Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County by and through The Office of The Assessor of Property v. Lamar Tennessee, LLC d/b/a Lamar Advertising of Nashville
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
SEPTEMBER 17, 2009 Session
METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON
COUNTY by and through THE OFFICE OF THE ASSESSOR OF
PROPERTY v. LAMAR TENNESSEE, LLC d/b/a LAMAR ADVERTISING
OF NASHVILLE
Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County
No. 06-1316-I Claudia C. Bonnyman, Chancellor
No. M2009-00266-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 8, 2009
This case involves a subpoena issued by the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson
County, on behalf of the Davidson County Assessor of Property, which required the appellant to
provide information regarding its business operations. When the appellant did not comply with the
subpoena, Metro filed a complaint seeking to enforce it. The trial court ruled that the appellant must
provide the requested information. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed and
Remanded
ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J.,W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., and
J. STEVEN STAFFORD , J., joined.
Lawrence P. Leibowitz, Jennifer L. Knapp, Knoxville, TN, for Appellant
Sue B. Cain, Director of Law; Lora Barkenbus Fox, Jeff Campbell, Assistant Metropolitan
Attorneys, Nashville, TN, for Appellee
MEMORANDUM OPINION1
I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Lamar Tennessee, LLC d/b/a Lamar Advertising of Nashville (“Lamar”) is in the outdoor
advertising business and leases hundreds of locations in Davidson County on which it erects
billboard signs. In 2004, the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, on behalf
of the Davidson County Assessor of Property (“Metro”), subpoenaed Lamar to appear at a hearing
to produce information regarding its billboards.2 The subpoena not only required Lamar to provide
testimony regarding its billboards, it also required it to produce documents providing the following
information about every billboard owned or leased by Lamar: (1) its location, stated either as an
address, coordinates, map and parcel number, company map location, or other means of
identification; (2) the landowner’s name and mailing address; (3) the lease terms applicable to each
landowner, including the date the lease was signed, its term, renewal options or periods, base rent,
whether the rent was prepaid, percentage of gross sign rent, the 2-year history of percentage of gross
sign rent and dollars paid to the landowner, and the party responsible for paying the property tax on
the land; and (4) the size and construction type of the billboard, including its date of installation,
number of faces, and whether it is a rotary sign. The subpoena provided that Lamar could either
produce a copy of all leases it currently had in effect for billboard sites in Davidson County, or it
could provide the aforementioned information in summary format “in the form of a database list in
Excel or Access in hard copy and electronic format.” The subpoena stated that if a summary format
was provided, the property assessor reserved the right to inspect any lease in order to verify the
information in the summary format.
Lamar pays personal property taxes on its billboards. The Property Assessor sought this
information from Lamar not for the purpose of assessing Lamar’s personal property taxes, but in
order to assess the value of the real properties on which the billboards were located. In other words,
the information regarding Lamar’s billboards would affect the real property taxes owed by the
landowners.
Lamar did not appear at the scheduled hearing. Lamar and the Property Assessor’s office,
by and through counsel, held discussions and attempted to negotiate regarding the subpoena over the
next year. The Property Assessor reissued the subpoena in March of 2006, again requesting the
1
Rule 10 of the Rules of the Court of Appeals provides:
This Court, with the concurrence of all judges participating in the case, may affirm, reverse or modify
the actions of the trial court by memorandum opinion when a formal opinion would have no
precedential value. W hen a case is decided by memorandum opinion it shall be designated
“MEMORANDUM OPINION,” shall not be published, and shall not be cited or relied on for any
reason in any unrelated case.
2
W e note that the 2004 subpoena is not included in the record before us, but according to the parties, it was
“re-issued” in 2006, and the 2006 subpoena is in the record.
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information regarding Lamar’s billboards. When Lamar did not appear at the hearing or produce the
requested information, Metro filed a complaint in chancery court, on May 24, 2006, seeking “to
compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of documents pursuant to T.C.A. § 67-5-303
and § 18.10 of the Charter of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County.”
Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-5-303 provides, in relevant part:
(a)(1) The assessor, in person or by a deputy, has the power and duty to examine any
person believed to have any knowledge or information relating to the assessment of
property of any taxpayer.
