Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1826 Introduced / Bill

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                    By: Eltife S.B. No. 1826


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to procedural and administrative requirements for
 appraisal review boards; providing a penalty.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 5.041, Tax Code, is amended by amending
 Subsections (b), (e-2), and (f) and adding Subsection (b-1) to read
 as follows:
 (b)  A member of the appraisal review board established for
 an appraisal district must complete the courses [course]
 established under Subsections [Subsection] (a) and (e-1). A member
 of the appraisal review board may not participate in a hearing
 conducted by the board unless the person has completed the courses
 [course] established under Subsections [Subsection] (a) and (e-1)
 and has received a certificate of course completion.
 (b-1)  At the conclusion of a course established under
 Subsection (a) or (e-1), each member of the appraisal review board
 in attendance shall complete a statement, on a form prescribed by
 the comptroller, indicating that the member will abide by the
 requirements of this title in conducting hearings.
 (e-2)  During [As soon as practicable after the beginning of]
 the second year and each succeeding year of an appraisal review
 board member's term of office, the member must successfully
 complete the course established under Subsection (e-1). A person
 who fails to timely complete the course established under
 Subsection (e-1) may not participate in a hearing conducted by the
 appraisal review board and may not vote on any determination of
 protest. Furthermore, a person who fails to complete the courses
 established under Subsections (a) and (e-1) may not be reappointed
 to an additional term on the appraisal review board. Appraisal
 review board members [If the person is reappointed to an additional
 term on the appraisal review board, the person] must successfully
 complete the course established under Subsection (e-1) in each year
 the member continues to serve after the first year of service.
 (f)  The comptroller may not advise a property owner, a
 property owner's agent, the chief appraiser, or an employee of an
 appraisal district[, or an appraisal review board] on a matter that
 the comptroller knows is the subject of a protest to the appraisal
 review board. The comptroller may provide advice to the appraisal
 review board as authorized by Subsection (a)(4) of this section and
 Section 5.103 and may communicate with the chairpersons of
 appraisal review boards and taxpayer liaison officers concerning
 complaints described under Section 6.052.
 SECTION 2.  Chapter 5, Tax Code, is amended by adding Section
 5.103 to read as follows:
 Sec. 5.103.  APPRAISAL REVIEW BOARD OVERSIGHT. (a)  The
 comptroller shall prepare model hearing procedures for appraisal
 review boards.
 (b)  The model hearing procedures shall address:
 (1)  the statutory duties of an appraisal review board;
 (2)  the process for conducting a hearing;
 (3)  the scheduling of hearings;
 (4)  the postponement of hearings;
 (5)  the notices required under this code;
 (6)  the determination of good cause under Section
 41.44(b);
 (7)  the determination of good cause under Sections
 41.45(e) and (g);
 (8)  a party's right to offer evidence and argument;
 (9)  a party's right to examine or cross-examine
 witnesses or other parties;
 (10)  a party's right to appear by agent;
 (11)  the prohibition against consideration by an
 appraisal review board of information not provided at the hearing;
 (12)  ex parte communication;
 (13)  exclusion of evidence under Section 41.461;
 (14)  postponement for failure to comply with Section
 41.461;
 (15)  conflict of interest;
 (16)  the process for the administration of
 applications for membership on an appraisal review board; and
 (17)  other matters related to fair and efficient
 appraisal review board hearings and processes.
 (c)  In the development of model hearing procedures, the
 comptroller may develop different procedures for different
 districts based on such factors as the size of the district, the
 number of protests filed in the district, and other similar
 characteristics.
 (d)  An appraisal review board shall follow the model hearing
 procedures prepared by the comptroller when establishing its
 procedures as required by Section 41.66(a).
 (e)  The comptroller shall develop and implement procedures
 that provide the public with a reasonable opportunity to register
 complaints or suggestions with the comptroller for improvement
 concerning an appraisal review board.
 (f)  The comptroller shall, before February 1 of each year,
 issue a report summarizing the complaints and suggestions
 concerning each appraisal review board received during the previous
 calendar year under Subsection (e). The report shall not identify
 the person making the complaint.
 (g)  The chairperson of an appraisal review board in a county
 with a population of more than 120,000 shall, before May 1 of the
 year in which the comptroller's report under Subsection (f) is
 received, make a written response to the issues raised in the
 report. The comptroller shall prescribe the requirements of this
 response.
