Pamela Slatten v. Hamilton County Assessor
Date Filed2023-12-29
Docket22T-TA-00004
Cited0 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER: ATTORNEYS FOR RESPONDENT:
JOHN C. SLATTEN MARILYN S. MEIGHEN
ATTORNEY AT LAW ATTORNEY AT LAW
Indianapolis, IN Carmel, IN
ZACHARY D. PRICE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Indianapolis, IN
IN THE
INDIANA TAX COURT
PAMELA SLATTEN, )
) FILED
Petitioner, ) Dec 29 2023, 12:19 pm
)
v. ) Case No. 22T-TA-00004 CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
) Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
HAMILTON COUNTY ASSESSOR, )
)
Respondent. )
ON APPEAL FROM A FINAL DETERMINATION OF
THE INDIANA BOARD OF TAX REVIEW
FOR PUBLICATION
December 29, 2023
MCADAM, J.
This case examines when, under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-12-37, an individual must
record a memorandum of contract documenting the purchase of residential property to
qualify for Indianaâs standard homestead deduction. The Indiana Board of Tax Review
(âIndiana Boardâ) determined that the statute requires an individual to record the
memorandum no later than December 31 of the assessment year for which the
deduction is sought. The taxpayer contends that the Indiana Boardâs interpretation is
inconsistent with the purpose of the homestead deduction, asserting that she had until
January 5 of the next year to record her memorandum. She argues that the Indiana
Boardâs interpretation contravenes the rules of grammar and that two other statutory
provisions, Indiana Code §§ 6-1.1-12-45(f) and 6-1.1-12-37(b)(2), independently extend
the time to record a memorandum of contract. Upon review, the Court affirms the
Indiana Boardâs final determination.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Pamela Slatten moved to the home in Carmel, Indiana, that is the subject of this
case in October of 2020. She contracted to purchase the home later that same year on
December 31, 2020, completing and signing an application for Indianaâs homestead
deduction (i.e., Form HC10) the same day. Five days later, on January 5, 2021, Slatten
recorded a memorandum of contract documenting her purchase with the Hamilton
County Recorder and filed her completed homestead deduction application with the
Hamilton County Auditor. 1
The Auditor granted Slatten the homestead deduction for the 2021 assessment
year but denied the deduction for the 2020 assessment year. The Auditor denied the
2020 deduction because she believed the law required Slatten to record her
memorandum of contract by December 31, 2020.
Slatten appealed the 2020 homestead deduction denial first to the Hamilton
County Property Tax Assessment Board of Appeals and then to the Indiana Board. The
Indiana Board held a telephonic hearing on Slattenâs appeal on October 19, 2021, and
1
A memorandum of contract that is executed, acknowledged by the parties, and contains
certain provisions may be recorded in lieu of the actual contract itself. See IND. CODE § 36-2-11-
20 (2020).
2
issued a final determination on February 1, 2022, denying Slattenâs request for relief.
Slatten initiated this original tax appeal on March 18, 2022. The Court heard the
partiesâ oral arguments on August 24, 2022.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The party seeking to overturn an Indiana Board final determination bears the
burden of demonstrating its invalidity. IND. CODE § 33-26-6-6(b) (2023). To prevail in her
appeal, Slatten must demonstrate to the Court that the Indiana Boardâs final
determination is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in
accordance with law; contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege or immunity; in
excess of or short of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations; without observance of
the procedure required by law; or unsupported by substantial or reliable evidence. I.C. §
33-26-6-6(e)(1)-(5).
THE HOMESTEAD DEDUCTION
Indiana law provides what is known as the âstandard homestead deduction.â 2
See IND. CODE § 6-1.1-12-37 (2020) (amended 2022). During the 2020 assessment
year, the deduction removed from annual property taxation the first $45,000 of
assessed value of oneâs homestead. 3 See I.C. § 6-1.1-12-37(b)-(c).
A taxpayer may claim the homestead deduction in one of two ways. The taxpayer
2
A taxpayer that is entitled to the standard homestead deduction is also entitled to a
supplemental homestead deduction and a tax cap credit. See IND. CODE § 6-1.1-12-37.5 (2020)
(amended 2023); IND. CODE § 6-1.1-20.6-7.5(a)(1) (2020). To the extent Slatten claims she is
entitled to these additional benefits, the Courtâs analysis needs only focus on her eligibility for
the standard homestead deduction.
3
In 2022, the Legislature amended the statute to provide that after December 31, 2022, the first
$48,000 of assessed valuation of an individualâs homestead would be removed from taxation.
See Pub. L. No. 174-2022 § 22 (eff. Jan. 1, 2023).
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may file the homestead application form (Form HC10) with the county auditor. I.C. § 6-
1.1-12-37(b)(2), (e). That form must be âcompleted and datedâ by December 31 of the
assessment year and filed by January 5 of the next year. See I.C. § 6-1.1-12-37(e). A
taxpayer may also use a sales disclosure form as an application for the homestead
deduction. See I.C. § 6-1.1-12-37(b)(2). That form must be submitted âon or before
December 31â of the year the homestead is purchased to obtain the deduction for that
year. IND. CODE § 6-1.1-12-44 (2020) (amended 2023).
