City of Columbus Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision (Slip Opinion)

2016 Ohio 8375, 72 N.E.3d 637, 148 Ohio St. 3d 700
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 2016
Docket2013-0449
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 8375 (City of Columbus Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision (Slip Opinion)) 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
City of Columbus Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision (Slip Opinion), 2016 Ohio 8375, 72 N.E.3d 637, 148 Ohio St. 3d 700 (Ohio 2016).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} This real-property-valuation case concerns the proper valuation for tax year 2009 of the 16 unsold units of a 20-unit condominium development. At the Franklin County Board of Revision (“BOR”), the property owner presented an appraisal that assigned a value of $2,900,000 to the units, far less than the *701 $5,986,400 value determined by the auditor. The BOR adopted the appraisal valuation and appellee Columbus City Schools Board of Education (“BOE”) appealed to the Board of Tax Appeals (“BTA”), which reversed the decision of the BOR and reinstated the auditor’s valuation. On appeal to this court, the property owner argues that the BOR properly relied on the owner’s appraisal. We hold that the BTA reasonably rejected the appraiser’s opinion of value, but we conclude that the BTA should have performed an independent valuation of the property. We therefore vacate the BTA’s decision and remand for further proceedings.

Factual Background

{¶ 2} Appellant, Metro Partners at NW, L.L.C. (“Metro”), contested the auditor’s 2009 valuation of 16 residential condo units for an aggregate value of $5,986,400. The 16 units were part of a 20-unit condominium building. Construction began in 2006 and was completed in 2008. Parking is on the ground floor, and the units are on the floors above. The auditor had valued the 16 units as 16 separate parcels, but the BOR reduced that value to $2,900,000 ($180,000 a unit) based on the appraisal and testimony of Donald E. Miller II, a member of the Appraisal Institute, that Metro offered at the BOR hearing.

{¶ 3} As of the tax-hen date, January 1, 2009, four units had been sold to individual owners. While the appraisal offered by the property owner notes that four condominiums were sold, it does not present details of those sales or use them in valuing the property. At the BTA hearing, the BOE presented conveyance-fee statements of those sales along with printouts from the auditor’s website showing the square footage of the units. 1 In its decision, the BTA overruled the owner’s objections to the admission of these documents. BTA No. 2010-W-3563, 2013 WL 784918, *5 (Feb. 20, 2013).

{¶ 4} Metro’s appraiser performed an income approach and a sales-comparison approach, treating the 16 unsold units as an economic unit in the nature of an apartment complex. The appraisal characterizes the building, called the “Metropolitan,” as a “fractured” or “stalled” condo development in light of the drastic adverse impact of the economic crisis on market conditions. Miller characterized the Metropolitan as “a 16-unit apartment” complex that “was a 20-unit condominium complex”: “With the change in the economy 16 units remain unsold, and rented * * He testified at the BOR hearing that the owners were operating the property as an apartment complex.

*702 {¶ 5} When questioned at that hearing whether he could look at the 16 remaining units as “one economic unit” given that four had been sold as condos, Miller stated that broken or stalled condominium complexes were known in the marketplace, and he claimed that his approach “is the way market participants look at the units.” Miller also testified that had he valued the entire building with all 20 units as an apartment complex, and then backed out the 16 unsold units, he would have arrived at the same or a similar opinion of value.

{¶ 6} Of Miller’s five sale comparables, four were apartment buildings and only one was a broken condominium complex. To.develop a prediction of market rent, the income approach relied on Miller’s survey of the four apartment complexes and one condominium development. That approach also looked at the rental income of 16 apartments rather than income from the sale of condo units. Additionally, the “highest and best use” discussion spoke of the property’s use as “market-rate multi-family,” meaning that the appraiser determined the property value by viewing the remaining, unsold condominiums as apartments to let under common ownership rather than as parcels to be separately acquired and used.

{¶ 7} Miller testified that the subject property and other complexes “will be renting units for a period of years.” The owner’s representative stated, however, when asked whether the 16 units had been “converted from condos to apartments,” that “they are still condos as they exist.”

{¶ 8} As indicated, the BOR adopted the appraisal’s valuation, and the BOE appealed. A short hearing was held before the BTA.

{¶ 9} The BTA found that Miller’s appraisal was unreliable because Miller had “valued the properties collectively as an ‘apartment complex’ ” and had “failed to consider the properties as * * * individual condominium units.” 2013 WL 784918, *5. The BTA stated that appraising the subject properties “as one economic unit, i.e., as an apartment complex,” impermissibly discounted their value. Id. at *6. Citing its earlier decision in M/I Homes of Cincinnati, L.L.C. v. Warren Cty. Bd. of Revision, BTA No. 2009-V-3796, 2010 WL 3724159 (Sept. 21, 2010), the BTA found that Miller “implicitly applied a ‘bulk discount’ because the properties are all owned by the same entity.” Id. Moreover, the BTA found that the appraisal’s comparables were not comparable because they were not condominium units. Id.

{¶ 10} Finally, the BTA faulted the appraisal, stating that the appraisal’s “failure to consider value under the cost approach” created an incomplete valuation, given that the building was completed less than 12 months before the tax-lien date. Id. at *7. The BTA noted, “Common ownership does not transform the condominium units, collectively, into an apartment complex particularly when the ‘apartment complex’ does not include all of the units in the building.” Id. The *703 BTA concluded that there was insufficient evidence to support the reductions and reinstated the auditor’s valuation. Id.

Ohio Tax Law Requires that the Condominium Units Be Valued and Assessed as Units to Be Individually Sold

{¶ 11} Metro’s second proposition of law faults the BTA for “not finding that competent, credible and probative evidence was submitted to the BOR.” The gravamen of this argument is that the appraiser’s valuation did not embody the kind of “bulk discount” that was legally improper. We disagree.

{¶ 12} It is true that in a proper case, “[t]he true value for real property may well depend on its potential use as an economic unit,” which “may include multiple parcels.” Park Ridge Co. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, 29 Ohio St.3d 12, 504 N.E.2d 1116 (1987), paragraph two of the syllabus. But the assemblage of numbered parcels that is necessary in such a case is prohibited in a case like the present.

{¶ 13} For guidance in this appeal, we look to Dublin City Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, 139 Ohio St.3d 212, 2014-Ohio-1940, 11 N.E.3d 222, ¶ 16-18. In that case, we held that valuing all the condominium units as a single economic unit because of their common ownership by the developer violated R.C.

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2016 Ohio 8375, 72 N.E.3d 637, 148 Ohio St. 3d 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-columbus-schools-bd-of-edn-v-franklin-cty-bd-of-revision-slip-ohio-2016.