Hannah McCoy and Carol Scott pressed the Henry County Commission on Dec. 23 to approve a senior tax-freeze application for McCoy’s mother even though the property is held in a trust. McCoy told the commission she had submitted a formal inquiry and documentation and cited state and county authority in support of the request.
“Miss McCoy wants to address the qualifications of seniors who have their property in trust,” the record shows; McCoy presented a letter asking the commission to treat the trust-held property as eligible and “quoted RSMO 1 37.1052 s b 7 56 and the county ordinance number 20 2 0 2 5 dash 0 5 2 9,” according to the meeting transcript.
Commissioners said the question raises a legal interpretation issue and committed to researching the statute and the county ordinance and seeking a legal opinion before taking action. Commissioner Mark Larson told the panel the county would need to “do some research on this and ... get any legal opinion,” and the record shows no formal county decision was made at the Dec. 23 meeting.
Why it matters: eligibility for a senior tax-freeze affects household tax liability and may have broader implications if the county interprets trust-held ownership differently from direct individual ownership. Commissioners emphasized any change would not be retroactive and would apply prospectively if the county revises its ordinance or applies state law differently.
Next steps: The commission recorded the inquiry and directed staff to research statutory language and county ordinance alignment. The transcript indicates commissioners will return the item for decision after staff and, if necessary, county legal review.