County of Monroe v. Pinecrest Development Corp.

510 A.2d 1274, 98 Pa. Commw. 200, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2283
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 16, 1986
DocketAppeal, 1410 C.D. 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 510 A.2d 1274 (County of Monroe v. Pinecrest Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Monroe v. Pinecrest Development Corp., 510 A.2d 1274, 98 Pa. Commw. 200, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2283 (Pa. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Craig,

The County of Monroe and the Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County directing the county to reassess, for tax purposes, four residential properties located in the Pinecrest Lake Resort. *202 The developer/owner of those properties, Pinecrest Development Corporation, had appealed the assessment of those four properties to both the Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals and the Court of Common Pleas. We remand this case for the trial court to issue an order consistent with the statutory requirements of section 704 of The Fourth to Eighth Class County Assessment Law, 72 P.S. §5453.704, which requires that:

(b) In any appeal of an assessment the court shall make the following determinations:
(1) The current market value for the year in question.
(2) The common level ratio.

The four residential units at issue are located in Pinecrest Lake Resort vacation and residential community. That sixty-nine acre development consists of forty-seven residential units covering approximately one-half acre of the land. Most of those units are situated in clusters of four townhouses, with two end units and two middle units sharing some common walls. The balance of the sixty-nine acres are common areas, including tennis courts, lake and swimming pool, recreation building, wading pool, and a larger swimming pool not yet constructed.

Title to a townhouse unit is conveyed in a “footprint deed”, representing a conveyance of the building and the land directly underneath the building. By clauses in the deeds, the owners have exclusive easement rights in the common area and facilities. Those easement rights are easements appurtenant.

The developer had created a non-profit trust to hold title to the common area. That trust is intended to furnish and maintain common area services for the benefit of the property owners. The county assigned a separate tax number to the common area and assessed the common area at zero value.

*203 The trial court concluded that the county’s assessments conformed with constitutional uniformity requirements. The developer has not filed a cross-appeal on that issue.

In ordering the county to reassess the developer’s four property units, the trial court directed the county (1) to assess their fair market values without any consideration of the common area, (2) to calculate the value of the townhouses using a “B” building construction-type rating, and (3) to assess and tax the common area separately to the record legal owner of that area—in this case, the trust.

Although we are remanding this case to the trial court because, under Section 704 of The Fourth to Eighth Class County Assessment Law, it was required to determine the current market value of the four townhouse units rather than directing the county to reassess those values, there are two important issues for our consideration: (1) whether the common area should be taxed and assessed separately; and (2) whether the townhouse units should be assessed without consideration of the common area easement rights.

Common Area Value

Although this court agrees with the trial court that the county must tax and assess the common area separately, we note that a common area may have a market value which is substantial or nominal, so that its assessment may or may not be for a nominal figure.

Pennsylvania case law has consistently held that actual market value is that price which a purchaser, willing but not obliged to buy, would pay an owner, willing but not obliged to sell, taking into consideration all uses which the property is adapted and might in reason be applied. In Re: Johnstown Associates, 494 Pa. 433, 431 A.2d 932 (1981).

*204 Here, the property owners have exclusive rights of easement to the common area, including exclusive use of the facilities. That use exclusivity could diminish the actual market value of the common area to zero or nominal value because there may not be a buyer willing to purchase the common area subject to those restrictive easement provisions.

However, not all developments with common areas have such stringent easement provisions. In Community Association of Pocono Farms, Inc. v. Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals, (No. 947, January Term, 1979, filed August 14, 1980), a tax assessment appeal case before the same trial judge as here, the lot owners had non-exclusive easement rights to a common area golf course which also extended golf memberships to individuals not owning lots in the development. There, the collective value of those property owners’ easements did not wholly diminish the actual market value of the golf course. The judge there correctly concluded that there was more to the whole value of that common area golf course than the sum of the various easements.

Similarly, the common area in this case could have value greater than the sum of the easements if the property owners released all or part of their easement rights. The actual market value of the common area could also change if the property owners modified their easement rights to permit the title holder of the common area to extend privileges to non-property owners.

Because the assessment of the common area is not before us on appeal, we will not review the county’s determination that the common area had zero actual" market value. That value must be determined on a case-by-case basis because of the likelihood that any recreational development with a common area will have unique characteristics affecting the actual market value of the common area.

*205 Easement Value

Under Section 602(a) of The Fourth to Eighth Class County Assessment Law, 72 P.S. §5453.602(a), the county had the duty to assess the actual value of the individual townhouse properties. The section prescribing the valuation method states, in pertinent part:

In arriving at actual value the county may utilize the current market value or it may adopt a base year market value. In arriving at such value, the price at which any property may actually have been sold either in the base year or in the current taxable year shall be considered, but shall not be controlling. ... In arriving at the actual value, all three methods: namely, cost (reproduction or replacement, as applicable, less depreciation in all forms of obsolescence), comparable sales and income approaches, must be considered in conjunction with one another.

The county’s original assessment of the property’s actual market values was primarily based on recent sales data of similar units in the development. During the appeal process, the county justified its valuation determinations, through the following analysis: The county first determined the actual market value of a property based on comparable sales. Next, the county assigned a value to the land directly under the building and a value to the building itself.

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Related

Timber Trails Community Ass'n v. County of Monroe
614 A.2d 342 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1992)
County of Monroe v. Bolus
613 A.2d 178 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1992)
Monroe County Board of Assessment Appeals v. Miller
570 A.2d 1386 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
510 A.2d 1274, 98 Pa. Commw. 200, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-monroe-v-pinecrest-development-corp-pacommwct-1986.