C. Fasnacht and C. Fasnacht v. Board of Property Assessment Appeals of Schuylkill County v. Schuylkill County, S. Manheim Twp. and Schuylkill Haven Area SD , 156 A.3d 365 ( 2017 )


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  •               IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Cole Fasnacht and                              :
    Courtney Fasnacht, his wife,                   : No. 356 C.D. 2016
    : Submitted: October 21, 2016
    Appellants       :
    :
    v.                      :
    :
    Board of Property Assessment                   :
    Appeals of Schuylkill County                   :
    :
    v.                      :
    :
    Schuylkill County, South Manheim               :
    Township, and Schuylkill Haven                 :
    Area School District                           :
    BEFORE:         HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge1
    HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge2
    OPINION
    BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                                   FILED: March 9, 2017
    Cole Fasnacht and Courtney Fasnacht, his wife, (together, Taxpayers)
    appeal from the February 9, 2016 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill
    County (trial court) that denied and dismissed their tax assessment appeal. We
    affirm.
    Taxpayers purchased property (Property) at 348 Bernie Drive in
    Schuylkill County, Tax Identification No. 28-2-28.1, on November 6, 2013, for
    1
    This Opinion was assigned to the authoring Judge on December 16, 2016.
    2
    This decision was reached before the conclusion of Senior Judge Friedman’s service with
    this Court
    $175,000. On June 5, 2015, the County Tax Assessment Office (County) notified
    Taxpayers of a change in the Property’s assessment from $33,540 to $66,120.
    Taxpayers appealed the assessment change to the County Board of Assessment
    Appeals, which denied their request to change the assessment. Thereafter, Taxpayers
    appealed to the trial court, contending that the change of assessed value was an
    impermissible spot reassessment.3
    At a hearing before the trial court on December 9, 2015, the County
    introduced its assessment card for the Property, which showed a fair market value of
    $132,244 and an assessed value of $66,120.                 The County also introduced the
    testimony of field appraiser Debra Detweiler, a Certified Pennsylvania Evaluator
    licensed to perform field appraisals. Detweiler testified that she has been a field
    appraiser for the County since 2003 and is assigned to thirteen or fourteen different
    municipalities in the County. She explained that, as a field appraiser, she receives
    building permits from various municipalities, and she is responsible to check on
    properties and adjust assessments for those properties with new construction or
    improvements. She added that the law does address the number of visits an assessor
    must make each year but said that, as a general rule, County field appraisers go to
    their designated areas twice a year; they check on permits that have been issued and
    drive the districts looking for other construction. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 4a-6a,
    11a, 22a, 37a-38a.
    3
    Section 8843 of the Consolidated County Assessment Law, 53 Pa.C.S. §8843, prohibits the
    county assessment office from engaging in the practice of spot reassessment. “Spot reassessment”
    means the reassessment of a property that is not conducted as part of countywide revised
    reassessment and that creates, sustains, or increases disproportionality among properties’ assessed
    values. Radecke v. York County Board of Assessment Appeals, 
    798 A.2d 265
    , 267 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2002).
    2
    Detweiler testified that she received a building permit for a patio
    enclosure issued for the Property on November 23, 2010. She stated that she visited
    the Property on January 5, 2011, and observed that construction had begun. She said
    that she visited the Property several times after January 2011, including occasions
    after the date of Taxpayers’ purchase of the Property in November 2013. She stated
    that while she monitored the progress of work on the patio enclosure, she also
    observed construction that was not included on the permit.           More specifically,
    Detweiler testified that the changes she observed at the Property included an addition
    to the rear of the home, increasing the living area of the second floor; a two-story
    attached garage with living area above that as well; and an above-ground pool or hot
    tub, which held no value for assessment purposes but was also something new. She
    also introduced photographs taken in August 1995 and September 2015 reflecting
    those changes. Detweiler acknowledged that she did not document every visit to the
    Property, but she said that her file notes reflect that the two-car garage with living
    area above was still under construction on May 9, 2014. R.R. at 9a-16a, 24a-26a.
    On April 20, 2015, Detweiler determined that the construction was
    complete and issued a Change of Assessment notice. She explained that it is the
    practice of the County that a revised assessment based on an improvement is not done
    until the construction is finished. She said that on her earlier visits, she had observed
    lumber stacked up outside and/or people working on the home, whereas on that date
    she saw no activity and noticed that there were curtains in the living area above the
    garage.   Detweiler testified that, relying on her expertise and experience, she
    concluded that the improvements on the Property were completed. She stated that the
    Property’s assessment was revised based on information obtained in the field and
    entered into “our governed system downstairs,” adding that the calculation of the new
    3
    assessed value from $33,540 to $66,120 was not a new appraisal, but was
    “predetermined in our system from the 1995 reassessment.” R.R. at 16a-19a.
