Nature of the Remedy
A remedy against valuation of real property is the taxpayer's administrative recourse from the assessor's action fixing the taxable basis of the property. It is directed at the assessment itself, particularly the fair market value, classification, actual use, assessment level, or resulting assessed value used to compute real property tax.
Real property tax is imposed by applying the applicable tax rate to the assessed value of the property. The assessed value is obtained by applying the proper assessment level to the fair market value. A mistake in either the valuation or the classification therefore affects the tax base even before the treasurer computes the tax due.
The remedy is technical and administrative because valuation requires appraisal judgment, classification of property, actual-use determinations, and application of schedules of market values and assessment levels. For this reason, the Local Government Code places the initial review of valuation disputes before specialized assessment appeal boards rather than directly before the courts.
Assessment Components That May Be Challenged
A valuation dispute may arise from any component of the assessment process that increases, decreases, or otherwise fixes the assessed value of the property. The taxpayer need not label the objection by a single technical word if the substance of the pleading shows dissatisfaction with the assessor's valuation action.
| Component | Meaning | Typical valuation issue |
|---|---|---|
| Fair market value | The price at which the property would ordinarily sell in the open market, considering its kind, location, use, and condition. | The assessor adopted an excessive value, ignored depreciation, used an inapplicable schedule, or included property not actually existing or taxable. |
| Classification | The legal category of the property, such as residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, mineral, timberland, or special class. | The assessor placed the property in a higher class despite its character or governing use. |
| Actual use | The purpose for which the property is principally or predominantly utilized by the person in possession, regardless of title or incidental use. | The assessor valued the property according to ownership, zoning, or potential use instead of its predominant actual use. |
| Assessment level | The percentage applied to fair market value to arrive at assessed value. | The assessor applied an assessment level not authorized for the property's class or actual use. |
| Assessed value | The taxable value resulting from fair market value multiplied by the assessment level. | The final assessed value is erroneous because one or more valuation inputs were wrong. |
Matters Properly Raised as Valuation Objections
The remedy against valuation covers objections that the assessment is excessive, inequitable, erroneous, illegal in method, or inconsistent with the facts governing the property. It includes reassessments, revised declarations, new assessments of improvements, changes in classification, changes in actual use, and other assessor actions that affect taxable value.
- Overvaluation. The property is assessed at a fair market value greater than its real worth under the applicable schedule or appraisal standards.
- Misclassification. The property is assigned to a class that carries a higher assessment level than the class justified by its character and use.
- Wrong actual-use treatment. The assessor disregards the rule that real property must be classified, valued, and assessed on the basis of actual use.
- Improper inclusion. The assessment includes structures, machinery, improvements, or portions of land that are not part of the taxpayer's taxable property.
- Double or overlapping assessment. The same property interest is effectively assessed more than once against the same taxpayer or against different persons for the same taxable base.
- Failure to recognize special treatment. The property is denied the valuation treatment applicable to special classes of real property when the factual and legal requisites are present.
The valuation remedy is distinct from a general attack on the validity of a tax ordinance, a claim of statutory exemption, or a protest against a tax already collected. Those matters may overlap with valuation, but the proper route depends on the substance of the grievance. If the dispute asks whether the assessor correctly fixed the property's taxable value, the assessment appeal process is the controlling remedy.
Persons Entitled to Question Valuation
The remedy belongs to the owner of the real property and to any person having legal interest in it. A legal interest exists when the person is directly affected by the assessment, such as when the person is in possession, beneficial enjoyment, administration, or contractual responsibility for the real property tax.
The appellant must be aggrieved by an assessment action. A person who has no ownership, possessory, beneficial, or legally recognized tax burden generally has no standing to litigate the valuation of another person's property.
Assessment Action and Notice
The period to contest valuation is tied to the assessor's action and the taxpayer's receipt of the written notice of assessment. The notice is important because it informs the taxpayer that a valuation determination has been made and that the statutory period for administrative appeal has begun to run.
A tax declaration, tax bill, or collection notice may reveal the amount of the assessment, but the operative trigger for a valuation appeal is the official assessment action communicated to the taxpayer. Where the law requires notice, finality should not be imposed on a taxpayer who was not properly informed of the assessment sought to be enforced.
The taxpayer should act on the assessment notice itself. Waiting for collection proceedings may shift the dispute from a valuation appeal to a collection controversy, and may expose the taxpayer to interest, penalties, or delinquency consequences while the assessment remains unreversed.
Initial Appeal to the Local Board of Assessment Appeals
An owner or person having legal interest who is not satisfied with the assessor's valuation action may appeal to the Local Board of Assessment Appeals within the period fixed by the Local Government Code. The appeal is the ordinary and direct remedy against valuation.
The appeal is made by a sworn petition stating the property involved, the assessment objected to, the grounds for the objection, and the relief sought. The taxpayer should identify the valuation component being challenged because the board reviews the assessor's action on the basis of the property's value, classification, use, and applicable assessment level.
The Local Board may affirm the assessment, order a reduction, direct a revision, or otherwise correct the assessor's action according to the evidence. Its function is not merely clerical; it reviews the valuation judgment of the assessor and determines whether the assessment conforms to law and fact.
