Bill Text: NC H323 | 2013-2014 | Regular Session | Amended


Bill Title: Permit Disregard of Certain Reappraisals

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-03-18 - Ref to the Com on Government, if favorable, Finance [H323 Detail]

Download: North_Carolina-2013-H323-Amended.html

GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA

SESSION 2013

H                                                                                                                                                    1

HOUSE BILL 323

 

 

Short Title:        Permit Disregard of Certain Reappraisals.

(Public)

Sponsors:

Representative Hanes (Primary Sponsor).

For a complete list of Sponsors, refer to the North Carolina General Assembly Web Site.

Referred to:

Government, if favorable, Finance.

March 18, 2013

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED

AN ACT to allow the disregard of certain General Reappraisals resulting in property values that may not best reflect true value as required by applicable property tax mandates.

Whereas, the Great Recession has had deleterious effects on the economy and, especially, on the housing market; and

Whereas, the total number of foreclosure filings and the total percentage of households in some stage of foreclosure during the past quadrennium have been disproportionately high; and

Whereas, annual analysis of the housing market in North Carolina has shown tax assessments in nearly half of the counties in the State were higher, on average, than actual market values; and

Whereas, the General Assembly has previously altered the timing of general reappraisals when sales values deviated too much from assessed values, but such countywide analyses can fail to properly account for pockets of improperly valued properties or where properties have values that offset improperly valued properties located elsewhere within the county; and

Whereas, these unique and extraordinary conditions have increased the difficulty of accurately appraising real property for tax purposes and increased the number of actual errors in conducting reappraisals; and

Whereas, the General Assembly recognizes that the confluence of these issues arising during the time when general reappraisals of real property were occurring has resulted not only in a higher risk but in a higher incidence of assessed values failing to accurately and fairly reflect true market values; Now, therefore,

The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:

SECTION 1.  Notwithstanding G.S. 105‑287, G.S. 105‑325, or any other provision of law restricting the time for which a change in appraisal or valuation may be made, a board of county commissioners of a county that conducts a reappraisal of real property under G.S. 105‑286(a)(3) on a quadrennial or more frequent cycle may disregard the latest reappraisal and revert to the reappraisal immediately preceding the latest reappraisal if (i) the board of county commissioners adopts a resolution providing for reversion to the preceding reappraisal no later than July 1 of the fiscal year in which the latest reappraisal would first take effect and (ii) the board of county commissioners determines that the preceding reappraisal may more accurately comply with applicable assessment standards than the latest reappraisal.  Before adopting the resolution, the board of commissioners must give at least 10 days' public notice of its intent to adopt the resolution and must hold a public hearing on the issue of adopting the resolution.  The resolution must designate a new reappraisal cycle and must provide for a general reappraisal within eight years of the preceding reappraisal.  The board of county commissioners must promptly forward a copy of the resolution adopted under this subdivision to the Department of Revenue.

SECTION 2.  If all of the conditions of Section 1 of this act are met, a board of county commissioners shall make any change on the abstracts and tax records necessary to revert those values to the values established in the preceding reappraisal for the year of the latest general reappraisal performed pursuant to G.S. 105‑286 and shall apply the reverted values for those properties for each tax year until the next general reappraisal for real property is performed by the county pursuant to G.S. 105‑286, unless those adjusted values are changed in accordance with G.S. 105‑287. In instances of parcels with errors that resulted in an overpayment of taxes, the governing board shall require that notice of refund and the refund amount be sent to the owner of record as of the date the payment was made.

SECTION 3.  After reverting values to the values established in the preceding appraisal pursuant to Section 2 of this act, the board of county commissioners must provide notice to any taxpayer whose parcel has an adjusted value.  A taxpayer who has a parcel with an adjusted value has 30 days from the date of notice to appeal the adjusted value.  The notice must clearly inform the taxpayer of the 30‑day appeal period.

SECTION 4.  Interest on taxes paid on parcels with errors that resulted in the parcels having an increased value in the latest reappraisal shall be calculated as if there was an order of the county board of equalization and review reducing the valuation of property pursuant to G.S. 105‑360(e). Additional taxes levied on parcels as a result of errors causing the parcels to have a decreased value in the latest reappraisal shall be treated as taxes on discovered property pursuant to G.S. 105‑312.

SECTION 5.  This act is effective when it becomes law. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of this act that can be given effect without the invalid provisions or application, and to this end the provisions of this act are severable.

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