Judge R. Stanton Wettick has denied a request to automatically lower hundreds of thousands of property assessments in poorer neighborhoods. Attorney Don Driscoll argued that a recent independent study demonstrated that poorer neighborhoods were paying more than their fair share. The motion was denied because the court determined that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court did not intend to allow the court to consider the “fairness of the assessments”, only the procedure for conducting it. The court wrote: “It does not provide for judicial oversight with respect to issues regarding the fairness of a reassessment.”
Mr. Driscoll, the attorney who initiated the reassessment through a lawsuit, now argued that the new assessment values should be revised, because approximately 300,000 properties in Allegheny County are overassessed as a result of the new assessment values, and properties in low-income areas were erroneously given higher percentage increases than homes in wealthier communities.
Allegheny County argued that although these new values are not perfect, “The Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that taxation is not a matter of exact science and that absolute equality or perfect uniformity is not necessary to satisfy the constitutional requirements of uniformity and equal protection.” The County then noted that the appeals process will continue year after year, so these values will always be shifting.
The County is currently under a Court Order to calculate the new total value for real estate assessments by December 17, 2012. School and local taxing entities need this information to calculate their millage rates for 2013. The County is currently in the process of proposing its 2013 budget, and should have a tentative 2013 millage rate by the end of the year.
As the impact of this ongoing litigation looms, the Office of Property Assessments continues to hear up to one thousand appeals every day in an attempt to complete the appeals process by the end of the year. Though the majority of appeals have already been heard, there are still approximately 15,000 appeals that have not been heard at this point. Appeal hearings will be scheduled through the end of the year, and the likelihood that the Office of Property Assessments will be able to complete all decisions by the end of the year is extremely small.
Property owners who have already attended hearings should expect to receive the decision from this appeal in approximately 2-3 months. Property owners who are dissatisfied with this decision have thirty days from the “Mailing Date” listed on this decision to file an appeal to the Board of Viewers.
If you have any additional questions about property assessments, or would like a free consultation about your property appeal case, please feel free to contact Attorney Noah Paul Fardo or Attorney Nicole Hauptman for a free consultation at (412) 802-6666, or email our office at info@pghfirm.com.
This article is written for entertainment purposes only. It should not be relied upon for legal advice, and in no way does this article create an attorney/client relationship. We only represent individual(s) once there is a signed representation and fee agreement in place. Please read full legal Disclaimer.
more about Allegheny County property assessment appeals.
Read Our Latest Property Assessment Articles:
- Allegheny County Ignores Appeal Results & Sends Wrong Tax Bills.
- 2013 Allegheny County Assessment Updates
- Allegheny County Assessments News and Updates
- Judge Denies Request to Lower Assessments
- Should Commercial Property Owners Bypass the First Hearing?
- Status Update for Allegheny County Property Assessments
- Secrets to Winning Your 2013 Allegheny Tax Appeal
- RESULTS OF INFORMAL HEARINGS RELEASED
- Allegheny County Reassessment Update
- Will Legislation Stop the Reassessments?
- How to Defend 2012 & 2013 School Tax Appeals.
- “The Fix is In.” – Why 7/10 Are Under-Assessed.
- 3/4/12 – Attorney Fardo to Speak at Seminar on Tax Exemptions.
- 2/8/12 – Did Outsourcing Cause Allegheny County Assessment Chaos?
- 2/8/12 – Allegheny County 2012 Reassessment Update.
- 1/24/12 – Assessment Deadline for City Extended – Others Waiting.
- 1/23/12 – Allegheny County New Assessment Website is a NIGHTMARE for Taxpayers.
- 1/13/12 – VIDEO: Reassessment Update: “Appeal Now, Pay Later”.
- 1/10/12 – Judge Overrules Fitzgerald – Orders 2012 Assessments to Continue
- 1/6/12 – “Scent of a Fitzgerald” : Allegheny County Assessments.
more from our: Allegheny County Assessment Blog