The Local Board's authority is confined to assessment matters. It does not act as a general court for every local tax issue, and it does not nullify ordinances in the abstract. Its task in this remedy is to decide whether the real property was properly valued and assessed.
Further Administrative Review
A party adversely affected by the Local Board's decision may seek review before the Central Board of Assessment Appeals. The Central Board exercises appellate supervision over local assessment decisions and promotes consistency in the treatment of real property valuation disputes.
The Central Board may review the factual and legal basis of the Local Board's ruling, including the correctness of the classification, actual-use determination, fair market value, assessment level, and resulting assessed value. Its review remains anchored on the assessment dispute and does not convert the case into a collateral attack on unrelated local tax matters.
After the Central Board acts, further judicial review proceeds through the court with jurisdiction over appeals from the Central Board. Questions properly preserved in the administrative proceedings may then be reviewed under the applicable rules, while matters not raised at the proper stage may be treated as waived unless they involve jurisdiction or a pure question that the reviewing court may consider.
Effect of Appeal on Collection
An appeal from valuation does not suspend the collection of the real property tax as assessed. The local government may continue to collect based on the existing assessment while the valuation case is pending, subject to adjustment after final resolution of the appeal.
This rule protects the fiscal needs of local governments while preserving the taxpayer's right to contest an erroneous assessment. The pending appeal prevents final acceptance of the valuation issue, but it does not by itself stop accrual, billing, or collection of the tax computed from the assessment then on record.
The taxpayer who wants to avoid delinquency consequences may pay the tax while maintaining the valuation appeal. Payment in this setting is not necessarily an admission that the assessment is correct because the law itself allows collection to proceed despite the pending challenge.
Effect of Payment of Taxes
Payment of real property tax does not automatically waive a timely and proper valuation appeal. Since collection is not suspended by the appeal, payment may be a protective act to avoid interest, penalties, levy, sale, or other delinquency remedies while the assessment is under review.
If the assessment is later reduced or corrected, the tax paid on the excessive valuation should be adjusted in accordance with the final decision. The usual consequences are refund, credit, or application of the overpayment to future real property tax liabilities, depending on the governing local procedure and the final disposition.
If the assessment is sustained, the payment stands as satisfaction of the corresponding tax to the extent paid. If the taxpayer paid less than the amount ultimately due, the deficiency remains collectible with the applicable legal consequences. If the taxpayer paid more than what the final valuation supports, the excess should not be retained as tax without legal basis.
The effect of payment must be distinguished from the separate remedy of payment under protest. Payment under protest is the statutory route when the taxpayer contests the legality or correctness of a real property tax already collected. A valuation appeal, by contrast, attacks the assessor's assessment action. Both may involve payment, but they address different immediate acts: assessment in one, collection in the other.
Valuation Appeal and Collection Protest Distinguished
| Point of comparison | Valuation appeal | Collection protest |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate object | The assessor's valuation, classification, or assessment action. | The treasurer's collection of a real property tax claimed to be illegal, erroneous, or excessive. |
| Usual first forum | Local Board of Assessment Appeals. | Local treasurer through written protest after payment, with further recourse as provided by law. |
| Payment requirement | Payment is not the jurisdictional starting point of the valuation appeal, but collection is not suspended. | Payment is generally required before the protest against the tax collection is entertained. |
| Main relief | Correction of fair market value, classification, assessment level, or assessed value. | Refund, credit, or cancellation of tax collected or demanded without lawful basis. |
| Practical effect | The assessment base is corrected for the property and period affected by the appeal. | The amount collected or collectible is corrected according to the protest ruling. |
Finality and Consequences of Inaction
A taxpayer who receives notice of an assessment and fails to appeal within the prescribed period risks the assessment becoming final for purposes of real property taxation. Once final, the assessment generally controls the computation and collection of real property tax until it is lawfully revised or superseded.
Finality promotes stability in local revenue administration. Local governments must know the assessment roll from which taxes will be collected, and taxpayers must raise valuation objections within the procedure and period fixed by law.
Finality does not convert an invalid tax into a valid one for all purposes, but it limits the taxpayer's ability to reopen factual valuation issues that should have been brought to the assessment appeal boards. Pure jurisdictional defects, lack of required notice, or issues governed by a different statutory remedy must be analyzed according to their own rules.
Operative Principles
- A remedy against valuation attacks the assessment base, not merely the tax bill.
- The controlling valuation concepts are fair market value, classification, actual use, assessment level, and assessed value.
- The proper initial remedy is administrative appeal to the Local Board of Assessment Appeals by the owner or person having legal interest in the property.
- The Central Board of Assessment Appeals provides further administrative review of Local Board decisions.
- The pendency of a valuation appeal does not suspend collection of the real property tax based on the assessment then in force.
- Payment during the appeal does not necessarily waive the valuation objection; it may preserve the taxpayer from delinquency while the dispute is resolved.
- A favorable final decision correcting the assessment requires corresponding adjustment of taxes paid or collectible on the erroneous valuation.
- Failure to use the assessment appeal remedy within the required period may cause the valuation to become final for tax computation and collection purposes.