The passage of Proposal
A in March of 1994 drastically changed the property assessment and taxation
system. Some of the changes are hard to understand. The confusion is
compounded because many of the old laws that are still in effect may
appear to be in conflict with the intent of Proposal A.
One such change
is the "assessment cap." The language in Proposal A stated
that, starting in 1995, the taxable assessment can be increased only
by the amount of the consumer price index (C.P.I.) or 5% (whichever
is less). However, other laws still require that the State Equalized
Value (S.E.V.) is to be 50% of the current market value. Since 1982,
the S.E.V. and the assessed value have been virtually the same. The
capped value and the S.E.V could be totally different.
As a result, there
will be three different "values" recorded for each property:
the State Equalized Value; the capped value; and the taxable value.
The property taxes will be calculated on the TAXABLE VALUE.
Starting 1995, the
Assessor will still be required to estimate the market value of every
property and record 50% of that as the State Equalized Value.
In addition, the Assessor will also be required to multiply individually
each 1994 assessment by the CPI to calculate each individual capped
value. The lessor of the two will be the 1995 taxable value
for that property. Structural items not previously assessed, for example
new construction, are added to the new values.
With this new system,
in most cases, a property's taxable value will not be increased more
than the previous year's taxable value times the CPI. This "capping"
process will continue annually until the ownership is transferred.
When a transfer
of ownership occurs, the next taxable value will be based on the State
Equalized Value that had been calculated annually. New legislation states
that the actual sales price must not be the sole basis of the new S.E.V.
for that property.
To
summarize:
STATE EQUALIZED
VALUE (S.E.V.) equals...
Half of the Appraised Market Value.
CAPPED VALUE equals...
last year's taxable value increased by the amount of the Consumer
Price Index (with a maximum of 5%) plus construction charges.
TAXABLE VALUE equals...
the lesser of the State Equalized and Capped Values. The taxable Value
will be used for the calculation of property taxes.
EXAMPLE
#1
A
home had a market value of $80,000. The state Equalized Value
(S.E.V.) was $40,000. Sales of comparable homes in the neighborhood
show that the market value has increased to $84,000. The annual
CPI is 1.026.
1995
S.E.V. is $42,000(half the appraised value)
1995
CAPPED VALUE is
$41,040
(40,000 * 1.026)
1995
TAXABLE VALUE is
$41,040
(lesser of Capped Value and S.E.V.)
EXAMPLE
#2
Same information
as in Example 1, except that in this instance, an addition worth 10,000,
was built. The market value of the property is now 94,000.
1995 S.E.V.
is $47,000(half the appraised value)
1995 CAPPED
VALUE is
$46,040
(40,000 * 1.026) + $5,000
1995 TAXABLE
VALUE is
$46,040
(lesser of Capped Value and S.E.V.)
EXAMPLE
#3
A home had a market
value of $80,000. The S.E.V. was $40,000. Sales of comparable homes
in the neighborhood show that the market value has decreased to $78,000.
The CPI is 1.026
1995 S.E.V.
is $39,000(half the appraised value)
1995 CAPPED
VALUE is
$41,040
(40,000 * 1.026)
TAXABLE VALUE
is
$39,000
(lesser of Capped Value and S.E.V.)
EXAMPLE
#4
Looking at the
current year 2001, assume the property has not transferred since 1995.
Each year there has been an S.E.V. and capped value calculated. The
taxable value for year 2000 is $45,000 and the S.E.V. is $55,000.
The property sold in 2000 for $115,000. The CPI is 3.2%. Sales of
similar homes show that the property's appraised market value is $119,000.
2001 S.E.V.
would be $59,900
(half the appraised value)
2001 CAPPED
VALUE would be
$46,440
($45,000 * 1.032)
2001 TAXABLE
VALUE would be
$59,9000
(transfer of ownership removes the "cap," and per State
law, the S.E.V. becomes the taxable value.)
ATTENTION
PROPERTY OWNER
With the passage
of Proposal A, there are new rules and regulations that impact your
property tax assessment. New terms such as "capped value"
and "taxable value" have become a part of the assessment and
taxation procedure.
This pamphlet is
being provided to help explain the changes in the assessment process.
Hopefully, after reading the information, you will have a better understanding
of this complex issue.