Forney v. Box Butte County Board of Equalization

582 N.W.2d 631, 7 Neb. Ct. App. 417, 1998 Neb. App. LEXIS 113
CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 1998
DocketNo. A-97-684
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 582 N.W.2d 631 (Forney v. Box Butte County Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forney v. Box Butte County Board of Equalization, 582 N.W.2d 631, 7 Neb. Ct. App. 417, 1998 Neb. App. LEXIS 113 (Neb. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Mues, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Bruce Forney appeals the order of the Nebraska Tax Equalization and Review Commission (TERC) affirming the decision of the Box Butte County Board of Equalization (Board) valuing his newly constructed residence located at 100 Burnham Drive in Alliance at $325,534 for tax year 1996. Forney’s primary argument on appeal is that a comparable sales analysis is inappropriate, as is a construction cost valuation. For the following reasons, we affirm TERC’s order.

BACKGROUND

Forney’s house is located in a newly developed neighborhood in Alliance. He purchased the two lots on which the house sits [419]*419in 1990 for $22,000. The house was constructed in 1994 and 1995. In tax year 1996, the county assessor valued the property at $434,666 — $26,870 for the land and $407,796 for the house itself. On June 27, 1996, Forney filed a property valuation protest, requesting that the land and building be valued in a range from $234,000 to $298,886. As a result, the Board conducted another appraisal, and the valuation was reduced to $325,534 — $26,870 for the land and $298,664 for the house.

Forney then filed an appeal to TERC, alleging that the assessed value of $325,534 was more than the actual or market value of $265,000. A TERC hearing was held on May 28,1997. Forney called two witnesses.

Jim Weinman has been a real estate broker in Alliance for 15 to 20 years. He testified that he is often called upon to do market surveys or market analysis for residential property in Alliance and that he relies primarily on the comparable sales approach when he does a market analysis. However, Weinman admitted that this approach was limited in the instant case because there had been only one other comparable property sold in Alliance in recent years and that home, which was less than 1 year old, had 1,000 square feet less space than the Forney residence and was on a single lot. He explained that by using the comparable sales approach, which compares the property being appraised with similar properties sold in the recent past, he found the sales price per square foot of this one property and by using that figure he determined the value of Forney’s 3,500-square-foot house to be $295,400.

However, Weinman explained that he was not sure that there is a market in Alliance for this price range because there are very few qualified buyers in this price range in Alliance, those who are qualified generally build their own homes, and consequently, homes generally resell for less than their replacement costs. Weinman further testified that the value of the highest priced house ever sold in Alliance was $207,000. In a letter to Forney dated July 3, 1996, Weinman opined that “it would be extremely difficult to breach the $200,000 barrier for any property in the Alliance market.”

When asked if he was a “qualified appraiser,” Weinman stated that he was not. However, he was familiar with appraisal [420]*420concepts, including replacement cost, but testified that he did not know anything about the replacement cost of this house and that in his analysis he did not consider the fact that this house sits on two lots. He also acknowledged that in Alliance, property values are increasing, sales prices are increasing, and the number of larger homes on the market is increasing.

Todd Peterson, president of First Security Bank in Mitchell, testified that banks normally base their loans on appraised value, which they consider to be market value, rather than construction or replacement cost. He stated that a bank normally loans up to 80 percent of appraised or market value, but that in this case the bank loaned even more due to the strength of Forney’s financial statement. Forney’s mortgage loan was $350,000, and Peterson testified that the cost of construction was $375,000. Peterson also testified that at least two homes in Alliance have sold for prices below their construction costs.

After the testimony of these two witnesses, Forney rested. The Board called Forney, who testified that the contract price for his home was $250,000 and that he had overrun that by approximately $100,000. Forney stated that he had a $350,000 mortgage on the property but may have utilized additional funds to construct his home. However, he felt that his house should be valued at $265,000 because there is no market to sell his home and, thus, its market value was actually much lower. He submitted an appraisal from Hitchcock Appraisal Service which by using the sales comparison approach valued the property’s market value at $265,000 to $290,000. This appraisal compared two Alliance properties, one of which sold for $150,000, or $82.60 per square foot, and the other for $207,000, or $84.39 per square foot, and one Scottsbluff property which sold for $250,000, or $90.42 per square foot, to Forney’s residence. The Alliance property which sold for $207,000 was the highest priced home ever sold in Alliance, but Hitchcock noted that this amount was well under the estimated cost to build the property, which was originally listed at $249,000. This home was built by the same builder that built Forney’s home and had many special features. However, in the appraisal Sharon Hitchcock noted that she departed from standard appraisal practices by limiting her [421]*421appraisal to the sales comparison approach because she had been requested to do so by Forney and his attorney.

Marilyn Lore, Box Butte County assessor, testified that John A. Tuttle and Company does the appraisal work for the county. The practice John Tuttle follows is to take pictures and measurements and bring them to the assessor’s office, and a Marshall-Swift pricing system is then applied to determine a property’s tax valuation. Marilyn Lore testified that Forney’s house was assessed in the same manner, using the same factors used for other houses in Alliance, when the initial $434,000 figure was arrived at. When the Board reevaluated the property due to Forney’s protest, Tuttle performed that reevaluation.

Tuttle testified that he has been a real estate appraiser for 30 years. He explained that when he has limited comparable sales for purposes of making a sales comparison analysis of value, he uses the replacement cost approach to help him determine an accurate fair market valuation. Due to the limited sales in Alliance, he used the replacement cost approach in determining the value of Forney’s property. He determined the “replacement cost new” of Forney’s house based on square footage, size, and quality of construction to be $300,584. He then reduced this figure 1 percent for physical depreciation of the property ($3,006) and 25 percent for economic/location depreciation factor ($75,146), which accounts for the fact that the home was located in Alliance, which has a limited market for houses in this price range, and considers that homes generally resell for less than the replacement cost.

Tuttle explained that the reduction for this economic/location factor was due to a 1990 study by the Board comparing replacement cost to actual sale value in Box Butte County. From this study, the Board determined that replacement cost should be uniformly reduced on all Alliance residential properties by 20 percent to arrive at an actual value for assessment purposes. The normal location depreciation factor for Alliance was 20 percent; thus, the location depreciation factor of 25 percent used on Forney’s home was 5 percent greater than that used in determining the home values of any other residents of Alliance and, according to Tuttle, was an accident in Forney’s favor.

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Related

Forney v. BOX BUTTE COUNTY BD. OF EQUAL.
582 N.W.2d 631 (Nebraska Court of Appeals, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
582 N.W.2d 631, 7 Neb. Ct. App. 417, 1998 Neb. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forney-v-box-butte-county-board-of-equalization-nebctapp-1998.