Kawasaki Motors Corp. v. Lancaster County Board of Equalization

584 N.W.2d 63, 7 Neb. Ct. App. 655, 1998 Neb. App. LEXIS 153
CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1998
DocketNo. A-97-773
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 584 N.W.2d 63 (Kawasaki Motors Corp. v. Lancaster 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.

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Kawasaki Motors Corp. v. Lancaster County Board of Equalization, 584 N.W.2d 63, 7 Neb. Ct. App. 655, 1998 Neb. App. LEXIS 153 (Neb. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Hannon, Judge.

Kawasaki Motors Corp. (Kawasaki) appeals the order of the Nebraska Tax Equalization and Review Commission (Commission) which upheld the valuation by the Lancaster County Board of Equalization (Board), for property tax purposes, of $13,916,455 for Kawasaki’s manufacturing plant. The Commission found the evidence did not show the Board’s action to be arbitrary and capricious and affirmed the Board’s decision. We find the evidence shows the Board’s action was arbitrary because the property was valued on the basis of a previous agreement, but since the Commission also effectively found the evidence showed the value set by the Board was not unreasonable, we affirm the order of the Commission.

BACKGROUND

The Kawasaki facility is a large manufacturing plant located just northwest of the city of Lincoln in Lancaster County, Nebraska. The plant has between 910,000 and 924,395 square feet and is located on approximately 100 acres of land. The plant consists of three large industrial buildings which are connected, several smaller buildings which are also connected, and several freestanding industrial buildings.

Kawasaki appealed to the Commission after the Board adopted the assessor’s value of $13,916,455. Kawasaki’s reason for appealing was that “[mjarket value indication via the income approach and market data approach supports a value below the assessed value.” Kawasaki requested a valuation of $8,475,000.

The hearing before the Commission was held on March 18, 1997. Kawasaki called Bemie Shaner, a licensed appraiser, to testify in support of his formal appraisal. The Board called Robin Hendricksen, also a licensed appraiser, to testify in support of his summary report, and John Layman, whose testimony was not received. The Commission received four exhibits, but we will describe and summarize only those facts relevant to this appeal.

[657]*657Exhibit 1, offered by Kawasaki, is a real estate appraisal prepared by Shaner. In the appraisal, dated March 12,1997, Shaner opines that the market value of the Kawasaki plant as of January 1, 1996, was $8,200,000. The appraisal is a multipage document containing photographs of the property and a separate section describing and analyzing the area, the site, the improvements, and the highest and best use of the property. In the appraisal, Shaner used only the sales comparison approach in analyzing the property. Shaner opined that neither a completed cost approach nor an income approach would be proper to use in this case. In his sales comparison approach, Shaner used price per square foot of gross building area as a “common denominator.” Shaner compared the Kawasaki plant with “[s]ales of large industrial properties located throughout the midwest region.”

Exhibit 2 is the “complete transcript of the records of the [Board] with respect to the protest and complaint of [Kawasaki].” Exclusive of notices, formal protests, et cetera, the exhibit contains the referee’s report and the record of the Board’s July 22 and 23, 1996, hearings at which the Board approved the referee’s report.

The referee’s report is a formal document prepared on a form and contains no information relevant to the value of the Kawasaki property except that in the section entitled “Action Taken by the Referee,” boxes are checked which indicate that after inspecting the property, the referee agreed with the data, valuation premise, and final value estimated by the assessor’s office and the referee determined that the data or information supplied by the owner was not conclusive and that therefore, no valuation change was recommended. The report contains a “Summary of Final Recommendations,” in which the recommended total property value is $13,916,455 ($13,064,630 for improvements and $851,825 for land). The report is signed by Wayne Kubert as both referee and coordinator and dated July 15, 1996.

Exhibit 2 also contains the “Lancaster County Board of Equalization 1996 Rules and Procedures for Property Valuation Protests” and Kawasaki’s “Property Valuation Protest.” Kawasaki’s protest states it was filed because “[t]he current [658]*658assessment is in excess of the market value. Comparable buildings in the region support a value below the one placed on this account.”

Part of exhibit 2 is a three-page computer printout entitled “Lancaster County Commercial and Industrial Valuation,” which contains rather cryptic information on the income approach, without explanation, and on the second page states, “Final Value for Parcel = $13,916,455 (Special Value).” Several computer printout sheets which must be intended to support the assessor’s value follow the valuation. (No explanation of this cryptic information is provided by the exhibit or through testimony.) The printout also contains a narrative beginning September 7, 1992, which states some of the relevant characteristics of the property. Most significantly, this narrative contains information about the settlement of the dispute over the assessed value of the property for 1994 and 1995. The record relates that the dispute was settled in 1995 with a price per square foot value of $15.01, and with additional increases, that settlement was the basis of the assessor’s value for 1996.

The computer printout continues for several pages and includes diagrams, descriptions of building dimensions, and other skeletal information and ends by showing a value of $13,916,455. Neither the document nor later testimony explains the significance of this information, and we thus find the information worthless. We note that the Commission also does not refer to such information in its analysis.

Exhibit 3 is Hendricksen’s “limited scope summary report” of the Kawasaki plant. This report contains a cost approach summary and lists the total value of the plant at $16,700,000, adjusted for depreciation. The report also contains a comparable sales analysis, in which Hendricksen listed the comparables in terms of price per square foot. This report contains the usual information which is compiled and utilized to support an appraiser’s opinion as contained in the report. The contents of the report were largely testified to by Hendricksen and therefore, will not be summarized here.

Shaner testified at the hearing before the Commission. He has been an appraiser since 1972, holds “the MAI designation from the appraisal institute” and is a certified appraiser in [659]*659Nebraska, Kansas, and Missouri. Shaner teaches appraisal courses and appraises all property except agricultural property. Shaner testified to explain and support his opinion and his appraisal which is contained in exhibit 1. The evidence shows Shaner is qualified as an appraiser and that his opinion is adequately supported. Under our standard of review, regardless of the outcome of this case, this court does not consider the adequacy of Shaner’s testimony on value or compare it with the evidence that might be in opposition thereto. At most, we decide the adequacy of the evidence to support the value given to the facility by the Board and the Commission’s action. For this reason, we are not summarizing Shaner’s testimony or his opinion on value. We observe only that Shaner’s appraisal is lower than the amount accepted by the Commission and of course could support any decision which might adopt it.

The Board called Hendricksen to testify. Since the adequacy of his testimony to support the Commission’s decision is critical to the outcome of this appeal, we shall summarize it in considerable detail.

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584 N.W.2d 63, 7 Neb. Ct. App. 655, 1998 Neb. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kawasaki-motors-corp-v-lancaster-county-board-of-equalization-nebctapp-1998.