Excel Corp. v. Pottawattamie County Board of Review

492 N.W.2d 225, 1992 Iowa App. LEXIS 253, 1992 WL 322266
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 27, 1992
Docket91-1216
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 492 N.W.2d 225 (Excel Corp. v. Pottawattamie County Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Excel Corp. v. Pottawattamie County Board of Review, 492 N.W.2d 225, 1992 Iowa App. LEXIS 253, 1992 WL 322266 (iowactapp 1992).

Opinion

HABHAB, Judge.

FACTS

This is an appeal of two property tax assessment cases consolidated in 1990. The property involved is a beef slaughter and fabrication plant in Oakland, Iowa, which is owned by the Excel Corporation. The property consists of 243,874 square feet of buildings on 133 acres of land and includes beef processing and fabricating equipment. In 1989 and in 1990, the Potta-wattamie County Assessor assessed the property in question at $7,577,750. After the board of review denied its protests, Excel appealed to the district court requesting the 1989 assessment be reduced to $2,580,750, 1 and the 1990 assessment be reduced to $2,000,000. 2

In 1983, Excel purchased the Oakland plant as part of a three-plant acquisition from Land O’ Lakes. Excel paid $60,000,-000 for the three plants. Excel paid $43,-000,000 cash, and the balance of the purchase price was paid by assuming liabilities including Industrial Revenue Bond payments and equipment tease payments. At the time of the purchase, only the Oakland plant was operating, the other two plants were closed.

In December 1983, Excel allocated $30,-000,000 to the subject property for its income tax and accounting purposes. The $30,000,000 figure was comprised of the following amounts: $200,000 for land; $10,600,000 for building and improvements; $9,960,000 for equipment (owned); and $9,240,000 for equipment (teased). The total original acquisition cost of the equipment owned and teased was $19,200,000.

Although Excel paid for the plant in 1983, because of antitrust litigation the plant ceased to operate in mid-1984. In March of 1987, Excel was finally allowed to take title to the property as a result of the United States Supreme Court decision in Cargill, Inc. v. Monfort of Colorado, Inc., 479 U.S. 104, 107 S.Ct. 484, 93 L.Ed.2d 427 (1986). Excel then reallocated the value it placed on the three plants for its internal records by allocating $12,000,000 for the Oakland plant. Excel divided the $12,000,-000 figure into the following amounts: $100,000 for land; $5,300,000 for building and improvements; and $6,700,000 for machinery and equipment. Excel did not reopen the plant. Rather, it used some of its equipment, valued at approximately $2,000,000, in Excel’s other plants.

In March 1988, Excel settled the residual value on the tease equipment for $1,000,-040, instead of the estimated $2,000,000. *227 Then, Excel reallocated the value of the Oakland property at $5,740,000 for equipment and $5,300,000 for land and buildings, for a total value of $11,040,000.

In its financial statements, Excel valued its Oakland property at $11,667,300. It pays $400,000 per year to insure the property at $15,600,000, on a basis of 40% of its $50,000,000 replacement value. Excel’s president testified the asking sales price for the property ranged between $15,000,-000 to $30,000,000, depending upon whether a prospective buyer would be perceived to be a competitor to Excel’s other nearby plants. Including the insurance premium and property taxes of $180,000, Excel spends approximately $760,000 per year to maintain the facility.

At trial, Excel presented two experts, William S. Carlson and Lawrence Nicholson, who testified the value of the land and buildings, not including the plant’s machinery and equipment, was $1,950,000 and $1,500,000, respectively. 3 Neither of Excel’s appraisers testified to the value of the machinery and equipment. The experts took the position that the machinery was either obsolete or merely being stored in the building for use at other plants, therefore, it should not be taxed as real property. Both Nicholson and Carlson admitted there is a strong income tax incentive for a buyer to allocate as much of the purchase price as possible to machinery and equipment.

Nicholson had only appraised one other beef packing plant, and he had not appraised any pork packing plants. After giving conflicting testimony, Nicholson reluctantly admitted his firm had not done a significant amount of appraisal work in Iowa. Nicholson excluded the machinery and equipment as allocated by the purchaser from the price of his comparable sales.

Carlson used only the sales prices approach. Carlson had never appraised a beef plant except for Excel’s closed beef plant in Spencer, Iowa, which was appraised only for the purpose of gifting it to the City of Spencer. Carlson also removed the value of machinery and equipment as allocated by the buyer from the sales price of each of his comparable sales. Carlson had never seen several of his comparable sales. Carlson’s adjustment for comparable sales exceeded 20%: sale 5 involved a 57% adjustment; sale 6 involved a 69% adjustment; sale 7 involved a 45% adjustment; and sale 8 involved a 50% adjustment.

The county assessor, Robert E. Hastings, and the board of review experts, Robert L. Kocer and Robert J. Wilson, 4 testified the property’s fair market value, including the land, building, machinery, and equipment, was between $7,520,000 and $7,825,000. Their calculations placed a value on the idle machinery and equipment at 10% of the original acquisition costs.

The 10% figure is only a suggestion in the Iowa Department of Revenue Guide to Valuation. The county assessor and the board’s expert witnesses were conservative in using the 10% figure. Iowa Code section 427B.10 limits the valuation of machinery and equipment for assessment purposes to 30% of the net acquisition cost of the property. See Iowa Code § 427B.10 (1991).

Wilson used the sales comparison and cost approaches. He ultimately relied upon his sales comparison approach in which he compared the plants that were comparable sales as a whole, without extracting the machinery and equipment from the sale. Wilson personally inspected and photographed each of his comparable sales. Wilson’s appraisal report contained an equip *228 ment valuation by Clyde White, who holds patents for meat processing equipment, has constructed and operated meat processing plants, and has appraised the machinery and equipment in over 20 beef processing plants.

The district court found White to be the most credible and informed witness regarding the value of beef packing machinery and equipment. The district court further concluded Hastings was the most knowledgeable witness regarding the actual conditions of the packing plants in Pottawatta-mie County because he had actual knowledge of the conditions based upon personal inspections of the plants. The other witnesses could only estimate the condition of each comparable sale at the time of each sale. The district court ultimately found the assessor’s experts to be more credible and dismissed Excel’s tax protest. Excel appeals. We affirm.

ASSESSMENTS FROM 1982 THROUGH 1990

The assessor made the following valuations for the property in question:

1982 1983 1984 1985

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492 N.W.2d 225, 1992 Iowa App. LEXIS 253, 1992 WL 322266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excel-corp-v-pottawattamie-county-board-of-review-iowactapp-1992.