    On cross-examination, Detweiler acknowledged that she could not be
    certain of the exact date that the work was finished. She testified that she never saw
    contractors at the Property because the former owners were doing the construction
    themselves beginning in January 2011. She also said that she was not aware that the
    ownership of the Property had changed, and she was using a working file that showed
    Vernon and Marianne Blankenhorn, and not Taxpayers, as the owners. She stated
    that on April 20, 2015, she noticed that the entire outside of the Property had been
    cleaned up and there was no sign of ongoing construction.
    Finally, Detweiler testified that, other than the 30-month exemption for
    interim assessments for new construction, Section 8813 of the Consolidated County
    Assessment Law (Law), 53 Pa.C.S. §8813, the Law does not specify time limits for
    revising assessments based on construction. However, Detweiler repeated that the
    County’s practice is to change an assessment when the County determines that
    construction is completed and that in this case, she initiated the change as soon as she
    made that determination. R.R. at 33a, 38a.
    Cole Fasnacht testified that the previous owners of the Property obtained
    the building permit and performed the renovations and that he did not perform any
    construction on the Property after his purchase in November 2013. Asked about the
    materials Detweiler observed in 2014, Fasnacht said that he had no idea what she
    saw, but that he was landscaping. He said that he also re-stoned the driveway, but he
    was told he did not need a permit for that. He stated that no other changes were made
    to the Property subsequent to Taxpayers’ purchase, including installation of the hot
    tub. R.R. at 46a-54a.
    4
    The trial court noted that under Section 8817(a) of the Law, 53 Pa.C.S.
    §8817(a), changes to assessments resulting from improvements or new construction
    shall not be construed to be illegal spot assessments. The trial court further observed
    that there is no requirement for a property owner to inform the assessment office that
    improvements to the property are complete.                  The trial court determined that
    Detweiler’s credible testimony established that: she was aware of ongoing
    construction at the Property; she monitored the construction on numerous occasions;
    and she initiated a change to the assessment at the time she reasonably determined,
    based on her experience and expertise as a field appraiser, that construction was
    finally completed.4       In light of these facts, the trial court concluded that the
    reassessment was not made at an arbitrary time in the future and was not an
    impermissible spot reassessment. Accordingly, the trial court denied Taxpayers’
    appeal.
    On appeal to this Court,5 Taxpayers argue that the Property’s
    reassessment due to improvements made before they purchased the Property
    constitutes impermissible spot reassessment. We disagree.
    Section 8817 of the Law, 53 Pa.C.S. §8817 (emphasis added), states:
    (a) General rule. - In addition to other authorization
    provided in this chapter, the assessors may change the
    assessed valuation on real property when a parcel of land is
    subdivided into smaller parcels or when improvements are
    4
    As factfinder, the trial court has exclusive province over questions of witness credibility
    and evidentiary weight. In Re: Penn Delco School District, 
    903 A.2d 600
    , 608 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006).
    Consequently, “this Court is prohibited from making contrary credibility determinations or
    reweighing the evidence in order to reach an opposite result.” 
    Id. 5 Our
    scope of review in a tax assessment appeal is limited to determining whether the trial
    court abused its discretion or committed an error of law, or whether its decision is supported by
    substantial evidence. 
    Radecke, 798 A.2d at 266
    .
    5
    made to real property or existing improvements are
    removed from real property or are destroyed. The recording
    of a subdivision plan shall not constitute grounds for
    assessment increases until lots are sold or improvements are
    installed. The painting of a building or the normal regular
    repairs to a building aggregating $2,500 or less in value
    annually shall not be deemed cause for a change in
    valuation.
    (b) Construction. - A change in the assessed valuation on
    real property authorized by this section shall not be
    construed as a spot reassessment under section 8843
    (relating to spot reassessment).
    Taxpayers acknowledge that under Section 8817(a) of the Law,
    assessors may change the assessed valuation on real property when improvements are
    made to real property and that Section 8817(b) of the Law specifically provides that a
    “change in the assessed valuation on real property authorized by this section shall not
    be construed as a spot reassessment . . . .” 53 Pa.C.S. §8817(b). However, Taxpayers
    maintain that the Law is well-settled that “the assessment of improvements must take
    place when the improvements are made and not at some arbitrary time in the future,
    or a board of assessment will be guilty of spot assessment.” Shenandoah Mobile Co.
    v. Dauphin County Board of Assessment Appeals, 
    869 A.2d 562
    , 565 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2005) (emphasis added).
