Filed: Jul. 28, 1997
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT _ No. 96-3765 _ R-D Investment Co., a Nebraska * Corporation; Lionsgate Partners, Ltd.,* a Nebraska Limited Partnership, * * Appellants, * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the v. * District of Nebraska * Lancaster County; Lancaster County * Board of Equalization, * * Appellees. * _ Submitted: May 23, 1997 Filed: July 28, 1997 _ Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge, BOWMAN and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judges. _ BOWMAN
Summary: United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT _ No. 96-3765 _ R-D Investment Co., a Nebraska * Corporation; Lionsgate Partners, Ltd.,* a Nebraska Limited Partnership, * * Appellants, * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the v. * District of Nebraska * Lancaster County; Lancaster County * Board of Equalization, * * Appellees. * _ Submitted: May 23, 1997 Filed: July 28, 1997 _ Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge, BOWMAN and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judges. _ BOWMAN,..
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United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
_____________
No. 96-3765
_____________
R-D Investment Co., a Nebraska *
Corporation; Lionsgate Partners, Ltd.,*
a Nebraska Limited Partnership, *
*
Appellants, * Appeal from the United States
* District Court for the
v. * District of Nebraska
*
Lancaster County; Lancaster County *
Board of Equalization, *
*
Appellees. *
_____________
Submitted: May 23, 1997
Filed: July 28, 1997
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Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge, BOWMAN and MORRIS SHEPPARD
ARNOLD, Circuit Judges.
_____________
BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs R-D Investment Co. and Lionsgate Partners, Ltd. appeal from an order
of the District Court1 granting summary judgment in favor of defendants Lancaster
County and Lancaster County Board of Equalization and dismissing plaintiffs'
1
The Honorable Richard G. Kopf, United States District Judge for the District
of Nebraska.
complaint. Plaintiffs asserted a claim under the Equal Protection Clause based on
allegations that defendants refused to accord them property tax relief while allowing
such relief to other similarly situated taxpayers. On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the
District Court erred in granting summary judgment and that the case should be
remanded for trial. Having reviewed the matter de novo, applying the well-settled
summary judgment standards of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, we affirm.
The undisputed facts are as follows. For the 1991 tax year more than 450 cases
were filed by various taxpayers in the district court of Lancaster County challenging the
county's assessment of taxes on their property. Several of these cases were filed by the
taxpayers who are the plaintiffs in the present action.2
Counsel for the taxpayers in 119 of the other cases and counsel for the
defendants recognized the existence of a substantial issue concerning the state district
court's jurisdiction; two of the 119 cases were designated for decision on the issue of
jurisdiction, with the understanding that the decision of the court would control all 119
cases. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the court decided that it had
jurisdiction to hear the taxpayers' appeals. Thereafter, counsel for the defendants and
counsel for the taxpayers in the 119 cases entered into stipulations of fact for each of
those cases; in addition, each of the taxpayers in the 119 cases entered into agreements
with the local taxing authorities establishing the terms of a mutually satisfactory
resolution of the taxpayers' claims. As part of the agreement, all parties to the 119
cases waived their right to appeal any decision of the district court of Lancaster
County.
2
The 450 or so cases filed in the district court of Lancaster County were appeals
from the Lancaster County Board of Equalization's decision to deny all of the
approximately 9500 protests filed with the Board seeking to reduce the protesting
taxpayers' property valuation to zero to "equalize" such property with other property
in the county that was not taxed.
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The 119 cases then were tried in the district court of Lancaster County pursuant
to the joint stipulations of fact. In keeping with the agreement of the parties, the court
entered decrees ordering reductions of 12.54% in the valuation of the properties of the
taxpayers for the 1991 tax year in the 119 cases. Less than a week later, on March 8,
1994, the Nebraska Supreme Court dismissed the appeal in Gra-Gar Inc. v. Sarpy
County Board of Equalization, No. S-93-703. The court dismissed the appeal for lack
of jurisdiction, citing rule 7A(2) of the Nebraska Rules of Practice and Procedure in the
Supreme Court and Court of Appeals, and referred to its decision a year earlier in John
Day Co. v. Douglas County Board of Equalization,
497 N.W.2d 65 (Neb. 1993).3
Upon learning of the Gra-Gar dismissal, and believing the issues in the case to be
nearly identical to those in the pending appeals in Lancaster County, the county moved
to dismiss the previously entered decrees for lack of jurisdiction. The Lancaster
County district court denied this motion. Lancaster County did not appeal because it
had promised, as part of its agreement with each of the taxpayers in the 119 cases, that
it would not appeal any decision made by the district court.
At the time of the Gra-Gar dismissal, none of the remaining cases, including
those of plaintiffs in the present case, had been resolved, although there had been
earlier correspondence between plaintiffs' counsel and counsel for Lancaster County
regarding a proposed resolution on the same basis as in the 119 cases. Several weeks
after the Lancaster County district court denied the county's post-Gra-Gar motion to
dismiss, plaintiffs' counsel wrote to counsel for the county asking whether plaintiffs'
cases still could be resolved by settlement. In response, counsel for the county advised
plaintiffs' counsel that based on Gra-Gar the county board had instructed him to contest
3
In John Day Co. v. Douglas County Board of Equalization, the Nebraska
Supreme Court held that, under Nebraska law, a county board of equalization "did not
have jurisdiction to consider the valuations of centrally assessed property in arriving
at the value of appellant taxpayers' locally assessed personal property" located within
the county.
497 N.W.2d 65, 71 (Neb. 1993). Thus, the court held, neither the district
court nor the supreme court had jurisdiction to hear the appeals, and so dismissed them.
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all cases. (It is undisputed that the county board indeed did so instruct its counsel). At
no time did plaintiffs ever submit to the county board stipulations of facts and
agreements similar to the ones presented to the board by the taxpayers in the 119 cases
in which decrees were entered.
Plaintiffs' pending state court cases eventually were terminated when the
Lancaster County district court granted defendants' motions for summary judgment.
The court held that it had no jurisdiction to hear the cases. All of the cases for the 1991
tax year are now terminated. Except for the taxpayers in the 119 cases, none of the
taxpayers obtained any relief.
The District Court held that the undisputed facts establish that plaintiffs were not
similarly situated compared to the other 119 taxpayers at the time defendants rejected
plaintiffs' settlement overtures. By then, the Gra-Gar appeal had been dismissed, and
upon learning of that ruling by the Nebraska Supreme Court defendants became aware
that the legal landscape had changed. The District Court reasoned that "the Equal
Protection Clause does not require the Defendants to 'settle' otherwise similar claims
in a similar manner when the underlying law changes such that the second series of
claimants are subject to a defense that the first series of claimants were not forced to
confront." R-D Investment Co. v. Lancaster County, No. 95-3350, memorandum and
order at 13 (D. Neb. Sept. 26, 1996). Accordingly, the court held that plaintiffs' rights
under the Equal Protection Clause had not been violated, and granted defendants'
motion for summary judgment.
Plaintiffs attack the District Court's holding and argue in a variety of ways that
summary judgment was improperly granted. Having considered all of plaintiffs'
arguments, we conclude that the decision of the District Court is correct, and the
judgment of the District Court is affirmed on the basis of that court's well-reasoned
memorandum opinion. See 8th Cir. R. 47B.
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A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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