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
This case presents the issue of when a taxpayer must record a memorandum of
contract documenting a propertyâs purchase to qualify for the homestead deduction. The
taxpayer, Slatten, contends that the Indiana Boardâs conclusion that Indiana law
required her to record her memorandum by December 31, 2020, is an abuse of
discretion and contrary to law.
Deadline for Recording under the âHomesteadâ Definition
The homestead deduction applies to property that qualifies as a âhomesteadâ for
a particular assessment year. The word âhomesteadâ is a term of art specifically defined
in statute and, for purposes of this case, means an individualâs principal place of
residence in Indiana that:
(ii) the individual is buying under a contract recorded in the county
recorderâs office, or evidenced by a memorandum of contract
recorded in the county recorderâs office under IC 36-2-11-20, that
provides that the individual is to pay the property taxes on the
residence, and that obligates the owner to convey title to the
individual upon completion of all of the individualâs contract
obligations[.]
I.C. § 6-1.1-12-37(a)(2)(B)(ii) (emphasis added). Here, the partiesâ dispute centers on
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the timing of the ârecordedâ requirement contained in this section. The parties agree that
Slatten recorded her memorandum of contract on January 5, 2021. They disagree,
however, whether that January 5 recording was timely for purposes of claiming the
homestead deduction for the 2020 assessment year.
On appeal, Slatten contends that the meaning of the term ârecordedâ is apparent
from the rules of grammar. She asserts that ârecordedâ is a past participle and as such
is a nonfinite verb that has no tense. She concludes that â[o]ne cannot infer a deadline,
a point in time by which an act must be completed, from a past participle.â (Petâr Reply
Br. at 1.)
But Slattenâs grammatical argument actually works against her. While the Court
agrees that the word ârecordedâ is best understood as a past participle, it does not
agree that past participles cannot communicate timing or sequence. Slattenâs argument
is heavily premised on her assertion that past participles do not have tense, a premise
on which there is authoritative disagreement. Compare, e.g., Bryan A. Garner,
GARNERâS MODERN ENGLISH USAGE 1229, 1246 (5th ed. 2022) (explaining that a past
participle is a nonfinite verb that is â[a] verb form that has no tense, person, or singular
or plural form, and is not limited by inflectionâ) with THE CHICAGO MANUAL OF STYLE §
5.108 at 233 (16th ed. 2010) (stating that â[a] participle is a nonfinite verb that is not
limited by person, number, or mood, but does have tenseâ). Nonetheless, the Court
need not resolve the question of tense to decide this case because past participles
inherently signal that the participleâs action is completed because they convey a
âperfective aspect.â GARNERâS at 1196, 1229 (stating that a past participle is â[a]
nonfinite verb form . . . used in verb phrases . . . to signal a perfective aspectâ and
5
defining âperfective aspectâ as â[a] verb aspect that expresses action as complete â or
implies that it is soâ); CHICAGO MANUAL OF STYLE § 5.108 at 233 (explaining that a past
participle âdenotes the verbâs action as completedâ). That a participle conveys timing
and sequence is made clearer by contrasting the past participle with the present
participle. The present participle embodies a progressive aspect that signals that the
participleâs action is âin progress or incomplete at the time expressed by the sentenceâs
principal verb.â CHICAGO MANUAL OF STYLE § 5.108 at 233. See also GARNERâS at 1196,
1229 (explaining that a present participle is âusedâŚto signal the progressive aspect,â
which âshow[s] that an action or state â past, present, or future â was, is, or will be
unfinished at the time referred toâ).
These grammatical nuances confirm that the recording required by the
homestead definition must be completed during the assessment year for which a
deduction is sought. They dispel any notion that recording need only be in progress at
the end of the assessment year to meet the âhomesteadâ requirements. As a past
participle, the word ârecordedâ as used in Indiana Code § 6-1.1-12-37(a)(2)(B)(ii) signals
that the recording is complete at the time a property is qualified as a homestead. Had
the Legislature intended otherwise, it could have used the present participle of
ârecordedâ or separated the recording requirement from the âhomesteadâ definition
altogether. Consequently, for Slatten to receive the homestead deduction for the 2020
assessment year, her property needed to be a homestead in 2020. And, to be a
homestead in 2020, Slatten needed to record her memorandum of contract in 2020 (i.e.,
by the end of the assessment year for which the deduction was sought â December 31,
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2020). 4,5
Slatten emphasizes that her interpretation âavoid[s] the unfair result that people
who buy houses near the end of the year would be denied the benefit of the homestead
deduction because of it being difficult to prepare, file, and record documents during the
end-of-year holidays.â (Petâr Br. at 14.) The Court is sympathetic to the concerns raised
by Slatten. The statute does not reveal the legislative purpose for the recordation
requirement. It may be intended as a safeguard against fraud or for administrative
effectiveness as Section 37(a)(2)(B)(ii) applies to prospective sales that are not yet
complete. But, regardless of the reason, this Court, like any other, may not usurp
legislative prerogative by construing a statute in a manner contrary to its plain language.
