Lower Mapunapuna Tenants Ass'n, Matter of, 15207

Decision Date18 March 1992
Docket NumberNo. 15207,15207
Citation828 P.2d 263,73 Haw. 63
PartiesIn the Matter of the Tax Appeal of LOWER MAPUNAPUNA TENANTS ASSOCIATION, Appellant.
CourtHawaii Supreme Court

Syllabus by the Court

1. In construing tax statutes, courts will presume that the words in a statute were used to express their meaning in common language, and where that statutory language is plain and unambiguous, our sole duty is to give effect to its plain and obvious meaning.

2. Departure from the plain and unambiguous language of the statute cannot be justified without a clear showing that the legislature intended some other meaning would be given the language.

3. Although not controlling, the uniform practical construction of a statute by those charged with carrying out the statute is entitled to much weight.

4. The right of appeal is purely statutory, and therefore, the right of appeal is limited as provided by the legislature and compliance with the method and procedure prescribed by it is obligatory; the statutory time for perfecting appeals, tax appeals in particular, is generally mandatory.

Ward D. Jones, Chuck Jones and MacLaren, Honolulu, for appellant.

Paul K.W. Au, Corp. Counsel (Ronald B. Mun, Deputy Corp. Counsel, with him on the brief), Honolulu, for appellee.

Before LUM, C.J., and PADGETT, HAYASHI, WAKATSUKI and MOON, JJ.

WAKATSUKI, Justice.

Appellant, the Lower Mapunapuna Tenants Association (Mapunapuna), appeals from an order issued by the Tax Appeal Court denying its request to schedule hearings before the City and County of Honolulu's Real Property Tax Board of Review (Tax Board of Review) regarding the tax assessments of its real properties for the years 1984 through 1987. Mapunapuna argues that it was entitled to automatic appeals of the assessments on its lands for those years during which its first appeal was still pending, and therefore, its failure to file notices of appeal of the assessments in each of those years did not make those appeals untimely under Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 232-4. We disagree.

I.

Mapunapuna is composed of a group of commercial tenants in the Lower Mapunapuna Industrial Subdivision. In 1983, forty-three commercial tenants represented by Mapunapuna timely filed notices of appeal to the City and County of Honolulu's Real Property Assessment Division (Real Property Assessment Division) regarding their 1983 real property tax assessments. Specifically, these taxpayers asserted that their property was over-assessed because the assessment did not make allowance for the fact that the subdivision has "adverse soil conditions and is located in a flood zone resulting in substandard and sometimes hazardous conditions." These appeals were not resolved until late December 1987 and 1988. The taxpayers did not file any notices of appeal of assessments that were made in at least one of those years, 1984 through 1987, during which their appeals of the 1983 real property tax assessments were pending.

Requests by these taxpayers for hearings before the Tax Review Board on their real property assessments for 1984 through 1987 were denied on the basis that the appeals were untimely under HRS § 232-4 and Revised Ordinances of Hawaii (ROH) § 8-12.4.

HRS § 232-4 states in relevant part:

§ 232-4 Second appeal. In every case in which a taxpayer appeals a real property tax assessment to a tax appeal court and there is pending an appeal of the assessment, the taxpayer shall not be required to file a notice of the second appeal; provided the first appeal has not been decided prior to April 9 preceding the tax year of the second appeal; and provided further the assessor gives notice that the tax assessment has not been changed from the assessment which is the subject of the appeal. (Emphasis added.)

ROH § 8-12.4 also states:

Sec. 8-12.4. Second Appeal.

In every case in which a taxpayer appeals a real property tax assessment to the Board of Review or to a Tax Appeal Court and there is pending an appeal of the assessment, the taxpayer shall not be required to file a notice of the second appeal; provided the first appeal has not been decided prior to April 9 preceding the tax year of the second appeal; and provided further the director gives notice that the tax assessment has not been changed from the assessment which is the subject of the appeal. (Emphasis added.)

On January 23, 1989, the taxpayers filed a notice of appeal to the Tax Appeal Court requesting hearings before the Tax Review Board on the real property tax assessments for 1984 through 1987. The taxpayers moved for summary judgment arguing that the language of HRS § 232-4 and ROH § 8-12.4 allowed them to automatic appeals for those years in which no notices had been filed. The City and County of Honolulu filed a motion to dismiss/cross-motion for summary judgment. Finding the taxpayers' requests were untimely, the Tax Appeal Court granted the City and County of Honolulu's motion and denied the taxpayer's motion for summary judgment.

II.

The taxpayers contend that their appeals were timely based specifically on their interpretation of the words "second," "assessment," and "change" in HRS 232-4.

Noting that the statute allows an automatic "second" appeal under certain circumstances, the taxpayers argue that "second" appeal actually means or includes all "other" appeals following the first one. Under this interpretation, taxpayers would be excused from filing any notices of appeal during the time the first appeal is pending if it has been pending for more than a year and the other requirements of HRS § 232-4 have been fulfilled. 1

This construction is clearly contrary to the plain language of the statute which specifically uses the word "second" to modify the word "appeal." In construing tax statutes, courts will presume that the words in a statute were used to express their meaning in common language. See Wilcox Est. v. Dir. of Taxation, 46 Haw. 375, 399, 381 P.2d 687, 701, reh'g denied 46 Haw. 474 (1963). The word "second" is commonly understood to mean that which follows the first. See Webster's Third New International Dictionary 2050 (3d ed. 1967). 2 The interpretation urged by the taxpayers is too expansive.

Further, the legislative history of HRS § 232-4 suggests that the legislature intended that only an appeal of a tax assessment from the year following the first year which has been appealed would qualify for an automatic appeal. Senate Committee Report 954, in 1965 Senate Journal, at 1216 states:

(1) Part I of the bill provides that a taxpayer who has filed a real property tax assessment appeal need not file a notice of the second appeal if the first appeal has not been decided prior to March 20 of the assessment year following the first appeal.... (Emphasis added.) 3

Thus, under the statute as applied in this case, only the second appeals, specifically those concerning the 1984 assessments which followed the first appeals from the 1983 assessments might qualify as automatic appeals. HRS § 232-4, however, imposes one additional requirement for an automatic appeal: the "assessment" that is the subject of the first appeal must not have "changed."

The taxpayers assert that they have met this additional requirement. They argue that they are only appealing the "assessment" on their lands and this "assessment" did not change in 1984...

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