 SECTION 3.  Section 6.052, Tax Code, is amended by amending
 Subsections (a), (b), (c), and (e) and adding Subsections (f) and
 (g) to read as follows:
 (a)  The board of directors for an appraisal district created
 for a county with a population of more than 120,000 [125,000] shall
 appoint a taxpayer liaison officer who shall serve at the pleasure
 of the board. The taxpayer liaison officer shall administer the
 public access functions required by Sections 6.04(d), (e), and (f),
 and is responsible for resolving disputes not involving matters
 that may be protested under Section 41.41. The taxpayer liaison
 officer is also responsible for receiving and compiling a list of
 complaints filed by the chief appraiser, a property owner, or a
 property owner's agent concerning the matters set forth in Section
 5.103(b) or any other matters related to the fairness and
 efficiency of the appraisal review board.
 (b)  The taxpayer liaison officer shall [may] provide to the
 public information and materials designed to assist property owners
 in understanding the appraisal process, protest procedures, how to
 file complaints under Subsection (a) of this section and Section
 6.04(g), and other related matters.  Information concerning the
 process for registering complaints and comments with the
 comptroller shall be provided at each protest hearing.
 (c)  The taxpayer liaison officer shall report to the board
 at each meeting on the status of all complaints filed with the board
 under Section 6.04(g) and with the officer under Subsection (a).
 (e)  The chief appraiser or any other person who performs
 appraisal or legal services for the appraisal district for
 compensation is not eligible to be the taxpayer liaison officer
 [for the appraisal district].
 (f)  The taxpayer liaison officer shall forward to the
 comptroller complaints filed under Subsection (a) in the form and
 manner prescribed by the comptroller.
 (g)  In counties with a population of more than 120,000, the
 taxpayer liaison officer shall be responsible for providing
 clerical assistance to the local administrative judge in the
 selection of appraisal review board members.  The officer shall be
 the intake point for applications and shall forward the
 applications to the local administrative judge and perform other
 duties as requested.  The officer is prohibited from influencing
 the selection process in any way.  The comptroller shall prescribe
 model procedures for this process.
 SECTION 4.  Section 6.41, Tax Code, is amended by amending
 Subsections (d-1) and (e) and adding Subsections (d-10), (d-11),
 (d-12), (d-13), (d-14), (d-15), and (i) to read as follows:
 (d-1)  In a county with a population of 120,000 [3.3 million
 or more or a county with a population of 550,000 or more that is
 adjacent to a county with a population of 3.3 million] or more the
 members of the board are appointed by the local administrative
 district judge in the county in which the appraisal district is
 established.  All applications submitted to the appraisal district
 or to the appraisal review board seeking appointment as a member of
 the board shall be delivered to the local administrative district
 judge.  The comptroller shall provide information and assistance to
 the local administrative judge to aid in the selection of appraisal
 review board members.
 (d-10)  In a county with a population of more than 120,000,
 an appraisal review board member may be removed for good cause.  The
 board of directors of the appraisal district, the chairperson of
 the appraisal review board, or a property owner in the district may
 file a motion with the local administrative district judge for the
 purpose of removing a member of the appraisal review board for good
 cause.  The motion shall contain detailed information with regard
 to the basis for a request for removal.  Good cause for removal
 shall be found only on a repeated pattern of behavior constituting
 good cause for removal.
 (d-11)  Good cause under Subsection (d-10) includes:
 (1)  failure to follow the provisions of this code;
 (2)  failure to follow rules adopted by the
 comptroller;
 (3)  a demonstration of bias or prejudice;
 (4)  participation in ex parte communication
 prohibited by this code;
 (5)  making decisions or recommendations with regard to
 membership on a panel or chairpersonship of a panel based on a
 member's voting record in previous cases;
 (6)  failure to regularly attend meetings;
 (7)  failure to provide a response under Section
 5.103(g);
 (8)  inattention to hearings or the hearing process;
 and
 (9)  failure to implement or follow the model hearing
 procedures developed by the comptroller under Section 5.103.
 (d-12)  The district judge has complete discretion in the
 selection of the appropriate procedure for the implementation of a
 removal process under Subsection (d-10). The district judge may or
 may not hold a hearing. The decision of the district judge is final
 and may not be appealed and may not be the subject of mandamus or
 other similar proceeding.
 (d-13)  If the district judge determines that an
 investigation of a motion filed under Subsection (d-10) is
 warranted, the district judge shall allow the member an opportunity
 to respond to the motion.  If good cause for removal is found, the
 member shall be removed from the appraisal review board
 immediately. The removal shall have no effect on prior decisions in
 which the member participated.
 (d-14)  The district judge may appoint a special master to
 determine the motion for removal of a member of an appraisal review
 board under Subsection (d-10). The special master shall be
 compensated by the appraisal district at the same rate as an
 appraisal review board member.
