Bill Text: GA HB31 | 2011-2012 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Revenue and taxation; assessing real property
Spectrum: Moderate Partisan Bill (Republican 5-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-02-03 - House Second Readers [HB31 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2011-HB31-Introduced.html
11 LC 18
9528
House
Bill 31
By:
Representatives Lindsey of the
54th,
Bryant of the
160th,
Geisinger of the
48th,
Cheokas of the
134th,
Sheldon of the
105th,
and others
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Title 48 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, related to revenue and
taxation, so as to provide for the comprehensive revision of the manner and
method of assessing real property; to limit valuation increases of real
property; to provide for procedures, conditions, and limitations; to provide for
applicability to certain types of real property; to provide for the manner and
method of increasing or removing mill limitations regarding school systems and
municipalities; to provide for optional discontinuation procedures; to provide
for related matters; to provide for effective dates and contingencies; to
provide for automatic repeal of certain provisions under certain circumstances;
to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
Title
48 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, related to revenue and taxation,
is amended by adding a new chapter to read as follows:
"CHAPTER
5C
ARTICLE 1
ARTICLE 1
48-5C-1.
Pursuant
to Article VII, Section I, Paragraph IV of the Constitution, 'The Ad Valorem Tax
Assessment Limit Amendment,' the provisions of this article shall control over
and supersede anything to the contrary in Chapter 5 of this title in any county
and all taxing jurisdictions therein, including any municipalities and school
districts, in which the provisions of said Paragraph IV are
effective.
48-5C-2.
(a)
The rate of increase of the assessed value of real property for state, county,
municipal, or educational ad valorem tax purposes, except as otherwise required
by Code Section 48-5C-7, shall not exceed an aggregate of 9 percent for each
three-year period of successive ownership and, except as provided in this
subsection, shall not exceed from one taxable year to the succeeding taxable
year the lesser of 3 percent or the percent change in the rate of economic
inflation on individual taxpayers as determined by the commissioner. For such
purpose, the commissioner may use the Consumer Price Index for all urban
consumers published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United States
Department of Labor and any other reliable economic indicator determined by the
commissioner or such other designee as specified by general law to be
appropriate. Such rate shall be determined by the commissioner not later than
December 1 of each year. Within such three-year period, such 3 percent
limitation shall operate in a cumulative manner so if an increase in one year is
less than 3 percent, the 3 percent cap for the next succeeding year may only be
increased by an amount equal to the difference in the actual percentage increase
in the preceding year and 3 percent.
(b)
Nothing in this Code section shall be construed to prohibit the assessed value
of real property from decreasing.
(c)
If real property or interests therein are sold or transferred, such real
property shall be assessed for ad valorem tax purposes in an amount not to
exceed the applicable percentage of fair market value pursuant to Code Section
48-5-7. Substantial additions or improvements to such real property shall be
assessed for ad valorem tax purposes at the applicable percentage of fair market
value pursuant to Code Section 48-5-7 and shall be added to the owner's
valuation amount under this subsection.
(d)
Nothing in this article shall be construed to alter or affect in any manner the
authority granted to the General Assembly under Article VII, Section II,
Paragraph II of the Constitution to enact homestead exemptions.
48-5C-3.
In
addition to any other provision of Chapter 5 of this title authorizing error or
omission correction by local tax officials, the commissioner shall be authorized
to correct any manifest, factual error or omission in the valuation of real
property.
48-5C-4.
(a)
For purposes of determining when any parcel of real property shall be
reassessed, an assessable transfer of interest in any real property includes,
but is not limited to, the following:
(1)
A conveyance by deed;
(2)
A conveyance by land contract;
(3)
A conveyance to a trust, except if the settlor or the settlor's spouse, or both,
conveys the property to the trust and the sole present beneficiary or
beneficiaries are the settlor or the settlor's spouse, or both;
(4)
A conveyance by distribution from a trust, unless the distributee is the sole
present beneficiary or the spouse of the sole present beneficiary, or
both;
(5)
A change in the sole present beneficiary or beneficiaries of a trust, except a
change that adds or substitutes the spouse of the sole present
beneficiary;
(6)
A conveyance by distribution under a will or by intestate succession, unless the
distributee is the decedent's spouse;
(7)(A)
A conveyance by lease if the total duration of the lease, including the initial
term and all options for renewal, is more than ten years or the lease grants the
lessee a bargain purchase option.
(B)
As used in this paragraph, the term 'bargain purchase option' means the right to
purchase the property at the termination of the lease for not more than 80
percent of the property's true cash value at the termination of the
lease.
