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Posted on Tue, Apr. 12, 2005

Caps on land tax ruled illegal


Counties cannot set maximum increase when property is reassessed, decision says



Staff Writer

South Carolina Supreme Court

Land-tax caps struck down

The South Carolina Supreme Court has struck down a state law allowing counties to cap the maximum increase when land is reappraised for taxes.

The court’s unanimous opinion said locally-imposed property tax relief violated a state constitutional requirement for “statewide uniformity.”

Local government officials have been watching the case closely since the suit was filed in 2003 because of the profound effect the decision would have.

The case arose from a 2002 Charleston County decision to cap property value increases at 15 percent during any five-year reassessment period. The city of North Charleston filed suit, challenging the law’s constitutionality.

Charleston is the only city in the state that acted to cap property taxes under the state law.

Coastal counties argued that the large property value increases — and usually higher tax bills — were unfair to homeowners. Others, including the state municipal association and the South Carolina Chamber of Commerce, argued caps shift the tax burden to other taxpayers.

“No two houses would be appraised equally,” Lexington County assessor Rick Dolan said. “It would end up pitting neighbor against neighbor.”

Because state law mandates that revenue — the total taxes collected — remain constant after reassessment, if the county were to collect less money from one homeowner, it would have to collect more from other property owners.

Capping property values would make buying a home more expensive in the long run, Dolan said, because long-time homeowners would not be paying taxes based on the full market rate of their homes.

Charleston County Council chairman Leon Stavrinakis was disappointed by the decision.

“This is just a ridiculous system,” Stavrinakis said. “You have no limit on the potential increase a person could face.”

Stavrinakis disputed the notion that caps pass the tax burden from the wealthy to the poor. Redevelopment, he said, could increase property values in poorer areas.

While the court’s decision overturns county-imposed caps, there was no ruling on the constitutionality of statewide caps.

In December, Gov. Mark Sanford vetoed a bill imposing a 20 percent cap on increases statewide. In his veto message, Sanford questioned whether the bill violated the state constitution.

The 20 percent statewide cap would have shifted more than $460 million among taxpayers, Richland County assessor John Cloyd said.

North Charleston attorney J. Brady Hair argued in court that reassessment caps of any kind are unconstitutional because they violate the state and federal equal protection clause. Any cap, he said, would require a constitutional amendment.

The court did not rule on either of those issues, and Hair said the Legislature could pass another statewide cap.

The decision “leaves the door open,” he said.

Stavrinakis said Charleston County would likely wait on reform from the Legislature. He had wanted a statewide cap written as a constitutional amendment.

“We’re kind of at a loss as to where to go,” he said of property tax reform. “Sooner or later, there’s going to be an uproar.”

Reach O’Connor at (803) 771-8435 or johnoconnor@thestate.com.


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