 (d-15)  The local administrative district judge shall
 appoint the replacement if a member of an appraisal review board is
 removed.
 (e)  Members of the board hold office for terms of four [two]
 years beginning January 1. The appraisal district board of
 directors by resolution shall provide for staggered terms, so that
 the terms of as close to one-half of the members as possible expire
 each year. In making the initial or subsequent appointments, the
 board of directors or the local administrative district judge or
 the judge's designee shall designate those members who serve terms
 of one year as needed to comply with this subsection.
 (i)  Service on a board does not constitute employment for
 the purposes of Chapter 201, Labor Code, and does not authorize a
 person to receive unemployment benefits by virtue of such service.
 SECTION 5.  Section 6.411, Tax Code, is amended by amending
 Subsection (c-1) and adding Subsections (c-2) and (c-3) to read as
 follows:
 (c-1)  This section does not apply to communications with a
 member of an appraisal review board by a [involving the] chief
 appraiser, [or] another employee or a member of the board of
 directors of an appraisal district, or a property tax consultant or
 attorney representing a party to a proceeding before [and a member
 of] the appraisal review board:
 (1)  during a hearing on a protest or other proceeding
 before the appraisal review board;
 (2)  that constitute social conversation;
 (3)  that are specifically limited to and involve
 administrative, clerical, or logistical matters related to the
 scheduling and operation of hearings, the processing of documents,
 the issuance of orders, notices, and subpoenas, and the operation,
 appointment, composition, or attendance at training of the
 appraisal review board; or
 (4)  that are necessary and appropriate to enable the
 board of directors of the appraisal district to determine whether
 to appoint, reappoint, or remove a person as a member or the
 chairman or secretary of the appraisal review board.
 (c-2)  Any communication from the chief appraiser, employees
 or agents of the appraisal district, members of the appraisal
 review board, or board of directors of the appraisal district with
 the local administrative judge regarding the appointment of
 appraisal review board members constitutes an offense. This
 prohibition does not apply to communications between current
 appraisal review board members and the local administrative judge
 regarding their own reappointment to the board. This provision
 does not apply to the taxpayer liaison officer with regard to the
 provision of clerical services; however, the taxpayer liaison
 officer may not offer an opinion or comment regarding the
 appointment of appraisal review board members.
 (c-3)  Any communication consisting of a ranking, scoring,
 or reporting of the percentage of value reductions determined by an
 appraisal review board or panel of the appraisal review board to
 members of the appraisal review board, appraisal district board of
 directors, or local administrative district judge constitutes an
 offense.
 SECTION 6.  Chapter 21, Tax Code, is amended by adding
 Section 21.09 to read as follows:
 Sec. 21.09.  ALLOCATION APPLICATION.  (a)  To receive an
 allocation authorized by Section 21.021, 21.03, 21.031, 21.05, or
 21.055, a person claiming the allocation must apply for the
 allocation. To apply for an allocation, a person must file an
 allocation application form with the chief appraiser in the
 appraisal district in which the property subject to the claimed
 allocation has situs.
 (b)  A person claiming an allocation must apply for the
 allocation each year the person claims an allocation. A person
 claiming an allocation must file a completed allocation application
 form before May 1 and must furnish the information required by the
 form. For good cause shown, the chief appraiser shall extend the
 deadline for filing an allocation application by written order for
 a period not to exceed 60 days.
 (c)  The comptroller shall prescribe the contents of the
 allocation application form and shall ensure that the form requires
 an applicant to furnish the information necessary to determine the
 validity of the allocation application.
 (d)  If the chief appraiser learns of any reason indicating
 that an allocation previously allowed should be canceled, the chief
 appraiser shall investigate. If the chief appraiser determines
 that the property is not entitled to an allocation, the chief
 appraiser shall cancel the allocation and deliver written notice of
 the cancelation not later than the fifth day after the date the
 chief appraiser cancels the allocation. A person may protest the
 cancelation of an allocation.
 (e)  The filing of a rendition under Chapter 22 is not a
 condition of qualification for an allocation.
 (f)  If the property was not on the appraisal roll in the
 preceding year, the deadline for filing an application for an
 allocation is extended to 45 days after receipt of the notice of
 appraised value required by Section 25.19(a)(1).
 SECTION 7.  Chapter 21, Tax Code, is amended by adding
 Section 21.10 to read as follows:
 Sec. 21.10.  LATE APPLICATION FOR ALLOCATION. (a)  The
 chief appraiser shall accept and approve or deny an application for
 allocation under Section 21.09 after the deadline for filing the
 application has passed if the application is filed before the date
 the appraisal review board approves the appraisal records.
