrong of egregious constitutional dimension falls
in favor of proceeding in equity.


Thus, Taxpayers rely upon, and the trial court considered, several
such cases in which courts were permitted to exercise equity jurisdiction despite
4

the existence of a statutory remedy, even where the uniformity challenge did not
present a facial constitutional attack. These cases hold in general that a party must
establish discrimination in the application of the taxing statute, and that the
statutory remedy, if any, is inadequate.


As to the first requirement, Taxpayers rely in part upon this Court's
decision in City of Lancaster v. Lancaster County, 599 A.2d 289, 294 (Pa. Cmwlth.
1991), petition for allowance of appeal denied, 530 Pa. 634, 606 A.2d 903 (1992).
Taxpayers assert that they have raised a substantial constitutional question, albeit,
one that involves a constitutional challenge to the application of taxing provisions -
-- that the County has violated the Uniformity Clause of the Pennsylvania
Constitution through its system of assessment. In order to satisfy this first
requirement of a substantial constitutional question, a taxpayer must show that a
statutory or administrative scheme violates the Uniformity Clause. A taxing
scheme will satisfy the requirements of the Clause if there exists "a reasonable
distinction and difference between classes of taxpayers sufficient to justify
different tax treatment." Id. In Appeal of Armco, Inc., 515 A.2d 326, 329 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 1986), petitions for allowance of appeal denied, 516 Pa. 643, 533 A.2d
714 (1987), this Court stated: "In tax matters, alleged violations of the equal
protection clause and the uniformity clause are analyzed in the same manner; a
taxpayer alleging that the administration of a tax violates its rights to be taxed
uniformly with others of its class must demonstrate deliberate, purposeful
discrimination in the application of the tax before constitutional safeguards are
violated." Although the use of the words "deliberate" and "purposeful" seem to
indicate some level of intentional culpability is required, an early decision of the
5

Pennsylvania Supreme Court suggests that that requirement is met simply when the
challenged system is "part of a systematic, deliberate method of enforcement of the
tax laws, and not mere errors or oversights." Fisher Controls Co. v.
Commonwealth, 476 Pa. 119, 127, 381 A.2d 1253, 1257 (1977).


The question then becomes whether, based upon the factual averments
in Taxpayers' complaint, they have shown that the County's methods have a
discriminatory effect. In City of Lancaster, the County sought to avoid a full re-
assessment of the entire county by selecting certain areas to be re-assessed. The
last time of a full county-wide re-assessment was approximately twenty-five years
before, in 1960. This Court stated: "We conclude that, as a matter of law, the
County, in singling out ten of the County's taxing districts, in utilizing a different
method of assessment on the properties in those districts, and in making
unsubstantiated wholesale adjustments to grade and depreciation factors of certain
of those properties, violated ... the uniformity requirement of Article VIII, Section
1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution." Id., 599 A.2d at 299. The Court concluded
that the method constituted a de facto countywide reassessment, and that no
adequate statutory remedy for a countywide assessment existed. The Court noted
that having one court decide the larger question of the constitutionality of a
countywide assessment rather than requiring each individual taxpayer to file an
appeal provided a more efficient method of review for both taxpayers and the
courts.


The Court reached a similar conclusion in Harrisburg v. Dauphin
County Board of Assessment Appeals, 677 A.2d 350 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996), petition
6

for allowance of appeal denied, 548 Pa. 620, 693 A.2d 590 (1997), where the
Court held that the County's reassessment program, designed to reassess certain
rehabilitated houses in the Shipoke section of the City of Harrisburg using a ratio
program, constituted a de facto countywide reassessment. Similarly, Millcreek
Township v. County of Erie, 714 A.2d 1095 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1998), petition for
allowance of appeal denied, ___ Pa. ___, ___ A.2d ___ (No. 547 W.D. Alloc. Dkt,
1998, filed March 5, 1999), also involved a county that had failed to conduct a
county-wide reassessment for a long period of time, resulting in inequities among
properties' assessed values. The Court recognized not only this aspect of the case,
but also found persuasive the trial court's findings that there were no uniform
standards for valuation, nor uniform procedure for assessors to follow.


Of course, those cases are distinguishable from this case in that
Allegheny County conducted countywide reassessments in 2001 and 2002. Thus,
we cannot conclude that any de facto county-wide reassessment has occurred, or
that the County has created a lack of uniformity by failing to conduct a countywide
reassessment within a reasonable time in order to avoid the type of non-uniformity
that eventually occurs by the passage of time.


