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Coates' Canons: NC Local Government Law Blog » When Does An Appraisal Error Justify a (ailffif>3 <br />17 <br />- Coates' Canons: NC Local Government Law Blog - http: / /canons.sog.unc.edu - <br />When Does An Appraisal Error Justify a Refund? <br />Posted By Chris McLaughlin On February 14, 2013 @ 9:49 PM In Finance & Tax I !' ;;, a,irml,irml ,ir;U <br />Which of these appraisal errors justifies a property tax refund? <br />1. Taxpayer is taxed for property that did not have a taxable situs in the jurisdiction. <br />2. Taxpayer is taxed for a house that burned the prior December. <br />3. Taxpayer has vacant land but is taxed for the land plus a house. <br />4. Taxpayer has an unfinished attic but was taxed for a finished attic. Finish was never <br />verified by appraiser. <br />5. Taxpayer has a 1,500 square -foot house but the assessor appraised it at 1,750 square <br />feet based on the size of similar houses in the same neighborhood. <br />Most property tax professionals would agree that a refund is justified in situations 1, 2 and 3. <br />So do I. But situations 4 and 5 are tougher nuts to crack. <br />Property tax refunds and releases are governed by _,......,..!' <br />�5_,, .::::..v...:: E13, which limits them to <br />circumstances in which the tax either was levied due to clerical error or was illegal. While <br />those terms are not defined by the statute, they've been analyzed several times our state <br />courts. <br />The most detailed of these opinions came from the N.C. Court of Appeals when it analyzed <br />the meaning of the term "clerical error" in the 1997 case ir7rl,irml,�a,irIs,,,,V.,,,,,,1 d�lllce,,,_�'��.U.Irl „�,y E23. As I <br />discussed in this 2010 post E33, the court concluded that to qualify as a clerical error the <br />mistake must be that one produces an unintended result and is apparent from the face of the <br />documents, such as a transcription mistake (for example, recording 5,200 square feet instead <br />of 2,500 square feet.) The term "clerical error” does not include errors in judgment or law on <br />such issues as market value, quality of construction, or eligibility for a property tax exclusion. <br />These types of non - clerical errors must be resolved through the annual appeal process and <br />may not be corrected retroactively under G.S. 105 -381. <br />Applying the Ammons analysis to the five situations above, I don't think any qualifies for a <br />refund due to clerical error. In each situation, the appraisal was that intended by the <br />assessor. None of the situations involved an unintended appraisal —in each instance the <br />assessor produced an appraisal that he /she thought was appropriate at the time. <br />But clerical error is only one of two justifications for a property tax refund. Might any of the <br />five situations above qualify as "illegal taxes "? <br />Here's our court defines that term: "[G.S. 105 -381] and our case law recognize a distinction <br />between an erroneous tax and an illegal tax or invalid tax. An illegal or invalid tax results <br />when the taxing body seeks to impose a tax without authority, as in cases where it is <br />asserted that the rate is unconstitutional or that the subject is exempt from taxation." <br />Redevelopment Comm. V. Guilford County, 274 N.C. 585 (1968). <br />I think it's clear that situations 1 and 2 would constitute illegal taxes because the taxing unit <br />had no authority to tax property not in its jurisdiction (situation 1) or that did not exist as of <br />January 1 (situation 2). Similarly, situation 3 seems to be an illegal tax because a taxing <br />unit has no authority to tax property that never existed. <br />In contrast, situations 4 and 5 involve property that did exist in the taxing unit's jurisdiction <br />as of the listing date but that received inflated appraisals. Is a tax on non - existent market <br />value illegal and subject to a refund under G.S. 105 -381? <br />http://canons.sog.unc.edu/?p=6994&print=l 5/20/2013 <br />