Kearney Convention Center, Inc. v. Buffalo County Board of Equalization

344 N.W.2d 620, 216 Neb. 292, 1984 Neb. LEXIS 912
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1984
Docket83-096
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 344 N.W.2d 620 (Kearney Convention Center, Inc. v. Buffalo County Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kearney Convention Center, Inc. v. Buffalo County Board of Equalization, 344 N.W.2d 620, 216 Neb. 292, 1984 Neb. LEXIS 912 (Neb. 1984).

Opinion

.Grant, J,

Plaintiff-appellant, Kearney Convention Center,. Inc. (hereinafter taxpayer), is the owner of the Holi *293 day Inn in Kearney, Buffalo County, Nebraska. The Buffalo County assessor assessed taxpayer’s property for the year 1981 and fixed the actual value of the property at $3,563,765. For the prior year the actual valuation was fixed by the assessor at $2,304,430.

The taxpayer timely filed a written protest with defendant-appellee, Buffalo County Board of Equalization (hereinafter County Board). At the hearing on this protest the County Board did not change the 1981 valuation. The taxpayer then timely appealed to the district court for Buffalo County, where the matter was submitted on a joint stipulation of facts. The trial court dismissed the petition on appeal and affirmed the action of the County Board. This appeal followed.

On appeal the taxpayer’s six assignments of error can be condensed to three points: (1) That the trial court erred in failing to find that two dissimilar methods of appraisal resulted in “blatant disparity in actual value between urban and agricultural real estate [and] constitutes unlawful lack of uniformity and proportionality within a class (real estate)”; (2) That the trial court erred in holding that the convention center’s claim of disproportionate assessment required a comparison with all other types of property in Buffalo County; and (3) That the trial court erred in refusing to grant the convention center tax relief based on a lack of uniformity and proportionality of valuation.

For the reasons hereinafter stated we reverse and remand.

As stated above, all facts in the case were submitted in a joint stipulation of facts. Those facts show that an appraisal of all real and personal property in Buffalo County was conducted by the county assessor’s office for the tax year 1981. In making the countywide appraisal for 1981, the assessor was required by the state Tax Commissioner to use the Marshall Valuation Service (published by Marshall and Swift Publication Company, and hereinafter *294 Marshall and Swift manual) in appraising all building improvements, and to use the Nebraska Agricultural Land Valuation Manual (hereinafter Land Manual) in appraising all real estate, including irrigated and dryland farm ground.

The valuation technique used in the Marshall and Swift manual is cost of reproduction less depreciation. Cost figures for labor and materials were stated in the Marshall and Swift manual in current (1981) dollars. This usage of current dollars was a departure from earlier assessing practices which had been based on the Nebraska Building Construction Manual prepared and issued by the Nebraska Tax Commissioner. The Nebraska construction manual had used cost figures based on 1976 dollar values, and had been used through 1980. The switch to the Marshall and Swift valuation technique for the taxable year 1981 had resulted in the increased valuation of the improvements on taxpayer’s land from $2,072,730 to $3,332,065. The land itself was valued in both 1980 and 1981 at $231,700. This resulted in an overall assessed value increase as to taxpayer’s improved real property of $1,259,335, or an increase of approximately 53 percent. The taxpayer’s expert witness agreed that the Marshall and Swift valuation method used by the county assessor was a proper technique; that the method was properly utilized by the assessor; and that “the fair market value - actual value of the Kearney Holiday Inn was approximately equal to the valuation of $3,563,765.00 set by the Buffalo County Assessor for the year 1981.” The taxpayer’s expert witness concluded that the actual value or fair market value of the taxpayer’s property was $3,385,576.70, or a figure equal to 95 percent of the valuation figure set by the county assessor.

As distinguished from the reproduction cost technique of the Marshall and Swift manual used to determine the actual value of taxpayer’s improved real property, the Land Manual uses a valuation technique of capitalization of earnings based on *295 yield production of various types of soil and the geographical location of the particular land.

The Land Manual was well described in Box Butte County v. State Board of Equalization & Assessment, 206 Neb. 696, 702-03, 295 N.W.2d 670, 676 (1980), as follows: “The Land Valuation Manual was developed by the Department of Revenue after extensive research and is based generally on soil types and geographical locations. To be more explicit, agricultural land is classified as irrigated cropland, dryland cropland, rangeland and meadow, and pasture. These in turn are subclassified into valuation groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, based on the productivity of the particular soil, and, when necessary, are further subdivided. Finally, recognizing the decrease in rainfall and growing days when moving from the southeast corner of the state to the northwest corner, the state has been divided into seven land valuation areas. Each land classification and sub classification has a calculated per-acre dollar value, differing in each of the seven land valuation areas. In arriving at these valuations, information was obtained from various farm management companies, county agents, and others as to cash rent data, grazing fees, crop yield data, and share rental information in the various areas, and with that information, a net return to the landlord for the various classes and subclasses was determined to which was applied a capitalization rate to arrive at a value.”

Buffalo County is in the south central area of the 7 land valuation areas, along with 15 other counties. As illustrative of the use of the Land Manual, the parties stipulated that the different qualities of soil for crop production in Buffalo County were appraised at the following values for the tax year 1981, using capitalization of earnings valuation technique:

*296 Irrigated Cropland Land Valuation Group Values Per Acre Dryland Cropland Land Valuation Group Values Per Acre
1A1 - $1,200 1D1 - $640
1A - 1,070 ID - 585
2A1 - 940 2D1 - 510
2A - 810 2D - 450
3A1 - 680 3D1 - 380
3A - 580 3D - 320
4A1 - 470 4D1 - 225
4A - 360 4D - 175

(The dryland valuations in this stipulation seem to be from the Land Manual’s Hall County figures rather than those for Buffalo County, but the differences are insignificant and do not affect the result in this opinion.)

The Buffalo County assessor had broken down all agricultural real estate in the county into the classifications set out in the Land Manual, and had assessed all agricultural land by applying the appropriate value per acre to each such classified acre. In assessing agricultural land in this manner, the county assessor was acting pursuant to the orders of the state Tax Commissioner, as the assessor was required to do by the terms of Neb. Rev. Stat.

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Opinion No. (1984)
Nebraska Attorney General Reports, 1984

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Bluebook (online)
344 N.W.2d 620, 216 Neb. 292, 1984 Neb. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kearney-convention-center-inc-v-buffalo-county-board-of-equalization-neb-1984.