(2) For such purpose, the assessor has the power to administer oaths and compel any
witness to appear and to answer oral or written questions.
....
(b) Any witness refusing to appear or to take such oath or make such answers, when
called upon by the assessor to do so, commits a Class C misdemeanor.
....
(d) The assessor or deputy assessor shall reduce to writing all statements made by the
owner of any property interest or witness under the provisions of this section, and
such statement shall be filed and maintained in the office of the assessor for a period
of not less than three (3) years.
Section 18.10 of the Charter of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County
provides:
The council, the civil service commission, the board of education and every other
officer and agency of the metropolitan government authorized to conduct
investigations or to hold hearings shall have power to compel the attendance of
witnesses and the production of books, papers and records pertinent to the
investigation or hearing, and to administer oaths to witnesses. If any person fails or
refuses to obey a reasonable order for attendance or reasonable order for the
production of books and papers, the council, board or other agency is authorized to
apply to the chancery court for an order requiring that the order of the council, board
or other agency be obeyed.
Lamar filed an answer to the complaint, denying that either the statute or the Metro Charter
provision applied to its situation and claiming that the Property Assessor’s request was unreasonable.
An agreed scheduling order was entered, setting deadlines for the completion of written discovery
and depositions, and setting a trial date. Lamar subsequently filed a motion to compel discovery,
claiming that Metro’s answers to its interrogatories and requests for production of documents were
incomplete, evasive, and inadequate.
The trial court held a hearing on Lamar’s motion to compel discovery on February 8, 2008.
We do not have a transcript of this hearing, and the court did not enter an order following the
hearing. However, it is undisputed that the trial judge decided at the hearing that no further
discovery would take place, and the judge ordered counsel for Lamar to file two separate motions
to quash the Property Assessor’s subpoena. First, Lamar was instructed to submit a motion to quash
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detailing the Property Assessor’s authority to request information via subpoena. Second, Lamar was
instructed to prepare a motion to quash addressing the reasonableness of the Property Assessor’s
subpoena in the instant case.
Before Lamar filed its motions to quash, Metro submitted the affidavit of Dean Lewis, a
Deputy Assessor of Property for the Davidson County Property Assessor’s Office. Mr. Lewis stated
that, in 2004, the Property Assessor’s Office began evaluating the appraised values of all properties
in Davidson County on which a billboard was located. He explained that the income from billboard
leases must be considered when valuing the real property. According to Mr. Lewis, the Property
Assessor’s Office sent members of its staff into the field in 2005 to collect data regarding billboards,
and they identified 878 billboards, mostly owned or operated by Lamar. However, Mr. Lewis
described various problems encountered by the staff regarding the real property appraisals. He said
that some of the billboards were located within easements on the landowners’ properties, so that the
landowners were not the actual lessors of the billboard site. Also, in some instances, the staff
members could not definitively determine whether a billboard was located on a certain parcel of
property because of its proximity to property lines. And finally, Mr. Lewis explained that the
Property Assessor’s Office needed to know the lease terms in order to properly determine the
increase in property value due to the billboard. Mr. Lewis stated that only five billboard leases were
found recorded in the Register of Deeds Office, and he said that the information Lamar reported for
the personal property taxes it pays did not include the information now sought by the Property
Assessor’s Office. Therefore, the Property Assessor’s Office determined that the “most economical
and effective means” of verifying the billboard locations and accessing the lease data was to obtain
the information from billboard companies.
On May 14, 2008, Lamar filed its first motion to quash the Property Assessor’s subpoena,
addressing the issue of the Property Assessor’s authority. Lamar conceded that the Property
Assessor was authorized to examine any person having knowledge relating to an assessment
pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-5-303, and it did not dispute that such authority
existed regarding both real and personal property. However, Lamar contended that because the
Property Assessor did not have “subpoena duces tecum powers,” he lacked the authority to require
a witness to produce documents. Lamar submitted a Senate bill from the 2006 Tennessee Legislative
Session, which proposed an amendment to Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-5-303 that would
have granted the Property Assessor “the power to issue subpoenas for documents, books, paper
records or other data that may be related to the assessment of property of any taxpayer.” However,
the bill did not pass.
