City to appeal court’s tax decision
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Property owners may have to wait up to three years
before collecting on refunds of a tax deemed illegal by a Santa Ana
judge.
The City Council decided Monday to appeal the decision of Orange
County Superior Court Judge Robert Gallivan, who first stated in a March
ruling that the property tax funding some city employee retirement
benefits violated the 1978 Proposition 13, which capped property taxes at
1% of assessed value.
“I think this will benefit the entire state, win lose or draw,”
Councilwoman Debbie Cook said. “It will provide an opinion for all cities
to rely on in the future, though I hope it won’t take us the three years
expected to get there.”
City officials have argued for the property tax, stating the charter
amendment passed at the same time as Proposition 13 allowed taxes that
met city retirement system obligations, and gave officials the power to
apply the money toward employee pensions.
Assistant City Atty. Scott Field said the appeal could take as long as
three years to make its way through the courts, and an additional two
years should that decision be appealed to the state’s Supreme Court.
The appeal faces much opposition.
Gallivan’s ruling stemmed from a 15-month lawsuit filed against the
city by the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn., on the behalf of resident
Chuck Scheid and the late Charles Davis, who was later dropped from the
case. The two men, then, believed the tax to be illegal and were
demanding refunds.
“The city is wrong on this,” Scheid said of the intent to appeal. “Why
should residents have to wait three years for the city to refund money
that was illegally taken from them?”
The Huntington Beach Taxpayers’ Assn., headed up by former City
Councilman Dave Sullivan, received thousands of calls from residents
seeking information on property tax refunds, many of them angry.
One thing, Sullivan said, that has been positive is the city’s tax
refund claim form, which has been changed to be more user-friendly as a
result of Cook, who brought the matter to the council’s attention earlier
this month.
Although Field stressed that property owners will still be able to
file refund claims up to 90 days after the appellate court decision,
Sullivan said taxpayers shouldn’t rely on “promises written in sand” and
should file now.
If the appellate court ultimately supports Gallivan’s trial ruling,
the city could face a loss of up to $25 million in refunds, dating back
to 1997, and lose $7 million in annual revenue.
Jon Coupal, president of the Jarvis association, said Gallivan’s
decision was “ironclad.”
“I just don’t see how the city hopes to prevail in this,” he added.
“I’d think they’d be better off finding out how they can get the money
back to the taxpayers.”
FYI
For more information on the property tax case, or to find a form from
the city, visit the City Clerk’s office on the second floor of City Hall,
2000 Main St. Copies of the city’s presentation on the subject are
available. Forms and information can also be found on the city’s Web site
at o7 https://www.ci.huntington-beach.ca.usf7 and are available through
fax via the Huntington Beach Infoline (714) 374-4800. Enter Message # 577
for a fax of the claim form, and Message #577 for a copy of the city’s
presentation.
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