Cincinnati School District Board of Education v. Hamilton County Board of Revision

2010 OH 4907, 127 Ohio St. 3d 63
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 2010
Docket2009-1405
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 2010 OH 4907 (Cincinnati School District Board of Education v. Hamilton County Board of Revision) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati School District Board of Education v. Hamilton County Board of Revision, 2010 OH 4907, 127 Ohio St. 3d 63 (Ohio 2010).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals (“BTA”) in a real property valuation case. The BTA affirmed the reduction ordered by the Hamilton County Board of Revision (“BOR”), which was based on the price paid by Fenco Development Company in a foreclosure sale. The Cincinnati School District Board of Education (“school board”) contends that the sale price was not indicative of value because the foreclosure sale did not qualify as an arm’s-length transaction. Additionally, the school board argues that the corporate taxpayer’s president engaged in the unauthorized practice of law during the BTA hearing and that such conduct raised a jurisdictional bar to the BTA’s decision.

{¶ 2} On the jurisdictional issue, we disagree with the school board. Once the filing of a valid complaint or notice of appeal vests jurisdiction in the board of revision or the BTA, a later instance of the unauthorized practice of law during the proceedings does not retroactively divest the tribunal of jurisdiction. Accordingly, we need not decide whether the unauthorized practice of law occurred in this case, because that fact is without jurisdictional consequence.

{¶ 3} We do agree, however, that the record shows a foreclosure sale that does not establish the property’s value pursuant to R.C. 5713.03. See R.C. 5713.04 (“The price for which such real property would sell at auction or forced sale shall not be taken as the criterion of its value”). A foreclosure sale usually does not qualify as an arm’s-length transaction because the sale occurs under the compulsion that the property be liquidated for the benefit of creditors. Moreover, the BTA’s finding in this case that the foreclosure sale was voluntary is not supported by reliable and probative evidence, and because the record does not furnish a basis on which the BTA could perform an independent valuation, we reverse the decision of the BTA and reinstate the auditor’s valuation of the property for tax purposes.

[64]*64Facts

{¶ 4} On March 30, 2007, Craig Fennel, president of Fenco Development Company, an S corporation, filed a complaint on behalf of the company against the auditor’s valuation of a 30,600-square-foot apartment building that the company had acquired as of February 27, 2006. The auditor had assigned a true value of $479,600 for tax year 2006; Fenco claimed that the property’s value was equal to the sale price of $135,000, the price Fenco paid the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) at a foreclosure auction. The BOR held a hearing on September 10, 2007, at which Fennel testified.

{¶ 5} Fennel stated that the property had been vacant for two years. Although the property had been in contract shortly before his company’s purchase, the winning bidder could not close. Fennel outbid two other auction bidders at $135,000, and at the hearing, he offered the HUD settlement statement and a document titled “Terms and Requirements of Foreclosure Sale- — -Acknowledgment by Bidder.” Those documents and the conveyance-fee statement established the sale price in the context of a foreclosure sale conducted by HUD. In addition to the basic documents, Fennel submitted photographs indicating the run-down condition of the property. He testified that he was holding the property on a speculative basis, waiting for other properties to be improved before improving his own.

{¶ 6} In contrast, the auditor submitted a “Real Estate Department Report” prepared by one of its staff appraisers, opining that “no sufficient claim or documentation has been presented to reduce the subject property to the $135,000 sought by the property owner.” Although the appraiser agreed that the condition of the property was “deplorable,” she testified at the BOR hearing that the conveyance-fee statement indicated a foreclosure sale, “which does not indicate a market sale.”

{¶ 7} The BOR characterized the evidence as showing a run-down property that had proved difficult to sell through auction, concluding that the sale price indicated the value of the property under the circumstances.

{¶ 8} The school board appealed to the BTA, which held its hearing on March 4, 2009. Fennel appeared and presented four exhibits: photographs documenting the run-down condition of the property; the auditor’s notification for tax year 2008 updating the property value to $136,350 from $135,000; and two HUD settlement statements, the first relating to an attempted sale for $506,000, and the second relating to Fenco Development Company’s purchase in February 2006.

{¶ 9} Fennel testified that the first settlement statement showed an attempted sale for $506,000, and he explained that the photographs documented the build[65]*65ing’s need for renovation before tenant occupancy: throughout the building’s 37 units, the copper had been completely stripped, every kitchen and bathroom had been destroyed, the street-side windows were boarded up, and all external doors were bolted shut. Fennel estimated that the cost of rehabilitation was at least $10,000 per unit. Finally, he testified about the blighted condition of a portion of the surrounding neighborhood.

{¶ 10} In its decision, the BTA noted that an arm’s-length sale must be voluntary and also that R.C. 5713.04 expressly prohibits viewing auction or forced-sale prices as the criterion of value for the property. But the BTA found that in a number of its own cases, the “sale prices of parcels sold at auction are nevertheless the best evidence of value when all of the elements of an arm’s-length sale are present.” Cincinnati School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Revision (July 7, 2009), BTA No. 2007-A-1196, 2009 WL 1999014, *4. Its review of the record persuaded the BTA that the “public sale was carried out voluntarily by the seller” and that the “auction, per se, contained] the elements of an arm’s-length transaction.” Id. As a result, the BTA concluded that the sale was an arm’s-length transaction “upon which the BOR properly relied in valuing the property for tax year 2006.” Id. Accordingly, the BTA affirmed the BOR’s use of the sale price of $135,000 as the value of the property for 2006. Id.

{¶ 11} The school board has appealed, and we now reverse.

Analysis

{¶ 12} The BTA is responsible for determining factual issues, but we “ ‘will not hesitate to reverse a BTA decision that is based on an incorrect legal conclusion.’ ” Satullo v. Wilkins, 111 Ohio St.3d 399, 2006-Ohio-5856, 856 N.E.2d 954, ¶ 14, quoting Gahanna-Jefferson Local School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. Zaino (2001), 93 Ohio St.3d 231, 232, 754 N.E.2d 789. The school board presents two legal issues, one concerning jurisdiction, and one on the merits.

The BTA and the BOR had jurisdiction to render their decisions in this case

{¶ 13} First, we address the school board’s contention that a jurisdictional impediment arose in the context of the BTA hearing. Jurisdictional objections typically raise an issue of law for resolution by the court. See Toledo v. Levin, 117 Ohio St.3d 373, 2008-Ohio-1119, 884 N.E.2d 31, ¶26, fn. 3; Toledo Pub. Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Revision, 124 Ohio St.3d 490, 2010-Ohio-253, 924 N.E.2d 345, ¶ 14, fn. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
2010 OH 4907, 127 Ohio St. 3d 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-school-district-board-of-education-v-hamilton-county-board-of-ohio-2010.