In re the Equalization Appeal of Johnson County Appraiser/Privitera Realty Holdings

283 P.3d 823, 47 Kan. App. 2d 1074, 2012 WL 3055854, 2012 Kan. App. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 27, 2012
DocketNo. 105,769
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 283 P.3d 823 (In re the Equalization Appeal of Johnson County Appraiser/Privitera Realty Holdings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Equalization Appeal of Johnson County Appraiser/Privitera Realty Holdings, 283 P.3d 823, 47 Kan. App. 2d 1074, 2012 WL 3055854, 2012 Kan. App. LEXIS 76 (kanctapp 2012).

Opinion

Standridge, J.:

Privitera Realty Holdings (Privitera) appeals the Kansas Court of Tax Appeals’ (COTA) decision reinstating the original value thát the Johnson County Appraiser (County) assigned to property that Privitera owns in Overland Park, Kansas, for the tax year 2008. For the reasons stated below, we find substantial evidence supports COTA’s decision.

Facts

The property at issue is a fast-food restaurant built in 1989 and located in front of a community shopping center at the intersection of 119th Street and Metcalf Avenue in Overland Park, a heavy retail intersection. Notably, the restaurant houses three fast-food chains under one roof — Kentucky Fried Chicken, Taco Bell, and Pizza Hut. This “KenTacoHut” is the only one of its kind in Johnson County.

For 2008, the County assigned a value of $1,774,450 to the KenTacoHut for ad valorem tax purposes. Privitera appealed the tax assessment to the small claims and expedited hearings division of COTA. The hearing officer presiding over the matter concluded [1077]*1077that Privitera’s recommended value of $1,393,200 better reflected the fair market value of the KenTacoHut compared to the value assessed by the County. Accordingly, the hearing officer reduced the assessment to $1,393,200.

The County appealed the decision of the hearing officer to the regular division of COTA. At the evidentiary hearing before COTA, the County presented the testimony of Linda Clark, a commercial valuation specialist with the County Appraisers office. Clark testified that she had taken numerous courses over the years from the International Association of Assessing Officers, the Appraisal Institute, and the Property Valuation Division (PVD) of the Kansas Department of Revenue. She also stated that she currently held a certified assessment evaluator designation from the International Association of Assessing Officers, a general certified appraisal certificate from the Kansas Real Estate Appraisal Board, that she was a registered mass appraiser with the PVD, and that she was current in her continuing education classes. Based on this education and training, COTA determined Clark was qualified to give an opinion as to the value of the KenTacoHut.

Clark noted that when a taxpayer appeals the assessment of his or her property, she will review the previous work done in making the initial assessment, request further information, and then make a value determination. Clark testified that the County’s original assessment of $1,774,450 was calculated using a cost approach to value within a computer assisted mass appraisal (CAMA) system approved by the PVD director of the Kansas Department of Revenue. The specific cost approach system used in the County’s CAMA system was the Marshall & Swift cost valuation system, a nationally known cost system and one of the most widely used by appraisers. Clark said that the cost parameters used in the Marshall & Swift system to value the KenTacoHut were specific for 2008.

Clark reported that she personally inspected the KenTacoHut on February 11, 2010. She noted the KenTacoHut was located on a “pad site” and that the building, considering its age (built in 1989), was in good condition and well maintained. When she inspected tire property, she determined the County incorrectly had listed the total building area of the KenTacoHut as 6,124 square [1078]*1078feet. Instead, the square footage of the restaurant was 6,222. Because the cost approach was used in 2008 to value the KenTacoHut, the increase in square footage resulted in an increase to the estimated value of the restaurant from $1,774,450 to $1,778,660. Clark specifically stated that the increase in the estimated value was solely the result of the discovery of the additional 98 square feet in 2010. She denied doing an entirely new cost approach to estimate the value of the KenTacoHut.

For purposes of the hearing, Clark prepared a 75-page document (introduced into evidence and designated as Exhibit 1), which included the report from the CAMA system assigning a $1,778,600 value to the KenTacoHut for the 2008 tax year. Specifically, the report indicated that it would cost $1,136,250 to replace the KenTacoHut building. A 10 percent “entrepreneurial profit” was added to this cost, resulting in a total replacement cost of $1,249,880. Clark stated that, based on her training and experience, adding a 10 percent entrepreneurial profit to the replacement cost was appropriate.

Once the replacement cost is calculated, Clark said that the age, physical condition, and functional utility of a building are considered to determine the applicable percentage of depreciation for the building. Here, the Marshall & Swift system — based on the building’s quality, type, and age — applied a 38 percent decrease to the replacement cost, resulting in avalué of $774,920. Next, Clark noted that no market adjustment (an adjustment that affects a particular property but cannot be explained in the land value or elsewhere, e.g., “functional obsolescence”) or economic adjustment (an external economic force that is having a positive or negative impact on the property) was made to the value of the KenTacoHut. Clark believed the KenTacoHut did not suffer from functional obsolescence because she could see no justification for changing the use of the property. The property appeared to be viable in its current, operational format. Based on her inspection of the property, she also did not believe an economic adjustment was warranted.

Clark then explained that she also considered the replacement cost for 25,430 square feet of asphalt and 2,220 square feet of concrete surrounding the KenTacoHut in determining the prop[1079]*1079erty’s value using the cost approach. Clark accounted for the replacement value of these items (a total of $33,160 after depreciation) and added this amount to the $774,920. Finally, Clark considered the 60,662 square feet of land upon which the KenTacoHut sits, which was valued at $16 per square foot and resulted in a total value of $970,590.

In determining whether $16 per square foot was a reasonable price for the land, Clark said she looked at sales of land she believed were similar based on their size, zoning, sale dates, locations, and whether they were considered “pad sites.” Based on this criteria, Clark chose four land sales between 2006 and 2007 that ranged in sale price between $13 and $24.02 per square foot. The list of comparable land sales was included in Exhibit 1. After looking at these sales, Clark concluded there was sufficient support for a $16 per-square-foot value to the land.

Adding together the cost value of the building, the asphalt, die concrete, and the value of the land, the total value of the KenTacoHut property came to $1,778,660.

In addition to the report from the CAMA system using the Marshall & Swift cost-approach system, Exhibit 1 also included other documentation intended by Clark to support the reasonableness of a $1,778,660 value for the KenTacoHut. First, Clark looked at 2008 values assessed by the County for numerous fast-food restaurants and determined that the value assigned to the KenTacoHut was within the range of these values. The list of fast-food restaurants was included in Exhibit 1.

Second, Clark performed an income approach to estimate the KenTacoHut’s value using the County’s CAMA system and data for restaurant rental, expense, and capitalization rates in 2008. Using this approach, Clark estimated the income value of the KenTacoHut at $2,192,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 P.3d 823, 47 Kan. App. 2d 1074, 2012 WL 3055854, 2012 Kan. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-equalization-appeal-of-johnson-county-appraiserprivitera-realty-kanctapp-2012.