 (b)  If an application described by Subsection (a) is
 approved, the property owner is liable to each taxing unit for a
 penalty in an amount equal to 10 percent of the difference between
 the amount of tax imposed by the taxing unit on the property without
 the allocation and the amount of tax imposed on the property with
 the allocation.
 (c)  The chief appraiser shall make an entry on the appraisal
 records for the property indicating the property owner's liability
 for the penalty and shall deliver a written notice of imposition of
 the penalty, which must include an explanation of the reason for the
 penalty, to the property owner.
 (d)  The tax assessor for a taxing unit that taxes the
 property shall add the amount of the penalty to the property owner's
 tax bill, and the tax collector for the unit shall collect the
 penalty at the time and in the manner the collector collects the
 tax. The amount of the penalty constitutes a lien on the property
 against which the penalty is imposed as if the lien were a tax and
 accrues penalty and interest in the same manner as a delinquent tax.
 SECTION 8.  Section 31.11, Tax Code, is amended by adding
 Subsection (j) to read as follows:
 (j)  At any time after a taxing unit denies an application
 for a refund, a taxpayer may file suit in district court to compel
 the payment of the refund. If a taxpayer prevails in the suit, the
 taxpayer may be awarded the costs of court and reasonable
 attorney's fees. If a taxing unit does not respond to an
 application for a refund within 90 days after the date the
 application is filed, the application is presumed to have been
 denied.
 SECTION 9.  Section 41.45, Tax Code, is amended by adding
 Subsection (n) to read as follows:
 (n)  A property owner does not waive the right to appear in
 person by filing an affidavit.  An affidavit shall be used by the
 appraisal review board only in the event the property owner does not
 appear in person. For the purposes of scheduling a hearing, a
 property owner shall designate on the affidavit that the property
 owner either does not intend to appear at the hearing or does intend
 to appear at the hearing and that the affidavit shall be used only
 in the event that the property owner does not appear at the hearing.
 If the affidavit does not designate an intention either to appear or
 not appear, the appraisal review board shall consider the absence
 of a designation as an intention not to appear. If the affidavit
 states that the property owner does not intend to appear at the
 hearing, the appraisal review board is not required to consider the
 affidavit at the scheduled hearing and may consider the affidavit
 at a hearing designated for the specific purpose of processing
 affidavits.
 SECTION 10.  Section 41.66, Tax Code, is amended by adding
 Subsections (i), (j), (k), (l), (m), (n), and (o) to read as
 follows:
 (i)  A protest hearing for a property owner not represented
 by an agent designated under Section 1.111 shall be set for a time
 and date certain.  If the protest hearing for a property owner not
 represented by an agent designated under Section 1.111 is not
 commenced within two hours of the time certain, the hearing on
 request shall be postponed.
 (j)  On request of a property owner or a designated agent, an
 appraisal review board shall schedule a maximum of 20 designated
 properties for hearing on the same day.  The request shall be
 contained on a separate protest for only the designated properties
 and must contain in bold "request for same-day protest hearings."  A
 property owner or designated agent may make only one request for
 same-day protest hearings per county.  The appraisal review board
 may follow customary scheduling practices in the scheduling of the
 same-day hearings.
 (k)  Property owners or their designated agents shall be
 randomly assigned to panels. However, the assignment may consider
 the property type subject to protest or the grounds raised for the
 utilization of panel expertise for a particular property type or
 particular grounds raised. If a property owner or designated agent
 is assigned to a panel for a day, the property owner or designated
 agent may not be reassigned to another panel without the property
 owner's or designated agent's consent. If the appraisal review
 board has cause for reassignment, a property owner or designated
 agent may agree to reassignment or may request and be granted a
 postponement of the hearing.  A change of members of a panel due to
 conflict of interest, illness, or inability to continue for the day
 does not constitute reassignment.
 (l)  Evidence and argument provided by a property owner,
 attorney or agent in support of a protest brought under Section
 41.41(a)(1) or (2) is not subject to Chapter 1103, Occupations
 Code, unless the person offering such evidence or argument states
 that the person is offering evidence or argument as a person holding
 a license or certification under Chapter 1103, Occupations Code.
 (m)  Appraisal districts and appraisal review boards may not
 make decisions with regard to membership on a panel or
 chairpersonship of a panel based on a member's voting record in
 previous cases.
 (n)  An appraisal review board shall respond in writing or by
 e-mail to a request for postponement, which request must contain
 the mail and e-mail address of the person requesting the hearing not
 later than the seventh day after the date the request is received.