    Taxpayers argue that the previous owners obtained a building permit in
    2010, and that all of the improvements to the Property were made before Taxpayers
    purchased the Property in 2013. Taxpayers argue that the County did not reassess the
    Property until June 2015, which was nineteen months after they purchased the
    Property. Relying on Duke Energy Fayette II, LLC v. Fayette County Board of
    Assessment Appeals, 
    116 A.3d 1176
    , 1179 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015), Taxpayers argue that
    the County unreasonably delayed imposition of the reassessment, rendering it invalid.
    6
    In Duke Energy, the property owner acquired 400 acres of property in
    2001 and 2002, and created a separate 60-acre tract on which the owner proposed to
    operate a gas-fired electric-generating station. The owner applied for and received a
    real estate tax abatement that ran on the 60 acres from 2001 through 2011. In the fall
    of 2003, the property owner completed construction of the electric generating station.
    Although the county was notified and made aware of the improvement, the county
    chose not to immediately reassess the property until the tax-abatement status was set
    to expire. After the tax abatement expired eight years later in 2011, the county
    reassessed the property. The county board of assessment appeals denied the property
    owner’s appeal, as did the trial court.
    On further appeal, this Court concluded that although it may have been
    reasonable for the county to reassess the property once the tax abatement expired, the
    Law requires reassessment upon completion of improvements. We observed that the
    county did not mistakenly fail to assess the property but, instead, intentionally chose
    to postpone the assessment until the tax abatement expired. Because the county did
    not comply with the Law and reassess the property at the time the improvements were
    completed, we held in Duke Energy that the county engaged in spot reassessment. 
    Id. In contrast
    to those facts, the trial court credited Detweiler’s testimony
    that she checked on the construction at the Property on a number of occasions and, in
    her opinion, the construction began in 2011 and continued beyond her visit in May
    2014. Importantly, the trial court made no finding as to when the construction was
    actually completed.     However, the trial court found that Detweiler reasonably
    concluded that the construction was finally completed when she visited the property
    in April 2015. There is no indication that the County intentionally or negligently
    delayed applying the value of the improvements to the Property’s reassessment.
    7
    Indeed, Taxpayers’ argument relies solely on the passage of time; they
    do not address Detweiler’s testimony; they do not argue that the Law requires field
    assessors to view properties more frequently or that the timing of the field appraiser’s
    visits in this case was arbitrary. In contrast to the facts in Duke Energy, Taxpayers do
    not contend that the County intentionally or negligently delayed the reassessment.
    We agree with the trial court’s determination that the reassessment of the
    Property was not made “at some arbitrary time in the future” and did not constitute
    impermissible spot reassessment. In reaching this conclusion, we recognize that the
    statutory scheme, insofar as it contains no specific requirements governing the timing
    of appraisal visits or timelines for applying the value of improvements to a property’s
    reassessment, may result in potentially painful surprises to unwary purchasers of
    property. Unfortunately, while we are not unsympathetic, it is not within the power
    of this Court to fashion a remedy for such occurrences.
    Accordingly, we affirm.
    ___________________________________
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    8
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Cole Fasnacht and                      :
    Courtney Fasnacht, his wife,           : No. 356 C.D. 2016
    :
    Appellants    :
    :
    v.                   :
    :
    Board of Property Assessment           :
    Appeals of Schuylkill County           :
    :
    v.                   :
    :
    Schuylkill County, South Manheim       :
    Township, and Schuylkill Haven         :
    Area School District                   :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 9th day of March, 2017, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Schuylkill County, dated February 9, 2016, is affirmed.
    ___________________________________
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    IN THE COMMONWEAL TH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Cole Fasnacht and                         :
    Courtney Fasnacht, his wife,              : No. 356 C.D. 2016
    : Submitted: October 21, 2016
    Appellants      :
    :
    v.                     :
    :
    Board of Property Assessment              :
    Appeals of Schuylkill County              :
    :
    v.                     :
    :
    Schuylkill County, South Manheim          :
    Township, and Schuylkill Haven            :
    Area School District                      :
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge
    DISSENTING OPINION
    BY SENIOR JUDGE FRIEDMAN                                  FILED: March 9, 2017
    Because the Law requires reassessment upon completion of
    the improvements and the record is inadequate for this court to determine
    when improvements to the Property were completed, I respectfully dissent
    and would vacate the trial court’s order and remand for an additional hearing.
