F & M Schaeffer Brewing Co. v. Lehigh County Board of Appeals

575 A.2d 649, 133 Pa. Commw. 197, 1990 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 293
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 17, 1990
DocketNos. 588-591 C.D. 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 575 A.2d 649 (F & M Schaeffer Brewing Co. v. Lehigh County Board of Appeals) 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
F & M Schaeffer Brewing Co. v. Lehigh County Board of Appeals, 575 A.2d 649, 133 Pa. Commw. 197, 1990 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 293 (Pa. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinions

OPINION

BARRY, Senior Judge.

F & M Schaeffer Brewing Co./Stroh Brewing Co. (taxpayer-appellant), appeals an order of President Judge Backenstoe of the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County which denied the taxpayer’s appeal, determined the fair market value of the taxpayer’s brewery property for the years of 1984-1988 as $34 million, and established the property’s assessed value as follows: $8,432,000 for 1984; $8,058,000 for 1985; $7,548,000 for 1986; $6,936,000 for 1987; and $6,120,000 for 1988.

We must decide whether the trial court erred by (1) applying a replacement cost approach to determine the [200]*200value of the taxpayer’s property; and (2) accepting the appraisal testimony provided by Lehigh County, which the taxpayer contends was based on inadmissible hearsay.

Judge Backenstoe’s opinion of March 1, 1989 at P. 2, ably described the property in question:

The subject property involved is a 791,382 square foot facility situated on 62.243 acres of land located on the south side of U.S. Route 22 and on the west side of Pennsylvania Route 100 in Upper Macungie Township. In 1971 a brewery was built on the land by the F & M Schaeffer Brewing Co. and subsequently in 1981, the property was acquired by the Stroh Brewing Co. The bulk of the building area is contained in one large, irregularly shaped manufacturing office and warehouse plant. In addition there are numerous small special purpose buildings located on the southwest side of the main plant.
The plant was built by F & M Schaeffer specifically to produce beer. At the northwest end of the main plant are the tall six story brew houses. In 1982 a new brew house was added to accommodate the special fire brewing process for the production of Stroh’s beer. Adjacent to the brew houses are the large silos which contain the grains used in the production of beer. Behind the silos is an interior rail shed which allows grains to be pumped from railroad cars into the silo storage area. Once the beer is brewed it is pumped into fermenter cellars adjacent to the rail shed and eventually it is stored in large storage cellars.
In the middle of the building is a 2 story office section. The office building contains the Stroh House which is a room for entertaining visitors. From the office section there is a visitor’s walkway for tours of the plant.
The rear portion of the plant is used for packaging and warehousing. Within this area there are elaborate packaging systems for bottling and canning the various beer products. Within the large warehouse there are three sections for keg washing, full keg storage and empty keg storage. In 1976 an addition was made to the warehouse [201]*201to increase storage capacity. Outside the main building are various small support buildings which include additional warehouses, a garage, a waste recovery building, a waste pre-treatment facility, a water recirculation building and a security building. The subject facility, with its attendant equipment, is capable of producing 3,500,000 barrels of beer annually.

After the county1 assessed the property at a fair market value of $34 million for the years of 1984-1988, the taxpayer sought de novo review by the trial court. The parties stipulated as to the common level ratios for the years in question.2 The taxpayer challenged the county’s valuation of the property. Experts for the parties used both the market approach and the cost approach to determine the property’s fair market value. After receiving all the evidence, the trial court accepted the county expert’s fair market value determination of $34 million, which was based on a replacement cost approach, rather than a reproduction cost approach favored by the taxpayer’s experts. This appeal followed.3

The taxpayer first contends that the trial court erred in applying a replacement cost approach to determine the property’s value.

For tax assessment purposes in third class counties, Section 7(d) of the Third Class County Assessment Act (Act), Act of June 26, 1931, P.L. 1379, as amended, 72 P.S. § 5348(d), states that:

In arriving at the actual value, all three methods, namely, cost (reproduction or replacement, as application, less depreciation and all forms of obsolescence), comparable [202]*202sales and income approaches, must be considered in conjunction with one another.

Thus, Section 7(d) of the Act expressly approves of a cost approach as a method of determining a property’s value. See Reichard-Coulston, Inc. v. Revenue Appeals Board of Northampton County, 102 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 227, 517 A.2d 1372 (1986), appeal denied, 517 Pa. 611, 536 A.2d 1335 (1987).

After considering all of the approaches defined in Section 7(d) of the Act, the trial court accepted the county’s application of a replacement cost approach. The court concluded that, because of the property’s unique functional and structural characteristics, the property must be classified as a “special purpose property,”4 and thus that a replacement cost approach provided the best method to estimate the property’s fair market value. The amici curiae, Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry and Institute of Property Taxation advance strong arguments against treating the property as a special purpose one. The amici submit that the “special purpose property” doctrine should have limited application and recommend the adoption of the rule, apparently judge-made, in the New York case of Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., Inc. v. Kiernan, 42 N.Y.2d 236, 397 N.Y.S.2d 718 366 N.E.2d 808 (1977). A remand under this rule is recommended to supply a clear factual record and to permit a finding that the present property cannot be converted to other uses without the expenditure of unreasonably substantial sums of money. Since the legislature in approving the use of the cost approach method did not adopt such a restriction, we refuse [203]*203to conclude that the trial judge abused his discretion in not doing so.

In Reichard-Coulston, this Court stated the cost approaches for property valuation as follows: (1) estimating the value of the land, assuming that the land is vacant and available for its highest and best use; (2) estimating the reproduction cost or cost new of the facility; (3) subtracting from the latter amount the facility’s depreciation; and (4) adding to this depreciated balance the estimated value of the land.

The taxpayer contends that the “highest and best use” 5 standard, as outlined in Reichard-Coulston, is actually a “value-in-use method.6 Also, the taxpayer contends that the property’s highest and best use is for a general manufacturing and warehouse facility.

We note that, before the legislature approved the cost approach, only a property’s value-in-exchange was relevant in tax assessment cases. Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel. However, a cost approach now has probative value in fixing property value for tax assessment purposes. Reichard-Coulston.

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Related

F & M Schaeffer Brewing Co. v. Lehigh County Board of Appeals
610 A.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
575 A.2d 649, 133 Pa. Commw. 197, 1990 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-m-schaeffer-brewing-co-v-lehigh-county-board-of-appeals-pacommwct-1990.