 (o)  The chairperson of an appraisal review board or member
 designated by the chairperson may make decisions with regard to the
 scheduling or postponement of a hearing. The chief appraiser or
 person designated by the chief appraiser may agree to a
 postponement of an appraisal review board hearing.
 SECTION 11.  Subsection (a), Section 41A.03, Tax Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  To appeal an appraisal review board order under this
 chapter, a property owner must file with the appraisal district not
 later than the 45th day after the date the property owner receives
 notice of the order:
 (1)  a completed request for binding arbitration under
 this chapter in the form prescribed by Section 41A.04; and
 (2)  an arbitration deposit made payable to the
 comptroller in the amount of[:
 [(A)]  $500[; or
 [(B)     $250, if the property owner requests
 expedited arbitration under Section 41A.031].
 SECTION 12.  Subsections (b), (b-1), and (c), Section 42.08,
 Tax Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (b)  Except as provided in Subsection (d), a property owner
 who appeals as provided by this chapter must pay taxes on the
 property subject to the appeal in the amount required by this
 subsection before the delinquency date or the property owner
 forfeits the right to proceed to a final determination of the
 appeal. The amount of taxes the property owner must pay on the
 property before the delinquency date to comply with this subsection
 is [the lesser of]:
 (1)  the amount of taxes due on the portion of the
 taxable value of the property that is not in dispute; [or]
 (2)  the amount of taxes due on the property under the
 order from which the appeal is taken; or
 (3)  the amount of taxes paid on the property in the
 prior year.
 (b-1)  This subsection applies only to an appeal in which the
 property owner elects to pay the amount of taxes described by
 Subsection (b)(1). The appeal filed by the property owner must be
 accompanied by a statement in writing of the amount of taxes the
 property owner proposes to pay.  The statement required under this
 subsection is not jurisdictional.
 (c)  A property owner that pays an amount of taxes greater
 than that required by Subsection (b) does not forfeit the property
 owner's right to a final determination of the appeal by making the
 payment.  The property owner may elect to pay additional taxes at
 any time.  If the property owner files a timely appeal under this
 chapter, taxes paid on the property are considered paid under
 protest, even if paid before the appeal is filed.  A property owner
 may use Section 31.03 to comply with this section for a taxing unit
 that has adopted split payment of taxes by paying one-half of the
 amount owed under Subsection (b) before December 1 and the
 remaining one-half before to July 1 of the following year.
 SECTION 13.  Section 42.21, Tax Code, is amended by adding
 Subsections (f), (g), and (h) to read as follows:
 (f)  A petition may include multiple properties of a similar
 type owned or leased by the same plaintiff or that are part of the
 same economic unit.
 (g)  A petition may be amended within the period provided
 under Subsection (a) for the same year to include additional
 properties owned by the same owner that are of a similar type or
 part of the same economic unit and are the subject of an appraisal
 review board order for that tax year.
 (h)  The court has jurisdiction over an appeal under this
 chapter, and an exhaustion of administrative remedies has occurred,
 regardless of the plaintiff identified in the petition, if the
 property was the subject of an appraisal review board hearing for
 the current tax year and the petition was filed within the period
 provided under Subsection (a).  A petition must provide sufficient
 information to identify the property that is the subject of the
 petition.  An issue of a proper party or the clarification of the
 identity of a property shall be the subject of a special exception
 and correction through amendment and not subject to a plea to the
 jurisdiction or failure to exhaust administrative remedies.
 SECTION 14.  Section 42.23, Tax Code, is amended by adding
 Subsection (h) to read as follows:
 (h)  Evidence, argument, and other testimony offered at an
 appraisal review board hearing by a property owner or agent are not
 admissible under this chapter except to establish the court's
 jurisdiction for purposes of evidence in a no-evidence motion for
 summary judgment or unless the property owner or agent is
 designated as a witness for purposes of trial.
 SECTION 15.  Section 41A.031, Tax Code, is repealed.
 SECTION 16.  The changes in law made by this Act are
 procedural and are applicable to any proceedings pending or not
 finalized as of the effective date of the sections of this Act that
 are applicable to the proceedings.
 SECTION 17.  (a)  Sections 1, 2, 3, 9, and 10 of this Act
 take effect January 1, 2014.
 (b)  Except as provided by Subsection (c) of this section,
 Section 4 of this Act takes effect January 1, 2014.
 (c)  Subsection (i), Section 6.41, Tax Code, as added by
 Section 4 of this Act, takes effect September 1, 2013, and applies
 to any claim pending on that date.
 SECTION 18.  Except as provided by Section 17 of this Act,
 this Act takes effect immediately if it receives a vote of
 two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as provided by
 Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this Act does not
 receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this Act takes
 effect September 1, 2013.