Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board

882 N.E.2d 141, 378 Ill. App. 3d 901, 317 Ill. Dec. 567, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 4
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 8, 2008
Docket2-06-0338
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 882 N.E.2d 141 (Commonwealth Edison Co. 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
Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board, 882 N.E.2d 141, 378 Ill. App. 3d 901, 317 Ill. Dec. 567, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 4 (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

JUSTICE O’MALLEY

delivered the opinion of the court:

Petitioner, Commonwealth Edison Company (ComEd), appeals the decision of respondent, the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board (PTAB), denying ComEd’s consolidated appeals from the property tax assessments for ComEd’s Aurora Township segment of the Electric Junction to Waterman issued by respondent, the Kane County Board of Review (Board of Review), for the 2003 and 2004 tax years. ComEd contends that PTAB used an improper method of valuation for the subject property. We affirm.

The subject property consists of 20 parcels of land with 17 property identification numbers. The parcels are generally narrow corridors of land averaging about 175 feet in width. Across the land are evenly spaced pairs of towers used to suspend high-voltage tension wires. Each pair of towers is set about 300 feet from the next, and the towers and power lines are placed in the approximate middle of the narrow corridor. The subject property totals just less than 107 acres. The subject property is commonly known as the Aurora Township segment of the Electric Junction to Waterman and comprises a part of ComEd’s electrical transmission network or grid.

On April 13, 2004, ComEd filed a tax appeal for the 2003 tax year, seeking a reduction in the property tax assessments for the subject property. The assessor had valued the subject property at $1,351,054. The Board of Review had adjusted the assessment to $537,327. In its tax appeal, ComEd asserted that the valuation of the subject property should have totaled $47,640, based on the historic cost of the various parcels comprising the subject property.

ComEd premised its tax appeal on the idea that the subject property is owned by a regulated utility. ComEd contended that the correct method for determining the fair market value of the subject property was its historic cost. ComEd justified its contention by reasoning that no investor would be willing to pay more for a property than the rate of return that the investor could earn would support. According to ComEd, using the historic cost to determine the fair market value of the property is appropriate because ComEd’s rate of return is limited by regulation to an amount based on the historic cost of the property, and because the property is highly specialized and is not the type of property that is bought and sold on the open market.

The Board of Review asserted that any sale of the subject property was no longer regulated following the enactment of the Electric Service Customer Choice and Rate Relief Law of 1997 (Customer Choice Law) (220 ILCS 5/16 — 101 et seq. (West 2004)) and pursuant to section 7 — 102(e) of the Public Utilities Act (Act) (220 ILCS 5/7 — 102(e) (West 2004)), because the subject property did not meet the threshold sales price of $5 million, which would require the approval of the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC). From this, the Board of Review reasoned that the deregulation of the sale of that type of property (valued at less than $5 million) invalidated the legal rationale for an historic-cost assessment to determine the fair market value of the property.

Countering the Board of Review’s position, ComEd maintained that the sale of the subject property would nevertheless continue to be regulated. ComEd reasoned that a sale of the subject property or a portion of it would disrupt the transmission and distribution network. According to ComEd, the ICC would continue to oversee any proposed sale. Because the ICC also continued to set rates based on the historic or original costs of the property and the infrastructure of the transmission and distribution network, ComEd concluded that valuing the subject property using the historic cost was still mandated.

During the pendency of the appeal of the 2003 tax year assessment, ComEd filed another appeal, this time for tax year 2004. The Board of Review had refused to further adjust the assessed valuation of the subject property, and ComEd raised substantially the same contentions as it had in its appeal of the 2003 valuation.

On September 26, 2005, the PTAB conducted a consolidated administrative hearing on both of ComEd’s pending tax appeals. Dr. Karl McDermott testified for ComEd. McDermott was employed as a vice president with National Economic Research Associates (NERA). With NERA, McDermott directed studies of energy utilities, both nationally and internationally, and had participated in numerous rate cases throughout the country, both for ComEd and for other utilities. From 1992 to 1998, before taking employment with NERA, McDermott served as a commissioner with the ICC. While a commissioner, McDermott’s duties included determining the rates that various utilities in Illinois could charge their customers. Also during his term as a commissioner, McDermott was significantly involved in the creation and implementation of the Customer Choice Law. Before becoming a commissioner with the ICC, McDermott served as president of the Center for Regulatory Studies, a nonprofit organization that evolved from the revision of the Act. McDermott testified that he was involved in the revision of the Act. Before his tenure with the Center for Regulatory Studies, McDermott was a staff employee of the ICC and a researcher for the National Regulatory Research Institute. McDermott’s academic credentials were concentrated in the field of regulatory affairs.

McDermott testified that the ICC was the agency charged with the responsibility of regulating public utilities. With the passage of the Customer Choice Law, the ICC’s role in regulating electrical utilities was not extinguished; rather, the ICC continued to determine the rates that a public utility may charge its customers and to prescribe the utility’s operating measures to ensure that the utility service remained safely and reliably delivered. McDermott testified that the Customer Choice Law did not deregulate the electric utility industry but, rather, it restructured the industry by separating the generation of electrical energy from the transmission and distribution of electrical service. The point of the Customer Choice Law was to create competition in the generating sector of the industry while leaving the transmission and distribution sector unchanged.

The Customer Choice Law caused ComEd and other electric utilities to restructure. The electric utilities spun off their generation businesses into competitive subsidiaries or sold them to third parties. ComEd remained a regulated public utility, the sole business of which was to transmit and distribute electricity. McDermott explained that it would be too inefficient and expensive to disturb the natural monopoly ComEd holds in the transmission and distribution sector, because it would make no sense to have multiple sets of competing transmission wires and rights of way. In exchange for monopoly status, and due to ICC regulation, the public is assured of safe and reliable electrical service at a reasonable price.

McDermott testified that ComEd’s primary asset, the transmission and distribution network that includes the subject property, is regulated by the ICC. The Electric Junction to Waterman, as part of the transmission network, is subject to ICC regulation.

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Bluebook (online)
882 N.E.2d 141, 378 Ill. App. 3d 901, 317 Ill. Dec. 567, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-edison-co-v-illinois-property-tax-appeal-board-illappct-2008.