Cordish Power Plant Ltd. Partnership v. Supervisor of Assessments

45 A.3d 273, 427 Md. 1, 2012 WL 1862002, 2012 Md. LEXIS 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 23, 2012
DocketNo. 114
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 A.3d 273 (Cordish Power Plant Ltd. Partnership v. Supervisor of Assessments) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cordish Power Plant Ltd. Partnership v. Supervisor of Assessments, 45 A.3d 273, 427 Md. 1, 2012 WL 1862002, 2012 Md. LEXIS 293 (Md. 2012).

Opinions

BATTAGLIA, J.

We are called upon to determine whether a ground lease1 owned by the City of Baltimore must be considered in the [3]*3valuation of an “income producing commercial real property”2 to which it is attached (for purposes of real property tax valuation), regardless of whether the lease itself has been proven to be restrictive of the use of the property.

Cordish Power Plant Limited Partnership and Cordish Power Plant Number Two, LLC (collectively “Cordish”), Appellants, lease from the City two adjoining pieces of real estate on East Pratt Street in Baltimore City known as the Power Plant Building and the Pier IV Office Building. After the two properties were valued by the Supervisor of Assessments for Baltimore City, Appellee, together at $38,138,600 for real property tax purposes, Cordish challenged the valuations in separate cases before the Property Tax Assessment Appeals Board, which affirmed, and thereafter before the Maryland Tax Court.

In both cases before the Tax Court, Cordish introduced appraisals and testimony that valued the properties at $29,900,000 collectively, based in part on the existence of ground leases owned by the City of Baltimore; the leases, themselves, however, were not introduced into evidence during the proceedings. The Supervisor of Assessments for Baltimore City, Appellee, argued that consideration of the ground leases was contrary to Section 8-113 of the Tax-Property Article, Maryland Code (1985, 2007 RepLVol.),3 which requires, [4]*4as a general rule, that interests subject to property tax under Section 6-102 of that Article be valued as though the lessee were the owner. The Tax Court affirmed the $38,138,600 valuation for the two properties collectively,4 which was subsequently affirmed upon judicial review by the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.

Cordish appealed and, prior to any proceedings in the Court of Special Appeals, we granted certiorari, 424 Md. 628, 37 A.3d 317 (2012), to address the following question:

Did the Maryland Tax Court err in its decision to discount the testimony offered by the Appellant because of the Tax Court’s reliance on an erroneous understanding of law, offered by the Appellee in its testimony, that Md.Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 8-113 prohibited the analysis of a ground lease and its affect on a commercial valuation of a property?

We shall hold that the Tax Court did not err in disregarding the effect of the ground leases, because Cordish did not [5]*5establish that the leases in issue restricted its use of the properties.

Commercial real property is valued, for property tax purposes, at its market value. Market value may be established in a myriad of ways, oftentimes depending on the context; three traditional methods are the cost to reproduce the property, comparison of prices of recently-sold comparable properties, and the capitalization of income approach.

Under the cost to reproduce method, market value is the cost to build the same building or improvement on the land on which the property at issue is located. The Appraisal Institute, The Appraisal of Real Estate 335 (11th ed.1996). The cost to reproduce or replace the building is reduced by depreciation and then added to the value of the land itself to arrive at the total appraisal of the entire property. Id. at 340-41. Costs of reproduction or replacement of the building may include direct costs of construction, such as material and labor, and indirect costs, such as financing costs. Depreciation of a building represents deterioration, which is caused by its age and condition, as well as its “obsolescence,” which includes consideration of its functional adequacy and the market demand for the particular type of building. Id. at 341.

Under the sales comparison approach, the value of a commercial property is dependent upon the range of prices of recently-sold properties that are comparable to the property in issue. Id. at 397. Comparable properties are of the same or similar nature and, typically, geographical location as the property to be valued. Id. at 402. Once identified, comparable properties are juxtaposed with the property in issue to determine whether they differ in legal, financial and physical characteristics “that cause the prices paid for real estate to vary,” including: the real property rights conveyed in the sale, market conditions affecting the sale, location, physical qualities, and use or zoning restrictions, among others. Id. at 402-04. The prices of the comparable properties are adjusted to account for these differences, in order to insure that the sale [6]*6prices of the comparables comport with the characteristics and conditions of the property at issue. Id. at 403-04.

Under the capitalization of income approach, income earned from a property is most indicative of its value. Id. at 449. Essentially, the value of a property is based upon what income the property is expected to generate on an annual basis, reduced by its operating expenses to yield its net operating income.5 Id. at 454, 515.

Once the net operating income is determined, comparable properties are consulted with respect to their market value as well as their net operating income during the relevant time in issue, in order to determine the capitalization rate or the rate that reflects the anticipated benefits and risk if the property were acquired. Id. at 459, 461, 514-15. In lieu of established capitalization rates for other properties, a property valuation based on the income approach may depend upon an assumed capitalization rate for the property in issue reliant upon market surveys of investor expectations.6 Id. at 514 n. 2. The capitalization rate may be upwardly adjusted for the risk of investing in the property in issue, or the likelihood that the property will not produce its anticipated income, as the uncertainty of future income loss is considered to detract from a property’s market value. Id. at 514-515; see also id. at 459 (“To a real estate investor, risk is the chance of incurring a financial loss and the uncertainty of realizing projected future benefits.”). Risk is evidenced by “the credit rating of the property’s tenants [and] the stability of the property’s income [7]*7stream.” Id. at 514. Once the capitalization rate is calculated, it is then applied to the property at issue, by dividing it into the net operating income to derive value. Id. The higher the capitalization rate, the lower the value. Alfred A. Ring, The Valuation of Real Estate 232 (2d ed.1970).

This last method, the income approach, is the preferred analysis in valuing an income producing commercial real property under Section 8-105(a)(l) of the Tax-Property Article:

(a) Valuation. — (1) Except for land that is actively devoted to farm or agricultural use, the supervisor:
(i) may value income producing real property by using the capitalization of income method or any other appropriate method of valuing the real property; and
(ii) shall consider an income method in valuing income producing commercial real property.

That is what the parties used here.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.3d 273, 427 Md. 1, 2012 WL 1862002, 2012 Md. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordish-power-plant-ltd-partnership-v-supervisor-of-assessments-md-2012.