Size of property tax case unresolved
NEWPORT-MESA -- A property tax case that has major financial
implications for the school district and cities inched closer to becoming
a class-action lawsuit on Tuesday when a judge directed attorneys for
both sides to create guidelines for who should be eligible to sue.
The case revolves around Rob Pool, a property tax lawyer, who sued the
county for raising his property assessment above the 2% limit mandated by
Proposition 13. In December, a Superior Court judge found the county
acted unconstitutionally in trying to recapture lost assessment when a
home loses value and then rebounds.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors has already recommended the
county counsel not appeal the decision. But county assessor Webster
Guillory still has the option to appeal until Feb. 26.
At a Tuesday hearing, Judge John Watson said he wants to see how the
two sides define the group hurt by the recapturing practice before he
decides to expand the case to other plaintiffs, said James Harmon, deputy
county counsel.
Pool and his attorneys will argue that possible plaintiffs, or
“class,†should be defined as broadly as possible under the law. Pool
said the strategy is based on Watson’s remarks that people who had called
the county after being slapped with the same type of assessment were
allegedly told they had no recourse.
“If people were calling the county and asking what to do and being
told by the county, ‘you can’t do anything,’ then it’s not fair,†Pool
said.
The county is still exploring how it will define the eligible class,
Harmon said.
At issue is about $285 million in refunds and a future reduction of
$147 million a year in the tax base for school districts, cities and
other agencies that rely on property taxes, according to a report
recently released by Auditor-Controller David Sundstrom. These numbers
cover a four-year period of recapturing from 1998 to April 2002.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District could lose as much as $11.5
million this year, though officials say a loss more likely would be near
$4 million. In subsequent years, the district could lose nearly $6
million.
Newport Beach faces a shortfall of $3.4 million the first year and
$1.7 million in subsequent years. Costa Mesa would get off the easiest,
with an estimated $1.5-million loss the first year and $780,000 in
subsequent years.
Pool anticipates that the county will take the opposite tack and make
the class as limited as possible.
“Clearly this is a hot potato for all of these elected politicians. If
they’re too staunch in their positions, the voting public is not going to
be happy and we may be saying adios to Webster Guillory and some of the
others,†Pool said. “But at the same time, I can’t begrudge them that
they have an obligation to protect the county’s public [treasury].â€
Watson will hear the case again March 11.
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