(C)
This paragraph shall not apply to personal property or that portion of the
property not subject to the leasehold interest conveyed;
(8)
A change of use of real property when classification of property changes as a
result of a local zoning ordinance change; or
(9)
The passage of ten years since the last assessable transfer of interest for
nonhomestead real property.
(b)
A transfer of interest resulting in a reassessment required pursuant to this
article occurs at the time of execution of the instruments directly resulting in
the transfer of interest and without regard to whether or not the applicable
instruments are recorded.
(c)
A transfer of interest requiring reassessment shall not include:
(1)
Transfers not subject to federal income tax in the following circumstances
pursuant to the specified provisions of the Internal Revenue Code:
(A)
1033 Conversions-Fire and Insurance Proceeds to Rebuild;
(B)
1041 Transfers of Property Between Spouses or Incident to Divorce;
(C)
351 Transfer to a Corporation Controlled by Transferor;
(D)
355 Distribution by a Controlled Corporation;
(E)
368 Corporate Reorganizations; or
(F)
721 Nonrecognition of Gain or Loss on a Contribution to a
Partnership;
(2)
A transfer of that portion of property subject to a life estate or life lease
retained by the transferor, until expiration or termination of the life estate
or life lease;
(3)
A transfer through foreclosure or forfeiture of a recorded instrument or through
deed or conveyance in lieu of a foreclosure or forfeiture;
(4)
A tax deed which is redeemed by the person to whom taxes are assessed within one
year of the date of the tax sale;
(5)
A conveyance to a trust if the settlor or the settlor's spouse, or both, conveys
the property to the trust and the sole present beneficiary of the trust is the
settlor or the settlor's spouse, or both;
(6)
A transfer for security or an assignment or discharge of a security
interest;
(7)
A transfer of real property or other ownership interests among members of an
affiliated group. As used in this paragraph, the term 'affiliated group' is as
defined in Section 1504 of the Internal Revenue Code;
(8)
A transfer of real property or other ownership interests among corporations,
partnerships, limited liability companies, limited liability partnerships, or
other legal entities if the entities involved are commonly controlled;
or
(9)
A transfer of an interest in a timeshare unit by deed or lease.
48-5C-5.
(a)
As used in this Code section, the term 'natural person' means an individual or
group of individuals who directly owns real property outside of any legal
entity. A natural person shall not include a trustee, agent, officer, or member
of a legal entity which has an ownership interest in real property. A legal
entity includes, but is not limited to, a corporation, partnership, limited
liability company, unincorporated association, or trust.
(b)
The commissioner is authorized to promulgate regulations to implement this
article, including, without limitation, providing for those circumstances that
constitute a change in the beneficial ownership of real property or an
assessable transfer of interest not evidenced by transfer of fee simple title.
The commissioner shall examine the substance, rather than merely the form of the
transfer, and related and surrounding transactions and may use the step
transaction, economic reality, quid pro quo, personal benefit, and other
judicially developed doctrines in determining whether the requisite assessable
transfer of interest has occurred.
(c)
The county assessor may send to any real property owner of record, or the
owner's agent of record, to the address of record, a certificate prescribed by
the commissioner which shall be signed and returned by the property owner or the
owner's agent certifying details of the ownership of the property. The county
assessor shall also be authorized to request, and the taxpayer shall provide,
the most recent trust documentation regarding such property. In addition to any
applicable interest and penalties for the late payment of property taxes, if the
owner or owner's agent knowingly falsifies any detail on the certificate, then
the owner or owner's agent is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the
commissioner, the county assessor, or an assessor appointed to handle multiple
county assessments pursuant to an intergovernmental agreement, as applicable.
The amount shall be three times the taxes lawfully due on the property. This
civil penalty shall be enforceable and collectable in the same manner as
property tax.
48-5C-6.
(a)
Upon the occurrence of an event requiring reassessment under Code Section
48-5C-4, for each of the ensuing seven taxable years, any annual increase in the
assessed value of the property attributable thereto shall for tax purposes be
limited to one-seventh of the applicable percentage of fair market value
pursuant to Code Section 48-5-7 multiplied by the difference between the
transferee's fair market value and the most recent value of that property
established by the board of assessors in the year the transfer occurred plus the
rate established in Code Section 48-5C-2.
(b)
Nothing contained in this Code section shall be construed to limit the decrease
in the assessed value of real property based on a subsequent decrease in the
fair market value following the assessable transfer of property.
48-5C-7.
