Burton Young & Woodfield Corporate Center SPE, LLC v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board

2025 IL App (1st) 221698-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 23, 2025
Docket1-22-1698
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (1st) 221698-U (Burton Young & Woodfield Corporate Center SPE, LLC v. Illinois 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
Burton Young & Woodfield Corporate Center SPE, LLC v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board, 2025 IL App (1st) 221698-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL App (1st) 221698-U No. 1-22-1698

FIRST DIVISION June 23, 2025

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ____________________________________________________________________________

BURTON YOUNG & WOODFIELD ) Petition for Review of Order of the CORPORATE CENTER SPE, LLC, ) Illinois Property Tax Appeal ) Board Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) ILLINOIS PROPERTY TAX APPEAL BOARD; ) Property Tax Appeal Board COOK COUNTY BOARD OF REVIEW; ) Docket No. 16-40766.001-C-3 PALATINE TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL ) DISTRICT #211; and SCHAUMBURG ) CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL DISTRICT #54, ) ) Respondents-Appellees. )

____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

Held: The decision of the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board is affirmed because its findings pertaining to the market value of the subject property were not against the manifest weight of the evidence.

¶1 Petitioner Burton Young & Woodfield Corporate Center SPE, LLC (petitioner), the owner

of certain commercial real estate (the subject property), appeals from a decision of the Illinois 1-22-1698

Property Tax Appeal Board (PTAB) that found the fair market value of the subject property for

the tax year 2016 was $37 million. In doing so, the PTAB credited the expert appraisal submitted

by the two intervenors herein, Palatine Township High School District #211 and Schaumburg

Consolidated School District #54. Petitioner argues that the fair market value of the subject

property was lower, and that the PTAB’s findings were contrary to the manifest weight of the

evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 The subject property is located in Schaumburg and is commonly known as Woodfield

Corporate Center. It includes two office buildings that are 13 and 14 stories tall, a four-story

parking deck, and surface parking for 2,092 cars. It has a net rentable building area of 521,362

square feet and a gross building area of 547,137 square feet.

¶4 In 2016, the subject property was purchased by Woodfield Corporate Center SPE, LLC for

$32 million. Under the Cook County Real Property Assessment Classification, the subject property

is a class 5 property. Accordingly, it is assessed at 25% of the fair market value.

¶5 Initial Assessment by Cook County Board of Review

¶6 For the 2016 tax year, the County Assessor valued the subject property at $10,501,477,

consisting of a $1,861,920 valuation for land and a $8,639,557 valuation for improvements. The

Cook County Board of Review (Board of Review) reduced the assessment to $9,926,880. The

Board of Review’s assessment corresponds to a fair market value of $39,707,520.

¶7 Petitioner’s Appeal to the PTAB

¶8 Petitioner timely filed an appeal of the 2016 assessment with the PTAB. Petitioner

requested a reduction of the total assessment to $6,500,000, corresponding to a fair market value

of $26 million. In support, petitioner submitted an appraisal by Frank C. Urban & Co. (the “Urban

-2- 1-22-1698

appraisal”) that appraised the subject property as having a fee simple market value of $26 million

as of January 1, 2016.

¶9 The Board of Review did not present any appraisals to PTAB, but it submitted its “Board

of Review Notes on Appeal” as support for its assessment of fair market value of $39,707,520.

The Board of Review relied on six comparable sales of office buildings, which ranged in size from

268,000 to 351,425 square feet. The sale price for those six properties ranged from $30,500,000

to $62,000,000 and from $103.72 to $218.10 per square foot.

¶ 10 In April 2019, Palatine Township High School District # 211 and Schaumburg Community

Consolidated School District #54 (together, the intervenors) intervened in the petitioner’s appeal

to the PTAB. The intervenors, who were represented by the same counsel, submitted an appraisal

by Eric Dost of the Dost Valuation Group (Dost appraisal) that concluded the market value of the

subject property was $37,000,000 as of January 1, 2016.

¶ 11 In rebuttal, petitioner submitted an appraisal review by John VanStanten of Stout Risius

Ross LLC (VanStanten report) that was highly critical of the Dost appraisal. According to

VanStanten, there were “several critical errors committed” in the Dost report, which relied on

“inappropriate market data and assumptions.”

¶ 12 August 2021 PTAB Hearing

¶ 13 Petitioner separately appealed the 2017 assessment for the subject property. At the parties’

request, the PTAB consolidated petitioner’s appeals for the 2016 and 2017 tax year assessments.

The Administrative Law Judge agreed to hold a single hearing addressing the appeals for both tax

years, although it would issue separate decisions for each year. As the instant appeal concerns only

-3- 1-22-1698

the 2016 tax year assessment, this order refers only to the relevant hearing testimony for that year’s

assessment. 1

¶ 14 Petitioner’s Expert Frank Urban

¶ 15 Petitioner elicited testimony from Frank Urban as an expert in real estate evaluation for tax

purposes. During his testimony, Urban referred to his appraisal that evaluated the property as

having a $26 million fair market value as of January 1, 2016.

¶ 16 Urban testified that the purpose of his appraisal was to assess the market value of the fee

simple interest for ad valorem assessment purposes. He noted that the subject property sold in

August 2016 for $32 million. He said this was indicative “of the lease fee property rights that

transferred in the transaction.”

¶ 17 Urban testified to why he believed the property was worth less than the sale price. Based

on his conversations with the owners, he believed were “three primary areas where the sale should

[be] adjusted as an indicator of value.” First, he suggested the sale price value was too high, citing

concerns as to whether AC Nielsen, a tenant who occupied roughly 35 percent of the building,

would be staying past its current lease. Urban testified there were reports that AC Nielsen planned

to relocate, although there were “40 months remaining on their lease term” at the time of the sale.

Urban testified that the buyers in 2016 “did not believe definitively that [AC] Nielsen was

vacating” and hoped for a lease extension.

¶ 18 Urban testified that AC Nielsen was paying $20.50 per square foot in rent, whereas other

tenants paid significantly less, about “9 ½ to $12 to $13 a square foot.” Thus, the “buyers knew

1 Petitioner has filed a separate appeal in this court (no. 1-22-1922) from the separate PTAB decision concerning the 2017 tax year assessment for the subject property. -4- 1-22-1698

they were going to be getting this above-market income stream” under the AC Nielsen lease for

40 months after the sale.

¶ 19 Urban also opined that the 2016 sale price was higher than its true market value because

the buyer saved “roughly $4 million” in leasing commissions and tenant improvement allowances

that were paid by the seller in 2015. Urban stated: “Those items do not contribute to the market

value of the real estate in the fee simple title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 IL App (1st) 221698-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-young-woodfield-corporate-center-spe-llc-v-illinois-property-tax-illappct-2025.