Lamar also contended that the Property Assessor did not have the authority to make
unreasonable requests, in any form, on taxpayers. It claimed that it did not maintain a list containing
the information sought by the Property Assessor and could not be forced to create one.
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A hearing was held on this first motion to quash on July 24, 2008. The trial court
subsequently entered an order incorporating its oral ruling from the bench.3 The court first noted that
it was undisputed that Metro could subpoena witnesses in order to reasonably investigate the value
of personal and real property for taxation purposes. Next, the judge stated:
And Metro has basically removed the legal issue of subpoena duces tecum because
it takes the position that answers to written questions are just fine. So I’m not
reaching the issue of the section in the Metro Charter that sets out what Metro
agencies can do to investigate.
All I’m going to do is rule that The Court will enforce . . . any mechanism,
and in this case it’s a subpoena, that provides written questions to Lamar and Lamar
is required to provide written answers, because that is a practical, common-sense
implied construction of 67-5-303.4
In sum, the court ruled that although a witness’s “responses do not have to be exact copies of
documents, such as leases, it is within the power of the Assessor to require a taxpayer to provide the
information contained in those documents and to do so in a written format.”
Lamar later filed its second motion to quash the subpoena, arguing that it was unreasonable.
Lamar contended that the Property Assessor already had, or could easily obtain, much of the
information that it was seeking, based upon Lamar’s personal property tax records and the open and
obvious nature of billboards. Lamar again claimed that it did not maintain lists such as the one
sought by the Property Assessor, and that forcing it to compile one would be unreasonably disruptive
to its business. Lamar insisted that it was unfair for it to be forced to provide confidential and
proprietary information that would be used to its clients’ detriment. Lamar further claimed that no
other billboard companies or other commercial entities were required to produce information similar
to that requested of Lamar. Lamar argued that discovery was necessary in order for it to properly
address the issue of the fairness or reasonableness of the subpoena, in order to determine whether
the Property Assessor already had access to the information requested, whether the Property Assessor
had attempted to obtain the information by other means, and whether the information sought was
relevant to the Property Assessor’s duties.
Following another hearing, the trial court denied the motion to quash, ruling that the
subpoena was reasonable and within the authority of the Property Assessor. However, rather than
requiring Lamar to produce specific documents, such as the leases, the court phrased each of the
subpoena’s requests in the form of a question and required Lamar to answer the question. For
example, the order required Lamar to answer the questions: “What is the location of each
3
W e have a transcript of the court’s oral ruling, but not of the entire hearing.
4
Again, Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-5-303(a)(2) provides that “the assessor has the power to
administer oaths and compel any witness to appear and to answer oral or written questions.”
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billboard[?]” and “[W]hat is the landowner’s name and mailing address?” Lamar timely filed a
notice of appeal.
II. ISSUES PRESENTED
Lamar presents the following issues for review, slightly restated:
1. Does the Davidson County Property Assessor have the authority to issue a subpoena duces
tecum?
2. Did the trial court err in refusing to allow Lamar to proceed with discovery before ruling on
the reasonableness of the subpoena?
3. Was the subpoena reasonable?
4. Did the trial court err in ordering Lamar to comply with the subpoena by answering questions
composed by the court?
For the following reasons, we reverse the decision of the chancery court and remand for further
proceedings.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
On appeal, a trial court’s factual findings are presumed to be correct, and we will not overturn
those factual findings unless the evidence preponderates against them. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d)
(2008); Bogan v. Bogan, 60 S.W.3d 721, 727 (Tenn. 2001). For the evidence to preponderate
against a trial court’s finding of fact, it must support another finding of fact with greater convincing
effect. Watson v. Watson, 196 S.W.3d 695, 701 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005) (citing Walker v. Sidney
Gilreath & Assocs., 40 S.W.3d 66, 71 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000); The Realty Shop, Inc. v. RR
Westminster Holding, Inc., 7 S.W.3d 581, 596 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999)). We review a trial court’s
conclusions of law under a de novo standard upon the record with no presumption of correctness.