See Southlake Indiana, LLC v. Lake Cnty. Assessor, 174 N.E.3d 177, 180 (Ind. 2021)
(indicating that âthat result, whatever its policy merits, is the legislatureâs call and not
ours. [Courts] apply the statute as written and do not second guess the legislatureâs
decisionâ).
Effect of Section 45(f) and Section 37(b)(2) on the Recording Deadline
Notwithstanding the language of the homestead deduction, Slatten offers an
alternative argument that two other statutory provisions operate to independently extend
the time to record a memorandum of contract to January 5 of the year following the
4
The Form HC10 itself, as promulgated by the Department of Local Government Finance, is
consistent with this conclusion. It presupposes that recordation has been completed at the time
the form is completed, which must be by December 31 of the assessment year. The application
requires an individual to specify the âRecorderâs Office Where Contract is Recorded,â the
âRecord Numberâ assigned to the contract, and its corresponding âPage.â (See Cert. Admin. R.
at 33.)
5 Slatten argues alternatively that, if ârecordedâ is not a past participle, it must be a reduced
passive relative clause. Because the Court agrees that ârecordedâ is a past participle, it is not
necessary to address this alternative argument.
7
assessment year (i.e., the deadline for filing the homestead deduction application). She
points to Indiana Code § 6-1.1-12-45(f) and Indiana Code § 6-1.1-12-37(b)(2). Each of
these provisions, she contends, extend the deadline for recording a memorandum of
contract to the deadline for filing the homestead deduction application. As will be
explained, the Court rejects this argument because both statutory provisions set forth
necessary conditions for filing and specify the sequence of actions the taxpayer must
complete, but neither can override deadlines established by other statutory provisions.
Slatten first points to the language contained in Indiana Code § 6-1.1-12-45(f).
She argues that it specifically establishes a deadline for recording a memorandum of
contract and points to its language that such a memorandum must be recorded âbefore,
or concurrently withâ the deduction application. She asserts this language allowed her
until January 5, 2021, to record her memorandum of contract because that is the day
she filed her homestead deduction application.
The Court disagrees. Section 45(f) provides that â[a] person who is required to
record a contract with a county recorder in order to qualify for a deduction under
[Indiana Code § 6-1.1] must record the contract, or a memorandum of the contract,
before, or concurrently with, the filing of the corresponding deduction application.â IND.
CODE § 6-1.1-12-45(f) (2020) (amended 2022). That section, though, merely establishes
the sequence of two actions (recording and filing). It mandates that any required
recording be done before or at the same time as the filing of the deduction application.
I.C. § 6-1.1-12-45(f). The provision does not, as Slatten contends, extend the deadline
for recording a memorandum of contract to obtain the homestead deduction. To the
contrary, it places a limit on the time allowed for recording by prohibiting a taxpayer from
8
recording a contract or memorandum of contract after filing a deduction application.
Slattenâs interpretation could be achieved if the word âmustâ is replaced with the word
âmayâ in the statute. See WEBSTERâS THIRD NEW INTâL DICTIONARY 1396 (2002 ed.)
(defining the word âmayâ as âhav[ing] the permissionâ to do something). The Court
cannot, however, substitute words in a statute to enlarge its meaning. See Kitchell v.
Franklin, 997 N.E.2d 1020, 1026 (Ind. 2013) (âCourts may not âengraft new wordsâ onto
a statute or add restrictions where none existâ).
Next, Slatten claims that Indiana Code § 6-1.1-12-37(b)(2) afforded her until
January 5, 2021, to acquire her interest in her homestead. She argues that Section
37(b)(2) expands the time an individual has to acquire a âhomesteadâ interest to the
year after the assessment year. She points to language stating that a taxpayer must
have an interest in the homestead on âany date in the same year . . . that a [homestead
application] is filedâ to qualify for a deduction. I.C. § 6-1.1-12-37(b)(2). Slatten concludes
that, because a taxpayer has until January 5 of the year after the assessment year to
file a deduction application, the taxpayer has until that date to obtain her interest (i.e.,
record a memorandum of contract) in the homestead.
The Court disagrees with this argument as well. Section 37(b)(2) states that the
homestead deduction applies to an assessment year âonly ifâ an individual has an
interest in the homestead on the assessment date or âany date in the same year after
an assessment date that a [homestead deduction application] is filed[.]â I.C. § 6-1.1-12-
37(b)(2). The Legislatureâs use of the phrase âonly ifâ indicates that the provision is
intended to set forth a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for qualification. Section
37(b), like Section 45(f), merely establishes the required sequence of two events
9
(acquiring an interest in a homestead and filing a homestead deduction application). It
requires an individual to have acquired a homestead interest by the time the individual
files the deduction application. And, like the provisions of Section 45(f), Section 37(b)
places additional limits on the deduction but does not expand limits imposed by other
statutory provisions.
CONCLUSION
Slatten has not demonstrated to the Court that the Indiana Boardâs final
determination is contrary to law or constitutes an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, the
Indiana Boardâs final determination in this matter is AFFIRMED.
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