Taxpayers also rely upon Ackerman v. Carbon County, 703 A.2d 82,
87 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997), petition for allowance of appeal denied, 551 Pa. 705, 712
A.2d 287 (1998), where this Court, in adopting and affirming a trial court's
decision, concluded that a failure to institute a countywide reassessment was found
to have "created intolerable and illegal assessment disparities among properties of
comparable value." Interestingly, Ackerman involved not a case arising from a
7

request for relief in equity, but from the consolidation of statutory appeals of some
600 homeowners.



The trial court in the present case considered each of these cases in
light of Taxpayers' pertinent factual averments, and stated:


In this complaint, [Taxpayers] do not allege that there are no
county-wide procedures and standards for establishing fair market
value. [Taxpayers] do not allege that the assessment system was
designed or deliberately operated to produce inequities. [Taxpayers]
do not allege that any groups of properties were deliberately singled
out for disparate treatment. To the contrary, [Taxpayers] only allege,
as to the 2002 assessment, that an assessment system that was
apparently designed to treat all properties in the same fashion (i.e., to
assess all properties at 100% of actual fair market value) did not
achieve this result as to a significant percent of residential properties
valued at less than $50,000.

Slip opinion at 26.


The trial court sought to distinguish the above-cited cases by looking
to Taxpayers' factual averments, and noting that they were not alleging that the
system was designed or deliberately operated to produce inequities, or that any
groups were singled out deliberately for disparate treatment. The County also
seeks to distinguish the above-cited cases by noting that Taxpayers here were not
deliberately singled out, that their assessments were not the result of a dated
countywide assessment, and that the County's method of assessment does not
result in a "pervasive or wholesale inequity" that the statutory remedy cannot
address. By approaching the issue in this limited manner, we believe the trial court
failed to consider, and the County fails to address, whether the method the County
8

used resulted in discrimination. As mentioned above, the discrimination prohibited
under the uniformity clause need not be deliberate in the sense that disparate
treatment is the purpose of the system; rather, as noted by the Supreme Court in
Fisher, the operative action is a discriminatory effect that results from a system,
rather than simple error or oversight.


Thus, we must consider whether the pleadings support a claim that the
methodology the County used had a discriminatory effect, for as noted in Fisher, a
systematic method that produces a discriminatory effect is also subject to review
under the uniformity clause. If there is no such effect, our analysis ends. If the
County's method does have a discriminatory effect, we must then consider whether
the statutory remedy is adequate to address the resulting inequities.

In
Appeal of Armco, 515 A.2d at 326, this Court held that an
assessment satisfies the requirements of the uniformity clause "where the taxing
authority assesses all property at the same percentage of its actual value;
application of such a uniform ratio assures each taxpayer will be held responsible
for its pro rata share of the burden of local government."


Some of Taxpayers' initial averments show that certified appraisals
and sales of similar homes were much lower than the County-determined fair
market value.4 Taxpayers claim that the 2001 countywide reassessment was

4 For example, taxpayer Beattie's property was assessed at $47,600, while four years
earlier, a house two doors away she alleges to be in better condition sold for only $30,000.
Taxpayer Ellis had an appraisal performed last year, obtaining a market value of $38,000, but the
County assessed the value at $57,100 in 2002. Similarly, Taxpayer Rummel challenged her
(Footnote continued on next page...)
9

flawed because it failed to include a substantial number of property transfers in a
developed computer model. Specifically, Taxpayers allege that the County's
failure to include all transfers of properties for less then $10,000 skewed the
assessment, causing over assessment of lower value properties and under
assessment of higher value properties. Additionally, Taxpayers contend that the
reassessment placed disproportionate weight on quantitative factors such as size
and number of bedrooms. Taxpayers also contend that the County's method of
dividing the county into approximately 1,800 neighborhoods contributed to the
divergence of actual fair market value to assessed value in discrete neighborhoods.


With regard to the 2002 assessment, Taxpayers point to sales data
compiled by the Comptroller of the City of Pittsburgh indicating that 53% of City
properties were assessed more than 15% above their actual sale price in 1992.
Among homes valued below $50,000, 2,608 homes were assessed more than 15%
above actual value, while only 342 were under-assessed. The City's analysis also
showed that "18,333 out of 48,610 validated sales (during 1999, 2000, and the first
three quarters of 2001) were over- or under assessed by more than 15%. Houses
valued at less than $50,000 were almost twice as likely to be over-assessed by
more than 15% than houses valued greater than $250,000 (85% of low cost sales
which were substantially incorrectly assessed were overvalued more than 15%;
while only 45% of the most expensive homes, which were substantially incorrectly

(continued...)

assessment in 2001, and obtained from a hearing officer a market value of $17,500, based on a
private appraisal; however, the County assessed her property at $68,700.
10

assessed were overvalued; 55% of these high priced homes were actually
undervalued)." Complaint, paragraph 48.


