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PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Monday, September 30, 2024

Senior residence claims East Allegheny School District is singling out new buyers with tax increase appeals

Lawsuits
Webp sharonfdipaolo

DiPaolo | Siegel Jennings

PITTSBURGH – A senior residential development claims that the East Allegheny School District has violated the Pennsylvania Constitution’s Uniformity Clause and the U.S. Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause, by selectively filing increase appeals against the assessments of properties recently purchased by new buyers, while leaving unchanged the assessments of properties not recently sold.

CPF Living Communities II – Pleasant, LLC filed suit in the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas on Oct. 6 versus East Allegheny School District. Both parties are of North Versailles.

The plaintiff is the owner and taxpayer for the property located at 120 Mosside Boulevard, in North Versailles and within the School District’s borders.

“The property is 119,868 square feet improved with 127 senior housing units. On or about July 16, 2019, taxpayers recorded their purchase of the subject property. On or about March 30, 2020, School District filed to the Allegheny County Board of Property Assessments Appeals and Review an appeal of the assessment of Taxpayers’ Property. Following a hearing, the BPAAR issued its disposition issuing a no-change in the assessment of the subject property. School District appealed the Board’s disposition to the Allegheny County Court  of Common Pleas at BV 20-001318, which is currently pending,” the suit states.

“Under Allegheny County Local Rules of Court, taxpayers in assessment appeals are not permitted to take discovery from School Districts or other taxing bodies; therefore, School District has not been required to state on record why it appealed taxpayers’ assessment. Upon information and belief, School District has no formal policy to govern its selection of properties for tax assessment appeals. Upon information and belief, School District has a pattern of filing assessment appeals against recently-purchased properties. Upon information and belief, School District initiated this appeal directly because it became aware of taxpayers’ purchase of the property. Upon information and belief, School District selectively files assessment appeals against recently-purchased properties while not appealing the assessments of properties that have not recently sold.”

The suit adds that the subject property is currently assessed at a fair market value of $11,970,750, or $94,257 per unit – but that at the Board hearing, the School District sought to increase the fair market value of the property to $20,000,000 or $160,000 per unit.

“School District’s scheme of selectively targeting recently-purchased properties creates fundamental unfairness by taxing substantially similar properties at drastically different effective rates based solely on when a taxpayer purchased. School District’s scheme unconstitutionally creates a subclass of recently-purchased properties. The Pennsylvania Constitution’s Uniformity Clause requires that ‘all taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects.’ The Uniformity Clause prohibits School District from treating recently-purchased properties disparately from properties have not recently sold,” the suit says.

“In this case, the School District effectively stands in the shoes of the assessor. Allegheny County has not implemented a countywide reassessment since 2012, after it was ordered to do so upon a finding that the County’s systematic application of its base year assessment method resulted in unconstitutional disparities. The government can reassess a property only when the property has been subdivided, has undergone a physical change, or within the context of a county-wide reassessment. School District is systematically and selectively causing spot assessments of recently-purchased properties. By treating taxpayers and other owners of recently-purchased properties disparately from other taxpayers, the School District is violating both the Pennsylvania Constitution and the United States Constitution.”

For a lone count of negligence, the plaintiff is seeking a declaration that the School District’s selective use of tax assessment appeals to charge owners of recently-purchased properties a disproportionate share of the property tax burden is in violation of the Uniformity Clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution; that taxpayers in Allegheny County Real Estate Tax Assessment Appeal matters are entitled to serve discovery upon taxing authorities, including but not limited to, interrogatories and requests for production of documents seeking information relative to a school district’s method or policy for selecting the properties it appeals; an injunction preventing the District from selectively pursuing appeals of recently-purchased properties, plus attorney’s fees and such other relief as the Court deems just and proper.

The plaintiff is represented by Sharon F. DiPaolo, Ryan J. Kammerer, Brendan B. Kelly and Christina N. Gongaware of Siegel Jennings, in Pittsburgh.

The defendant has not yet retained legal counsel.

Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas case GD-23-011663

From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com

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