    Debra Detweiler testified that she obtained and reviewed a 2010
    permit issued to Vernon and Marianne Blankenhorn to enclose a patio on the
    Property. (N.T., 12/9/15, at 5.) Detweiler agreed that building permits are
    generally valid for one year. (Id. at 31.) Detweiler testified that she first visited
    RSF - 1 -
    the Property on January 5, 2011, and the homeowners had just started
    construction on the rear of the home, which they were doing themselves. (Id. at
    9, 35.) Detweiler further testified that she determined that construction was
    completed on April 20, 2015, because there was no lumber stacked outside, 1 no
    activity outside, and curtains hung in the living area above the garage. (Id. at 11-
    12.) Detweiler testified that she was not aware that the Property had changed
    ownership and that construction on the house could have been completed during
    one of her visits in 2013 or 2014. (Id. at 29-30, 33, 35, 39.) In fact, Detweiler
    acknowledged that there was no way for her to know when construction was
    completed. (Id. at 38-39.) She just made the determination that the construction
    was completed upon her visit in 2015. (Id. at 39.)
    Cole Fasnacht testified, without contradiction, that the previous
    owners obtained a building permit and constructed a garage and addition to the
    Property. (Id. at 47.) After purchasing the Property on November 6, 2013,
    Fasnacht did not perform any construction on the Property, only making
    cosmetic repairs and changes to the landscaping. (Id.) Additionally, he testified
    that before he purchased the Property curtains hung in the living area above the
    garage. (Id. at 48.) Fasnacht stated that he was told by bank employees that
    taxes on the Property would not increase once the Property was titled in his
    name. (Id. at 52.)
    1
    Detweiler testified that she did not know if the lumber she saw on a previous occasion
    was being used for the interior of the garage or for decking purposes. (N.T., 1 2 / 9 / 1 5 , at 33.)
    RSF - 2 -
    None of the testimony or evidence presented to the trial court
    answers the question of when improvements to the Property were completed.
    The majority recognizes this deficiency stating “[i] mportantly, the trial court
    made no finding as to when the construction was actually completed.” (Maj.
    Op. at 7 (emphasis added).) However, the Law requires reassessment upon
    completion of the improvements and not at some arbitrary point in time. Duke
    Energy Fayette II, LLC v. Fayette County Board of Assessment Appeals, 
    116 A.3d 1176
    , 1179 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015). Thus, it must be determined when the
    improvements were completed.
    Moreover, although Detweiler introduced two photographs, one
    taken in August 1995 and the other in September 2015, the photographs do
    not depict the Property at the time the building permit was issued, during the
    construction process, or at     the    time   the   construction was completed.
    Specifically, the first picture was taken eight years before the building permit
    was issued and the most recent picture was taken approximately five months
    after Detweiler determined that the construction was completed.
    Detweiler’s credited testimony i s insufficient for purposes of
    determining when the construction on the Property was completed. Detweiler
    changed the assessment when she “ believed” that the construction was
    completed. (Trial Ct. Op. at 6.) However, Detweiler never definitively stated
    when the construction was completed. She “believed” that construction was
    complete in 2015 because she did not see workers and saw curtains hanging on
    the windows. (N.T., 12/9/15, at 11-12.) However, the only time Detweiler saw
    RSF - 3 -
    workers was during her initial 2 0 1 0 visit. (Id. at 30, 33.) Additionally,
    Detweiler testified that “[t]here very well could have been” curtains on the
    windows before April 2015; she could not recall. (Id. at 35.) Detweiler’s
    stated “belief” is insufficient for purposes of determining when the construction
    on the Property was completed.
    Additionally, because the building permit was issued in 2010, and
    building permits are generally valid for only one year, I submit that
    reassessment five years later can constitute an “arbitrary time in the future.”
    (Maj. Op. at 8.)
    For the foregoing reasons, I would vacate the trial court's order and
    remand for a supplemental hearing to determine when the improvements to the
    Property were completed.
    ___________________________________
    ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge
    RSF - 4 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C. Fasnacht and C. Fasnacht v. Board of Property Assessment Appeals of Schuylkill County v. Schuylkill County, S. Manheim Twp. and Schuylkill Haven Area SD - 356 C.D. 2016

Citation Numbers: 156 A.3d 365

Judges: Wojcik, J. ~ Dissenting Opinion by Friedman, Senior Judge

Filed Date: 3/9/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023