In re: A.J. Kivitz v. Board of Assessment Appeals of Blair County

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 9, 2018
Docket1715 C.D. 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re: A.J. Kivitz v. Board of Assessment Appeals of Blair County (In re: A.J. Kivitz v. Board of Assessment Appeals of Blair County) 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
In re: A.J. Kivitz v. Board of Assessment Appeals of Blair County, (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

In re: Alan J. Kivitz, Vicki Sommer, : Gary Raymond and Donna Raymond, : t/d/b/a Vidoro Properties, : Appellants : No. 1715 C.D. 2017 : Argued: October 16, 2018 v. : : Board of Assessment Appeals of : Blair County :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE SIMPSON FILED: November 9, 2018

In this tax assessment appeal with unusual procedures, Alan J. Kivitz, Vicki Sommer Kivitz, Gary Raymond and Donna Raymond, t/d/b/a Vidoro Properties (collectively, Taxpayers) seek review of an October 2017 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County (trial court) regarding their real estate tax assessment appeal of four parcels located in a highway shopping area in Blair County (County). The trial court determined the assessed market values of the properties. Taxpayers only appeal with respect to the parcel known as the Summit Property, and specifically with respect to the square footage of a building located on it. Asserting the County failed to present sufficient evidence supporting its mid-appeal reassessment of the building, which occurred during the trial court proceeding, Taxpayers seek a remand for a determination of the fair market value of that parcel based on the square footage of the building as calculated by their expert. Upon review, we vacate and remand. I. Background Taxpayers own Vidoro Properties, a business which owns four contiguous parcels of land with mixed commercial use improvements including a large building (Summit Property) housing a health and fitness center. The building, located in a highway shopping area, also includes an office leased to HealthSouth. The other parcels include an indoor pool and two one-acre parking lots. The parcels are located in Allegheny Township (Township) in the Hollidaysburg Area School District (School District).

In 2016, the County’s Assessment Office undertook a county-wide reassessment, its first since 1958. For the 2017 tax year, the County assessed the market values of the four parcels as follows: (1) Summit Property (Tax Parcel #2- 14.1.22) - $5,377,900; (2) Swimming Pool Property (Tax Parcel #2-14.1.21) - $1,676,200; (3) Summit Parking Area- 1.00 Acre (Tax Parcel #2-14.1.12) - $131,700; and (4) Summit Parking Area- 1.05 Acre (Tax Parcel #2-14.1.15) - $110,600.

Taxpayers appealed to the Board and challenged all four assessments. In October 2016, the Board issued a “no change” disposition on each assessment. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 7a.

Taxpayers appealed to the trial court. They alleged the County’s assessments were improper and invalid because they were based on an erroneous interpretation of fair market value. Taxpayers further alleged the assessments

2 lacked uniformity, were discriminatory and substantially higher than assessments of comparable properties in the taxing district.

In support of their position, Taxpayers obtained an appraisal from John K. Cowan (Taxpayers’ Appraiser), a certified general appraiser. He appraised the Summit Property. Taxpayers’ Appraiser was the only expert witness appearing in this appeal.

At the April 2017 de novo hearing, Taxpayers’ Appraiser testified that he valued the Summit Property at $2,500,000. Tr. Ct. Hr’g, Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 4/21/17, at 48; R.R. at 66a. Although Taxpayers used the property for a health and fitness club, Appraiser testified its highest and best use would be something other than a health club. Id. Taxpayers’ Appraiser did not believe the cost approach would be appropriate for valuation. N.T. at 48-49; R.R. at 66a-67a.

Taxpayers’ Appraiser further testified that the income approach would not make sense because although the property leases space to several businesses, overall the Summit Property loses approximately $20,000 per year. N.T. at 25-26; R.R. at 43a-44a. Logically, an investor would not buy a building that loses $20,000 per year. In short, the Summit Property is not sellable as an income property. N.T. at 26, 49; R.R. at 44a, 67a.

Therefore, Taxpayers’ Appraiser relied on the comparable sales approach (value per square foot, determined by comparable sales, multiplied by the useable square feet). See N.T. at 50; R.R. at 68a. Appraiser measured the building

3 on the Summit Property and determined it to be 57,590 square feet in size, which was significantly less than the square footage the County used in its assessment. N.T. at 51; R.R. at 69a. A major reason for the discrepancy was the condition of the second floor, which was not a full floor; rather, it was a mezzanine. N.T. at 56; R.R. at 74a. Taxpayers’ Appraiser did not include the area for the mezzanine “because of the nature of the mezzanine.” Id. He explained, “A lot of it – it overlooks these basketball courts and the racquetball courts and I did not plug the mezzanine in as square footage. It’s observation deck and hallways.” Id. This “low utility” testimony was in conjunction with Appraiser’s unrebutted testimony that the highest and best use for the building would be for something other than a health club. See N.T. at 48; R.R. at 66a. Also, this testimony is the sole description of the mezzanine in the record. Whether, and to what extent, the square footage of the mezzanine should be used in calculating fair market value based on the comparative sales approach is important to the resolution of the case.

As to comparative sales, the first comparison involved a fitness center that sold for $67.24 per square foot. N.T. at 51; R.R. at 69a. The second comparison involved an abandoned National Guard armory that sold for $53.13 per square foot. N.T. at 51-52; R.R. at 69a-70a. The third sales comparison involved a former auto dealership that sold for $47.24 per square foot. N.T. at 52; R.R. at 70a.

Making certain adjustments, Taxpayers’ Appraiser arrived at a figure of $41 to $45 per square foot. Id. Accordingly, he valued the Summit Property

4 building at $43 per square foot, multiplied by 57,590 square feet, which yielded a total market value of approximately $2,500,000. N.T. at 52-53; R.R. at 70a-71a.

With respect to the square footage in the building, the County based its initial assessment on a measurement of 88,000 square feet. At the April 2017 hearing, counsel for the County explained that the assessor could not enter the building for assessment purposes and mistakenly believed the building had a full second floor. See N.T. at 79-80; R.R. at 97a-98a. The County indicated it encountered similar “mezzanine issues” on prior occasions and that the County’s chief assessor committed to sending someone out to do a re-measurement of the building. N.T. at 80; R.R. at 97a-98a.

On May 23, 2017, the trial court entered an order noting a hearing scheduled for May 31, 2017. Tr. Ct. Order, 5/23/17; R.R. at 14a-15a. The court directed all counsel to submit any legal memoranda prior to the May 31 hearing. Id. The order further specified (with emphasis by underline added):

Any of the parties shall also submit any new measurement of the buildings within the (Summit) complex. There was a major disparity between each party’s measurement and this was reviewed by the County of Blair. The Court would DIRECT that the County of Blair, based on any finding of square footage, also formulate a new assessment based on that finding.

Id. In a letter to the trial court dated May 25, 2017, counsel for the County stated (with emphasis added):

As you will recall, at the tax assessment appeal trial for the Summit [P]roperty, there was a discrepancy between the square footage of the building as reported by

5 the Assessment Office and by [Taxpayers’ Appraiser]. In response to that discrepancy, the County’s chief assessor re-measured the building.

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Bluebook (online)
In re: A.J. Kivitz v. Board of Assessment Appeals of Blair County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-aj-kivitz-v-board-of-assessment-appeals-of-blair-county-pacommwct-2018.