It goes without saying that, if all properties are overvalued by the
same percentage, then the tax burden, even with overvaluation would at least
provide a degree of parity regardless of actual fair market value. Thus, it seems
equally clear that, if an assessment scheme results in assessed values that depart
significantly from true market value, such property owners will not be paying their
proportionate share of the tax burden. Where such a departure affects only certain
segments of property owners, discrimination may be a result.


As the Supreme Court stated in Leventhal v. City of Philadelphia, 518
Pa. 233, 239, 542 A.2d 1328, 1331 (1988):


So far as the reasonableness of classifications made for the
purposes of taxation is concerned, the Uniformity Clause of the
Constitution of Pennsylvania and the Equal Protection Clause of the
United States, stand in pari materia. Both the federal equal protection
clause, as applied to taxing statutes, and the state constitutional
requirement of uniformity of taxation "upon the same class of
subjects" (Pa. Const. Art. VIII, §1) mandate that classification in a
taxing scheme have a rational basis. In either case, a classification for
tax purposes is valid when it "is based upon some legitimate
distinction between the classes that provides a non-arbitrary and
`reasonable and just' basis for the different treatment." Where there
exists no legitimate distinction between the classes, and thus, the tax
scheme imposes substantially unequal tax burdens upon persons
otherwise similarly situated, the tax is unconstitutional.
(Citations omitted.)

11


This Court has noted that "absolute equality and perfect uniformity in
taxation are not required." Lee Hospital v. Cambria County, 638 A.2d 344, 351
(Pa. Cmwlth.), petition for allowance of appeal denied, 538 Pa. 661, 648 A.2d 791
(1994). The uniformity clause requires "only substantial uniformity and
approximate equality." Id. As stated in Appeal of Armco, uniformity is achieved
when the taxing authority assesses all property at the same percentage of its actual
value. There then exists the possibility that, even if the taxing authority complies
with the requirement that the same percentage of value applies to all properties for
the purpose of determining tax liability, inequities may arise if valuation is
performed improperly. The result may be the same in such a scenario as if the
taxing authority applied a different percentage to the value of the property, if the
base value on which that assessment is grounded is not the actual value and was
determined in a non-uniform manner. By varying part of the equation, if not that
part requiring application of a uniform ratio, the result may well be the same as if
the taxing authority did apply different ratios to different categories of properties.
In either circumstance, some people will not pay their pro-rata share of the tax
burden. Such a result can be characterized as being discriminatory.



However, even if we assume that Taxpayers have raised a substantial
constitutional question, and established a discriminatory effect, we still must
consider the adequacy of the statutory remedy. Here Taxpayers have not asserted
that the County is applying disparate ratios to actual value. While they recognize
this distinction, Taxpayers assert that "Individual appeals from the reassessment
can at most reduce an over-assessment to a property's actual value. Since tax
charges are a product of the assessment and millage, and millage is based on total
12

assessed value [of all properties in the county] the under-assessment of a
substantial proportion of homes will cause lower valued homeowners to be
overcharged for taxes even if their individual assessment has been corrected."
Complaint, paragraph 53. They assert that an appeal of an assessment could not
address this concern, because they have no power to challenge another property
owner's assessment. However, while a taxpayer may not challenge the taxing
authority's assessment of another property owner's under assessment, Taxpayers
have not asserted that they may not request the Board of Assessment Appeals to
recalculate the millage for the purpose of applying an accurate millage solely to
their appeals. This brings us back to the point of Borough of Green Tree --- that
those agencies that have expertise in a particular area should be left to exercise that
expertise in evaluating claims of this kind. Taxpayers have not alleged that the
Board cannot re-evaluate the total millage in an assessment appeal, and
accordingly, we are not persuaded that the statutory appeal process is inadequate.
As we noted in our decision in Annenberg, 686 A.2d at 1383, "[t]he Board of
Assessment Appeals has expertise in applying the tax laws of the Commonwealth
and in dealing with the kinds of complicated questions of valuation and of liability
or exemption ... ."


Additionally, a similar tax challenge in the administrative appeal
(rather than equitable) process in Ackerman demonstrates that the statutory remedy
can accommodate a multitude of tax assessment issues. As noted above, that case
involved a consolidated appeal of 600 homeowners who challenged Carbon
County's assessments, asserting that they violated the Uniformity Clause. The trial
court examined various indicators of tax disparity, such as Coefficients of
13

Dispersion, a statistical tool that helps determine the reliability of assessments.
While the approach Taxpayers take here may be one way of demonstrating lack of
uniformity, Ackerman illustrates that there are methods of demonstrating non-
uniformity to the administrative agency and to the trial courts on appeal in the
statutory process that may address their complaint. Taxpayers claim that the Board
cannot consider relevant evidence as to millage and the effect of over or under
assessment, but they do not point to any rules or regulations that would preclude
the Board's consideration of such information. Accordingly, we cannot conclude
that Taxpayers have satisfied their burden to establish that no adequate legal
remedy exists.


