Orange County NC Website
9 <br /> https://canons.sog.unc.edu/zoi3/oz/when-does-an-appraisal-error-justify-a-refund/ <br /> � SCHOOL of <br /> JNC <br /> GOVERNMENT <br /> Coates' Canons NC Local Government Law <br /> When Does An Appraisal Error justify a Refund? <br /> Published: 02/14/13 <br /> Author Name: Chris Mclaughlin <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 verified by <br /> appraiser. <br /> 5. Taxpayer has a 1,500 square-foot house but the assessor appraised it at 1,750 square feet based on <br /> 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. So do I. <br /> But situations 4 and 5 are tougher nuts to crack. <br /> Property tax refunds and releases are governed by G.S. 105-381,which limits them to circumstances in <br /> which the tax either was levied due to clerical error or was illegal. While those terms are not defined <br /> by the statute, they've been analyzed several times our state courts. <br /> The most detailed of these opinions came from the N.C. Court of Appeals when it analyzed the <br /> meaning of the term"clerical error" in the 1997 case Ammons v. Wake County.. As I discussed in this <br /> 2010 post, the court concluded that to qualify as a clerical error the mistake must be that one produces <br /> an unintended result and is apparent from the face of the documents, such as a transcription mistake <br /> (for example, recording 5,200 square feet instead of 2,500 square feet.) The term"clerical error" does <br /> Copyright©2009 to Present School of Government at the University of North Carolina. <br />