Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 v. Property Tax Appeal Board

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 28, 2011
Docket2-10-0068 NRel
StatusUnpublished

This text of Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 v. Property Tax Appeal Board (Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 v. Property Tax Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 v. Property Tax Appeal Board, (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS Appellate Court

Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board, 2011 IL App (2d) 100068

Appellate Court THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF MERIDIAN COMMUNITY UNIT Caption SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 223 and THE OGLE COUNTY BOARD OF REVIEW, Petitioners, v. THE ILLINOIS PROPERTY TAX APPEAL BOARD and ONYX ORCHARD HILLS LANDFILL, INC., Respondents.

District & No. Second District Docket No. 2-10-0068

Filed June 28, 2011 Modified upon denial of rehearing October 24, 2011 Held In an action arising from a dispute over the Property Tax Appeal Board’s (Note: This syllabus decision reducing the tax assessment for a parcel of land owned by constitutes no part of respondent and used as a sanitary landfill, the appellate court affirmed the the opinion of the court Board’s decision that the fair market value of the property was $10 but has been prepared million, based on the conclusion that the cost approach used by by the Reporter of respondent’s first appraiser in finding a valuation of $10,660,000 Decisions for the supported the income approach used by its second appraiser in reaching convenience of the a valuation of $9,600,000, notwithstanding the fact that each appraiser reader.) used a single approach, since the comparable-sales approach would not have been reliable where the sales were part of a Department of Justice divestiture order that included the property at issue, and under the circumstances, the methodology employed by the appraisers was appropriate. Decision Under Petition for review of order of the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board, Review No. 03-00470.001-I-3.

Judgment Affirmed.

Counsel on John B. Roe, State’s Attorney, of Oregon, and Stuart L. Whitt, Joshua S. Appeal Whitt, and Catherine M. Hess, all of Whitt Law LLC, of Aurora, for petitioners.

Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (Michael A. Scodro, Solicitor General, and John P. Schmidt, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel), for respondent Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board.

Robert M. Sarnoff, Michael F. Baccash, and Jeffrey G. Hertz, all of Sarnoff & Baccash, of Chicago, for respondent Onyx Orchard Hills Landfill, Inc.

Panel JUSTICE ZENOFF delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Schostok and Birkett concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Petitioners, the Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 (school district) and the Ogle County Board of Review (BOR), appeal from the decision of respondent the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board (PTAB) reducing the 2003 tax assessment for a parcel of land owned by respondent Onyx Orchard Landfill, Inc. (Onyx). We affirm. ¶2 The property at issue (instant landfill) is a sanitary landfill consisting of 333.78 acres located in Davis Junction, Illinois. The landfill is three rectangular parcels, identified by separate parcel identification numbers; however, only one parcel, consisting of 159.54 acres, is involved in this proceeding. As of January 1, 2003, the date of valuation, the Ogle County assessment on the parcel at issue was $2,501,240. The BOR increased the assessment to $8,633,000, and Onyx appealed to the PTAB, which, after an extensive evidentiary hearing, reduced the assessment to $3,321,000. ¶3 The record shows that the instant landfill was among a number of assets located throughout the United States that were subject to a federal divestiture order, the purpose of which was to establish viable competition in the waste disposal business. On March 31,

-2- 2000, the instant landfill was transferred from BFI Waste Systems of North America, Inc., to Onyx’s parent company. Onyx owns and operates the instant landfill. ¶4 At the hearing before the PTAB, Onyx presented the testimony of two appraisers, both of whom opined as to the fair market value of the entire landfill, even though only one parcel was at issue. One appraiser calculated the market value at $10,660,000 and the other at $9,600,000. The school district, which had been allowed to intervene, presented evidence that the entire landfill had an estimated market value of $25,900,000. Below, we set forth only those facts necessary to an understanding of the issues in this appeal.

¶5 Onyx’s Appraisals ¶6 Michael J. Kelly, a real estate appraiser with 32 years’ experience appraising commercial and industrial properties, including landfills, testified that the purpose of the Onyx appraisal was to determine the unencumbered fee-simple value of the instant landfill as of January 1, 2003. Kelly testified that, given that his assignment was to value the real estate only and that the landfill was a going concern, the cost approach was the best method to calculate the market value. According to Kelly, the use of the income-capitalization approach to determine reliable market data, even assuming one could obtain valid arm’s-length royalty agreements (leases between landfill owners and operators), would entail too many adjustments to the income stream to provide a reliable value for the real estate only. Kelly also rejected the sales-comparison approach because the sale of an operating landfill is of the going concern and thus the approach necessitates significant adjustments, such as excluding elements of business value that contribute to the sale price. Kelly questioned the reliability of any figure reached using the sales-comparison method. As a result, Kelly decided to use only the cost approach. ¶7 Using this method, he determined that the value of the instant landfill was $10,660,000. He arrived at this number by first determining the value of the land as though it were vacant. By looking at recent sales of agricultural properties in Ogle County, Kelly concluded that the land’s value was $4,000 per acre. He then calculated the replacement cost for the improvements on the property, which totaled $2,618,000. He then determined that the cost of cell liners for the developed portion of the landfill was $19,150,000, to which he applied a depreciation factor because the landfill had reached 63% of its permitted capacity as of January 1, 2003. Factoring in depreciation reduced the value of the cell liners to $7,472,290. Kelly then depreciated the value of improvements other than the cell liners and came to a total of $2,036,500. When he added the value of the land, the improvements, and the cell liners, he came to a total of $10,658,790, which he rounded to $10,660,000. ¶8 Douglas Main was Onyx’s second appraiser. He specialized in waste and the waste industry, having directed for five years PriceWaterhouseCoopers’ Waste Group, a national practice providing advisory consulting services to the waste management industry. Prior to working for PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Main owned his own company called Landfill Valuation of America. Main testified that his assignment in the present case was to value the real estate only and to exclude from his valuation the going-concern or whole-business value, which combines all the assets. Main searched for any sale of the instant landfill within three

-3- years of the valuation date in order to determine its market value, defined by an arm’s-length transaction between unrelated parties without force or a specific reason to buy or sell. Onyx’s purchase of the landfill did not meet the criteria for an arm’s-length transaction, because it occurred under duress when the Department of Justice ordered the divestiture of the instant landfill as part of a portfolio of assets. Moreover, according to Main, price allocations for some of the assets in the portfolio sale had no relevance to market value because they were made for accounting purposes and were not reflective of the real estate only.

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