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Agenda - 06-20-2023; 8-d - Tax Refund Request – Walker Hall Busby, Jr.
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Agenda - 06-20-2023; 8-d - Tax Refund Request – Walker Hall Busby, Jr.
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BOCC
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6/20/2023
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Agenda
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8-d
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11 <br /> https://canons.sog.unc.edu/zoi3/oz/when-does-an-appraisal-error-justify-a-refund/ <br /> thought that the assessor ignored relevant sales of comparable properties—clearly they would not be <br /> entitled to refunds. Market value judgments may be challenged only during the appeal process for the <br /> current tax year. <br /> But that's not really the case in situations 4 and 5. The taxpayers don't claim that the assessor simply <br /> made a poor estimate of what the properties would have sold for on January 1. Instead, the taxpayers <br /> claim that the assessor appraised and taxed physical property features (a finished attic, additional <br /> square feet)that did not exist in the taxing unit's jurisdiction as of the listing date (and in fact never <br /> existed at all). <br /> That sounds pretty darn similar to situations 1,2, and 3, doesn't it? If refunds are justified in the first <br /> three situations of non-existent property, aren't they also justified in the last two? <br /> I think the best answer is no. A valuation error cannot justify a refund as an illegal tax even if that error <br /> was caused by the valuation of property features that never existed. <br /> Very few appraisals are based on actual physical inspections of the property at issue. Instead, assessors <br /> rely on the mass appraisal process which requires countless judgment calls about specific physical <br /> features and their market value. <br /> If we open up every one of those judgment calls to retroactive review for five years under G.S. 105- <br /> 381, we would do serious harm to finality of our local government tax bases.And without that finality, <br /> budgeting for local governments would become far more difficult than it already is. <br /> No doubt, some valuation errors make compelling arguments for refunds. Consider an example similar <br /> to situation 5 above, but assume that instead of mistakenly appraising a 1,500 square-foot house as <br /> 1,700 square feet the assessor appraises it at 5,000 square feet. Is a refund justified when the judgment <br /> error is so egregious? <br /> Despite the size of the error, I still don't think it qualifies as an illegal tax because at the end of the day <br /> it was a judgment error. And once you start refunding any judgment error, you open the door for <br /> countless retroactive appraisal reviews. <br /> But my veteran assessor SOG colleague Ken Joyner thinks when an appraisal error is so large— <br /> appraising a house at more than 3 times its actual square footage, for example—the result must have <br /> been unintended. If so, then a refund would be justified under the clerical error criterion even if we <br /> conclude that it was not an illegal tax. In other words, any truly egregious appraisal error must have <br /> been unintended and therefore should be eligible for a refund. <br /> Similarly, a county could adopt a rule of reason: if an appraisal error is large enough, then a refund is <br /> justified. For example, a county might adopt a policy under which appraisal errors of greater than 10% <br /> Copyright©2009 to Present School of Government at the University of North Carolina. <br />
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