The
provisions of this article shall not apply to:
(1)
Bona fide agricultural property under Article VII, Section I, Paragraph III(c)
of the Constitution;
(2)
Tangible property which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places or
in a state historic register under Article VII, Section I, Paragraph III(d)(1)
of the Constitution;
(3)
Property on which there have been releases of hazardous waste, constituents, or
substances into the environment under Article VII, Section I, Paragraph
III(d)(2) of the Constitution;
(4)
Bona fide conservation use and bona fide residential transitional property under
Article VII, Section I, Paragraph III(e) of the Constitution;
(5)
Forest land conservation use property under Article VII, Section I, Paragraph
III(f) of the Constitution; and
(6)
Public utility property under Article VII, Section I, Paragraph III(g) of the
Constitution.
ARTICLE
2
48-5C-20.
(a)
The mill limitation in effect on January 1, 2013, for any school system pursuant
to Article VIII, Section VI, Paragraph II of the Constitution may be increased
or removed for any school system upon the adoption of a resolution by the board
of education by a majority of the members of the board of education conditioned
upon approval by a majority of the qualified voters residing within the limits
of the school system voting in a referendum thereon.
(b)
Following the adoption of such resolution, the board of education shall notify
the election superintendent by forwarding to the superintendent a copy of the
resolution calling for the increase or removal of the mill
limitation.
(c)
Upon receipt of the resolution, the election superintendent shall issue the call
for an election for the purpose of submitting the question of the imposition of
the tax to the voters of the school system. The election superintendent shall
issue the call and shall conduct the election in the manner authorized under
Code Section 21-2-540. The election superintendent shall cause the date and
purpose of the election to be published once a week for four weeks immediately
preceding the date of the election in the official organ of the
county.
(d)
The ballot submitting the question of increasing or removing the mill limitation
shall have written or printed thereon the following:
'( ) YES
( )
NO
|
Shall
the current __ mill limit applicable to taxes of the _____ school system be
(increased to a ____ mill limit) (removed so that there is no mill
limitation)?'
|
(e)
All persons desiring to vote in favor of increasing or removing the mill
limitation shall vote 'Yes,' and all persons opposed to increasing or removing
the mill limitation shall vote 'No.' If more than one-half of the votes cast
are in favor of increasing or removing the mill limitation, then the mill
limitation shall be increased or removed accordingly. The election
superintendent shall hold and conduct the election under the same rules and
regulations as govern special elections. The election superintendent shall
canvass the returns, declare the result of the election, and certify the result
to the Secretary of State and to the commissioner. The expense of the election
shall be paid from school system funds.
48-5C-21.
(a)
The mill limitation in effect on January 1, 2013, for any municipality may be
increased or removed for any municipality upon the adoption of a resolution by
the governing authority of the municipality by a majority of the members of the
governing authority conditioned upon approval by a majority of the qualified
voters residing within the limits of the municipality voting in a referendum
thereon.
(b)
Following the adoption of such resolution, the governing authority shall notify
the municipal election superintendent by forwarding to the superintendent a copy
of the resolution calling for the increase or removal of the mill
limitation.
(c)
Upon receipt of the resolution, the election superintendent shall issue the call
for an election for the purpose of submitting the question of the imposition of
the tax to the voters of the municipality. The election superintendent shall
issue the call and shall conduct the election in the manner authorized under
Code Section 21-2-540. The election superintendent shall cause the date and
purpose of the election to be published once a week for four weeks immediately
preceding the date of the election in the official organ of the
county.
(d)
The ballot submitting the question of increasing or removing the mill limitation
shall have written or printed thereon the following:
'( ) YES
( )
NO
|
Shall
the __ mill limit applicable to taxes of the City of_____ be (increased to a
____ mill limit) (removed so that there is no mill limitation)?'
|
(e)
All persons desiring to vote in favor of increasing or removing the mill
limitation shall vote 'Yes,' and all persons opposed to increasing or removing
the mill limitation shall vote 'No.' If more than one-half of the votes cast
are in favor of increasing or removing the mill limitation, then the mill
limitation shall be increased or removed accordingly. The election
superintendent shall hold and conduct the election under the same rules and
regulations as govern special elections. The election superintendent shall
canvass the returns, declare the result of the election, and certify the result
to the Secretary of State and to the commissioner. The expense of the election
shall be paid from municipal funds.
(f)
The procedures provided in this Code section shall be supplemental to and not in
lieu of any other method for increasing or removing a millage cap by local
Act."
SECTION
2.
This
Act shall become effective on January 1, 2013; provided, however, that this Act
shall only become effective on January 1, 2013, upon the ratification of a
resolution at the November, 2012, state-wide general election that amends the
Constitution so as to authorize referendums on limitations on the increase of
value of real property for ad valorem tax purposes and ratifying and authorizing
base year assessed value homestead exemptions. If such resolution is not so
ratified, this Act shall not become effective and this Act shall stand repealed
in its entirety on January 1, 2013.
SECTION
3.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.