Drury Chesterfield, Inc. v. Muehlheausler

347 S.W.3d 107, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1058, 2011 WL 3585468
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 16, 2011
DocketED 93686
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 347 S.W.3d 107 (Drury Chesterfield, Inc. v. Muehlheausler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drury Chesterfield, Inc. v. Muehlheausler, 347 S.W.3d 107, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1058, 2011 WL 3585468 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

DANIEL G. PELIKAN, Special Judge.

Introduction

Respondent Drury Chesterfield, Inc. (Drury) challenged the assessment of its real property and improvements in St. Louis County for the 2006 tax year. The State Tax Commission (Commission) issued an order on October 15, 2008, sustaining its hearing officer’s decision and affirming the St. Louis County Board of Equalization’s decision, finding the appraised valuation for the two parcels of property owned by Drury, as determined by the county assessor for the tax year 2006, was $23,175,400. Drury filed a timely petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County. The circuit court reversed the Commission’s order, finding the Commission’s order was unauthorized by law in considering the total development cost in concluding that the cost approach to valuation was the most appropriate appraisal method for valuing the subject property. The circuit court ordered the Commission to set aside the 2006 tax year assessment and find that the true value in money of Drury’s real property as of January 1, 2006, is $13,900,000. St. Louis County Assessor, Philip Muehl-heausler (Assessor) filed his timely notice of appeal to this Court. We review the decision of the Commission, rather than that of the circuit court, pursuant to Sections 138.432,138.470, and 536.100 through 536.140, RSMo. Finding that the Commission did not abuse its discretion in sustaining the hearing officer’s decision of July 18, 2008, we reverse the trial court’s judgment.

Background,

On January 1, 2006, Drury owned two parcels of property located at 333 and 355 Chesterfield Center East in Chesterfield, St. Louis County (the Subject Property). Drury purchased the parcels in May 2004 for $5,106,431. Drury was in the process of constructing and building the. Drury Plaza Hotel and its adjacent restaurant as *109 of January 1, 2006, spending more than $25,000,000 constructing the improvements. The smaller parcel contained 1.05 acres improved with a one-story, 4400-square-foot office building being temporarily utilized as construction offices for the hotel construction project. The larger parcel contained 3.8 acres improved with a ten-story hotel structure containing 164,-054 gross square feet, which was approximately 85 percent constructed as of January 1, 2006. Both parties agreed that the highest and best use of the property was the current use, hotel development.

Assessor valued the real property of the Subject Property as of January 1, 2006, at $23,175,400. Drury’s appraiser valued the Subject Property at $13,550,000. Drury appealed to the St. Louis County Board of Equalization, which sustained Assessor’s value. Drury then appealed to the Missouri State Tax Commission.

A hearing was conducted before a hearing officer of the Commission. Drury presented testimony from Gary P. Andreas (Andreas), a principal of real estate appraisal firm H & H Financial Group, Inc., which Drury retained to appraise the Subject Property and set forth findings and opinions in an appraisal report. Andreas indicated that the Subject Property’s market value as of January 1, 2006, was $13,900,00o. 1 He opined that the income capitalization approach to valuation was the best method to use for the Subject Property. 2 Andreas testified that the hotel on the Subject Property was not yet operational on January 1, 2006. He had performed a cost and sales comparison approach, as well as an income approach to value the Subject Property, but relied on the income approach.

Andreas testified that the income approach was “completely hypothetical” because the Subject Property was not producing income as of January 1, 2006. Andreas said that the developer provided costs for construction, which did not include the cost of land acquisition, and also provided separately the costs for land acquisition. He reviewed comparable land sales that were west of the Subject Property within a couple of miles and located in the Chesterfield Valley flood plain. Andreas chose to use reproduction costs rather than replacement costs because the Subject Property was newly constructed. He did not consider the actual cost of the land because the land had been acquired in 2001, and he said several market forces came into place prior to the date of assessment. Drury’s appraisal report stated that the income capitalization approach analyzes the property’s capacity to generate income and converts this capacity into an indication of market value. Andreas noted that the income approach is suitable for properties that have “obvious earning power and investment appeal” but is inappropriate for properties that have “no readily discernible income potential.” Drury’s appraisal report stated that the income approach is “generally the preferred technique for ap *110 praising income-producing properties because it most closely reflects the investment rationale and strategies of typical buyers.”

Referring to the cost approach, Andreas stated that the “concluded hypothetical value via the Cost Approach was $32 million; however this value represents the hypothetical value of the subject property as of the date of the completion prior to the adjustment for the impact of non-real estate components.” In his appraisal report, Andreas explained that the cost approach estimated the cost to replace the improvements, and deducted any depreciation to combine that result with the estimated value of the underlying land. “The [cost] approach is applicable when each component is independently measurable and when the sum of all components is believed to reflect market value. The approach is not applicable to unimproved land or obsolete improvements,” the report states. Andreas did not mention any errors in the County’s description of the Subject Property.

Andreas summarized his written appraisal as follows:

The appraisal process includes the estimation of the hypothetical market value of the subject as of the date of appraisal then adjusting the market value to reflect the exclusion of the contribution to value of non-real estate components such as the value of the franchise, the value of the assembled labor force, the value of any related reservation system and the costs to be incurred to complete the construction of the physical components of the hotel.

The Assessor presented testimony from one of his employees, Boris Frumson (Frumson), who testified that the County utilized a computer generated cost approach methodology to support Assessor’s valuation of $23,175,400. 3 Frumson said that the Marshall Valuation Service was the source of the market data that the Integrated Assessment System used to calculate a cost approach. The appraisal considered the base replacement cost, and then a “modifier” of a higher grade hotel of “B,” giving the Subject Property a replacement cost new of $108.70 per square foot. Frumson explained that the total replacement cost new, less depreciation was $18,308,670. The County’s income approach to value concluded $10,223,700, which was not based on an operating hotel and was for a partial year. Frumson’s opinion was that the true value in money for the Subject Property as of January 1, 2006, was $22,400,400 and $775,000 for the two parcels separately, for a total of $23,175,400.

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347 S.W.3d 107, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1058, 2011 WL 3585468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drury-chesterfield-inc-v-muehlheausler-moctapp-2011.