Audrain County sues state over property tax assessments

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Audrain is one of five counties suing the State Tax Commission over increasing property assessments.

The lawsuit was filed Monday in Polk County. Audrain County joins Polk, DeKalb, Reynolds and Pike counties in challenging the commission’s decisions on property reassessment.

The counties allege that the commission has not taken the proper legal steps to compel them to raise their property tax assessments because there was no notice and no hearing as laid out in state law, according to the lawsuit. Instead, the commission requires assessors to sign memoranda of understanding that compel them to adjust tax rates, the suit says.

Audrain was among the counties that refused to sign a memorandum of understanding to raise residential property assessments 12-15%. State officials later insisted on 15% after the county agreed to 12%.

The commission’s study had shown residential property was assessed at 59.21% instead of the 90-100% the commission requires, according to the lawsuit.

Lawsuit against the State Tax CommissionDownload

“The increases proposed by the Commission … are arbitrary and not based on accurate data and if imposed will have an unequal and discriminatory impact on taxpayers within the respective Counties and will negatively impact taxpayers’ abilities to stay in their homes,” the counties’ lawyer wrote.

The commission withheld more than $50,000 in tax reimbursements from Audrain County because officials did not sign the memorandum, the lawsuit states.

The counties are asking the court to pause the tax commission’s action while the case is litigated.

Summons have been issued to state tax commissioners, but no hearings have been set.

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