2. §1983 Claim


Taxpayers also claim that the trial court erred in dismissing their
claim under 42 U.S.C. §1983. As noted above, Taxpayers have not established
that the statutory remedy is inadequate to address their alleged injury. In Murtagh
v. Berks County, 715 A.2d 548 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1998), petition for allowance of
appeal denied, 557 Pa. 656, 734 A.2d 863 (1999), this court concluded that
"[b]ecause Pennsylvania's administrative process for challenging tax assessments
provides taxpayers with an adequate state remedy, the trial court did not have
subject matter jurisdiction to consider taxpayers §1983 action absent the
exhaustion of their administrative and judicial remedies." Id., 715 A.2d at 552.
This conclusion was recently confirmed by this Court in Jordan. We therefore
conclude that the trial court did not err in dismissing Taxpayers' §1983 action.

14

3. Noncompliance with Ordinance PRDs


Taxpayers claimed that the County failed to comply with standards
imposed by the County's Assessment Standards and Practices Ordinance. This
issue presents a question of law as to whether the assessment satisfies the
ordinance. We see no reason why this issue cannot be addressed in an appeal to
the Board. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not err in dismissing
Taxpayers' complaint in this regard.

4. Mootness of Challenge to 2001 Assessment


The trial court, in a footnote, stated that it would not address
allegations in Taxpayers' complaint regarding the County's 2001 countywide
reassessment. The trial court relied upon our decision in Israelit v. Montgomery
County, 703 A.2d 722 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997), petition for allowance of appeal
denied, 555 Pa. 735, 725 A.2d 184 (1998), for the proposition that a class action
may not be maintained to obtain a refund of taxes resulting from an improper
assessment. However, for the same reasons expressed above concerning the 2002
countywide reassessment, we conclude that the trial court did not err in dismissing
Taxpayers' claims arising from the 2001 countywide re-assessment.


Based on the foregoing, we affirm the trial court's decision.




______________________________________

JAMES
GARDNER
COLINS, President Judge
Judge Pellegrini concurs in the result.
15

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Henrietta Beattie, Gertrude Ellis, :
Karen Rummel, Sandra Walls,

:
Kenneth Pierce and Mon Valley

:
Unemployed Committee, on their

:
own behalf and on behalf of all others
:
similarly situated,


:

Appellants


:





:

v.


:





:
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania,

:
James Roddey, its Chief Executive

: No. 1008 C.D. 2003
and Manatron, Inc.


:


ORDER


AND NOW, this 15th day of April 2004, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Allegheny County is affirmed.



______________________________________

JAMES
GARDNER
COLINS, President Judge

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Henrietta Beattie, Gertrude Ellis, :
Karen Rummel, Sandra Walls,
:
Kenneth Pierce and Mon Valley
:
Unemployed Committee, on their
:
own behalf and on behalf of all others :
similarly situated,

:

Appellants

:




:

v.


: No. 1008 C.D. 2003




: Argued: February 4, 2004
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania,
:
James Roddey, its Chief Executive :
and Manatron, Inc.

:
BEFORE: HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, President Judge
HONORABLE
BERNARD
L. McGINLEY, Judge
HONORABLE
DAN
PELLEGRINI, Judge
HONORABLE
ROCHELLE
S. FRIEDMAN, Judge

HONORABLE RENÉE L. COHN, Judge

HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
HONORABLE
MARY
HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge
CONCURRING AND DISSENTING
OPINION BY JUDGE FRIEDMAN
FILED: April 15, 2004


I agree with the majority that the Court of Common Pleas of
Allegheny County (trial court) properly dismissed the section 1983 claim filed by
Henrietta Beattie, Gertrude Ellis, Karen Rummel, Sandra Walls, Kenneth Pierce
and Mon Valley Unemployed Committee (together, Taxpayers) against Allegheny
County, Pennsylvania, James Roddey, its Chief Executive, and Manatron, Inc.
However, for many of the reasons stated in Kowenhoven v. County of Allegheny,
___ A.2d ___ (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 1673 C.D. 2003, filed April 13, 2004) (Friedman,

J., concurring and dissenting), I do not agree that the trial court properly dismissed
Taxpayers' equitable claims on grounds that Taxpayers have an adequate legal
remedy.


_____________________________



ROCHELLE
S.
FRIEDMAN,
Judge



RSF - 18 -

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