Union Carbide Corp. v. Huddleston, 854 S.W.2d 87, 91 (Tenn. 1993) (citing Estate of Adkins v.
White Consol. Indus., Inc., 788 S.W.2d 815, 817 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989)). “Decisions with regard
to pre-trial discovery matters rest within the sound discretion of the trial court” and “will not be
reversed on appeal unless a clear abuse of discretion is demonstrated.” Benton v. Snyder, 825
S.W.2d 409, 416 (Tenn. 1992) (citing Paine v. Ramsey, 591 S.W.2d 434, 436 (Tenn. 1979)).
IV. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Lamar asks this Court to determine whether Metro, on behalf of the Property
Assessor, has the authority to compel the production of documents through a subpoena duces tecum.
However, as stated above, the trial court did not address this issue, stating that “Metro has basically
removed the legal issue of subpoena duces tecum because it takes the position that answers to written
questions are just fine.” On appeal, Metro similarly argues that Lamar was not required to produce
specific documents, so long as it provided answers to its questions in writing. Therefore, we will
not address whether the Property Assessor is authorized to compel the production of specific
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documents. See City of Memphis v. Shelby County Election Comm’n, 146 S.W.3d 531, 539 (Tenn.
2004) (stating that “appellate courts will not render advisory opinions”).
Again, Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-5-303 provides, in pertinent part:
(a)(1) The assessor, in person or by a deputy, has the power and duty to examine any
person believed to have any knowledge or information relating to the assessment of
property of any taxpayer.
(2) For such purpose, the assessor has the power to administer oaths and compel any
witness to appear and to answer oral or written questions.
(emphasis added). Based upon this language, the trial court concluded that the Property Assessor
was authorized to require a witness to provide written answers to its questions. On appeal, Lamar
does not challenge or even discuss the trial court’s interpretation of the statute as requiring a witness
to provide written answers to the Property Assessor’s questions. As such, we decline to address the
issue sua sponte.
Lamar does argue that the Property Assessor’s subpoena was unreasonable, and that the trial
court erred in refusing to allow the parties to engage in further discovery prior to determining
whether the subpoena was reasonable. We note that the statute does not expressly include a
reasonableness requirement. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-5-303. However, the Property Assessor’s
statutory authority “appear[s] to constitute the functional equivalent of a subpoena power,” Tenn.
Op. Att’y Gen. 06-059 (2006), and subpoenas issued pursuant to the Tennessee Rules of Civil
Procedure may not be unreasonable or oppressive. Tenn. R. Civ. P. 45.07(1). Both parties in this
case agree that the statute implicitly requires that the Property Assessor’s requests for information
be reasonable.
As discussed, the trial court ruled on the issue of reasonableness despite the fact that the
parties were still in the process of discovery. The court did not address Lamar’s motion to compel
written discovery, and the parties did not even begin oral discovery. In opposing Lamar’s motion
to compel discovery, Metro did not argue that discovery was not necessary. Instead, it argued that
its answers to written discovery were adequate and that the case was “ready for the next phase of
discovery – depositions.” We do not have a transcript of the hearing on the motion to compel
discovery, and the trial court did not enter an order following the hearing, but the parties agree that
the trial court decided at the hearing that no further discovery would take place. We conclude that
the decision to deny the parties the opportunity to engage in further discovery constituted an abuse
of discretion. We express no opinion as to the merit of Lamar’s motion to compel discovery,
requesting that Metro be ordered to supplement its initial discovery responses. The trial court may
limit the discovery to only what is necessary for it to make an informed decision about whether
Metro’s questions to Lamar are “reasonable.” However, regardless of the trial court’s ruling on that
issue, the parties should be afforded an opportunity to engage in further discovery.
V. CONCLUSION
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For the aforementioned reasons, we reverse the decision of the chancery court and remand
for further proceedings. Costs of this appeal are assessed equally to the appellant, Lamar Tennessee,
LLC d/b/a Lamar Advertising of Nashville, and its surety, and to the appellee, Metropolitan
Government of Nashville and Davidson County, for which execution may issue if necessary.
___________________________________
ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S.
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