In Re Appeal of Parsons

472 S.E.2d 182, 123 N.C. App. 32, 1996 N.C. App. LEXIS 584
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 2, 1996
DocketCOA95-961
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 472 S.E.2d 182 (In Re Appeal of Parsons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Appeal of Parsons, 472 S.E.2d 182, 123 N.C. App. 32, 1996 N.C. App. LEXIS 584 (N.C. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

Taxpayers Louise Parsons and Julian Price (taxpayers) are the owners of record of real property known as the Parsons-Price tract (tract). The tract is 194.77 acres of undeveloped land located on the west side of Pinecrest Road and the north side of U.S. Highway 70 West (Glenwood Avenue) across from Umstead State Park in Raleigh’s extraterritorial jurisdiction. The tract’s topography is rolling with gentle slopes. The north, west and east sites of the tract contain average to above-average residential subdivisions developed mostly in the 1970’s and 1980’s. Raleigh-Durham Airport is two miles to the northwest, but the subject property is not under flight paths and is not within the 55 decibel line. There are no unfavorable easements or encroachments on the tract. The site contains a lake approximately 28 acres in size (if floodplain areas are included). The tract is zoned R-4, allowing residential lots of 1/4 acre in size. Raleigh City water, sewer, trash collection, police and fire protection are available.

According to the appraiser of taxpayers, both the neighborhood and the tract “possess the needed attributes to support [single-family] residential development, that is ease of access, availability of utilities, *34 favorable topography, and compatibility with the surrounding properties.” The parties stipulated that the tract’s highest and best use was for residential development.

As of 1 January 1992, Wake County’s initial valuation of the tract was $4,684,000. Taxpayers timely appealed this valuation to the Wake County Board of Equalization and Review (the Board), and the Board reduced the valuation of the tract to $3,376,856. The land was assessed at $3,289,975, or $16,892 per acre; a dwelling located on the property was assessed at $86,881. Of the sixteen other parcels of undeveloped real property in Wake County which have 100 or more acres zoned R-4, the comparable parcels were valued between $2,209 and $13,969 per acre, nevertheless, the county valued the Parsons-Price tract at $16,892 per acre. Taxpayers appealed Wake County’s decision to the Property Tax Commission. They contended that the true value of the tract on 1 January 1992 was $1,900,000 with no value for improvements.

At the hearing, taxpayers presented testimony of two expert witnesses. Wake County presented testimony of one expert witness. Taxpayers’ expert witness in real estate appraising and subdivision analysis was Robert S. Martin (Martin). He testified that he is the owner and president of Martin & Associates, an appraisal company in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and that he prepared taxpayers’ appraisal report of the tract. Martin testified that he had been a certified real estate appraiser for nineteen years. He also testified that he was the author of a book entitled Subdivision Analysis which is used by real estate appraisers to value subdivision property, and the creator of a computer software program designed to aid and assist in valuing subdivision real property. Martin was accepted by the Commission without objection as an expert in “real estate appraising and subdivision analysis.”

Martin retained the engineering firms of Jerry Turner & Associates (Turner) to prepare a subdivision site plan, and Bass and Kennedy to prepare a projection of development costs for the site plan. Turner’s site plan included areas designated as a lake, green-ways and buffers.

Martin testified that he inspected the tract on three different occasions prior to valuing the property. He prepared a report using two different valuation methods — the sales comparison approach and the development approach. Martin did a sales comparison approach which used five comparable sales from August 1986 to December *35 1991 and ranging in size from 160 to 563 acres. He testified that the effective date of valuation, 1 January 1992, required sales compara-bles which occurred prior to the effective date because “if we were doing that correctly, we wouldn’t have information past that date.” Martin also testified that it was not the standard and accepted practice to use sales occurring after the effective date unless “we really have no other choice.” These parcels were valued from a low of $10,900 per acre to a high of $13,002 per acre. Martin made various adjustments to account for differences in topography, location, size, shape and availability of utilities. After making the necessary adjustments, Martin determined that the indicated value per acre using the sales comparison approach was $12,000, for a total value of. $1,998,696. Martin did not rely on this approach exclusively for his final valuation of the property and opined that the development approach was “significantly more reliable.”

Using the development approach, Martin compared proposed finished lots to be located in a subdivision on the subject property with sales of similarly sized lots in similar subdivisions. Martin testified that he had a site plan prepared for the property and an engineer prepared projected development costs. Martin took into account the topography of the property, including a lake with a dam, creek and “depressions” which were “below the level of the lake” and the creek. He also accounted for a “greenway,” which he testified was an undeveloped buffer zone required to be set aside when developing residential property such as that at issue in the instant action.

Martin determined that the highest and best use for the property was one-half acre lots. He also determined that the property would best support 186 such half-acre lots, based on the topography and location of the land. Martin testified that half-acre lots preserved the wooded land and character of the property and decreased development costs. Martin also noted that the property in the immediate vicinity was composed of half-acre to three-quarter acre lots. Wake County claims that Martin rejected developing the tract at R-4 density for aesthetic reasons.

Martin’s projected site plan was based on an average price of $45,645 for each of the 186 lots. After making the necessary deductions for the costs of development, Martin valued the subject property, using the development approach, at $1,900,000. Martin contrasted his lot density with that of Wake County, which projected 383 lots of .36 acres each. Martin noted that the maximum number of lots *36 that the property could support was 340, and testified that he did not believe Wake County’s projection was “possible.” Martin also testified that the average lot size in Wake County was .415 acre, and that sixty-six percent of all Wake County lots were larger than .4 acre. Seventy-six percent were larger than .36 acre.

Martin also testified that Wake County’s projected price per .36 acre lot, $35,000, was unreasonably high. Martin’s research showed that, even assuming that 383 lots were feasible, the statistical information demonstrated an average price per lot of no more than $32,120. Martin’s evidence further showed that Wake County failed to account for the higher development costs (including “water, sewer and streets”) which would accompany the denser development of 383 lots.

John P. Arenas (Arenas) was the second witness for taxpayers. His property evaluation report assessed the development and investment potential of the tract.

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Bluebook (online)
472 S.E.2d 182, 123 N.C. App. 32, 1996 N.C. App. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appeal-of-parsons-ncctapp-1996.