Lupo v. Board of Assessors of Huron

10 Misc. 3d 473
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Misc. 3d 473 (Lupo v. Board of Assessors of Huron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lupo v. Board of Assessors of Huron, 10 Misc. 3d 473 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

[474]*474OPINION OF THE COURT

John B. Nesbitt, J.

This case presents two novel issues regarding real estate taxation of commercial waterfront property. Specifically, are the riparian rights attached to such property as augmented by a submerged land license that authorizes offshore marina and dockage operations taxable under any circumstances? If so, are they taxable under the circumstances of this case where such rights were assigned by the upland owners to a corporate entity and the dockage is not permanently affixed to either the upland or any submerged lands?

I. Background

What prompts these inquires is the manner in which the Town of Huron has valued the petitioners’ property for purposes of the annual tax levies by the Town, county, and local school district upon real property within their respective jurisdictions. Of course, a municipality’s ability to generate revenue through this type of taxation must be found in and comply with state enabling authority (see Castle Oil Corp. v City of New York, 89 NY2d 334, 338-339 [1996]). Under the Real Property Tax Law, this tax takes the form of an annual monetary assessment against each unit of real property as deemed a “parcel,” a tax determined by a dollar rate applied to each thousand dollars of the parcel’s value as established for such purposes, unless eliminated or diminished by one or more statutory exemptions. (See generally RPTL art 5.)

Generally, under RPTL 305 (2), unless a uniform system of fractional property values is in place, a property’s value for purposes of real property taxation is its “full value.” (See 98 NY Jur 2d, Taxation and Assessment § 303.) This term derives from article XVI, § 2 of the State Constitution requiring that “[assessments shall in no case exceed full value” and is repeated in RPTL 701 (4) (a) defining “excessive” as “an entry on an assessment role of the assessed valuation of real property which exceeds the full value of real property.” By settled judicial construction, the term “value” means “market value” (see Foss v City of Rochester, 65 NY2d 247, 253 [1985]). Market value is the selling price upon which a reasonably informed buyer and seller would agree, in an open market setting, neither of whom is acting under any constraint or compulsion regarding the transaction (see Matter of Onondaga County Water Dist. v Board of Assessors of Town of Volney, 45 AD2d 258, 261 [4th Dept 1974]). The “best evi[475]*475dence” of such value is a recent sale of a property under those very conditions, failing which the courts have traditionally used one of three methods: comparable sales, capitalization of income, or reproduction cost less depreciation (see Matter of Allied Corp. v Town of Camillus, 80 NY2d 351, 356 [1992]). Eschewing categorical rules of market valuation, the courts are guided by its purpose in the taxation context “to arrive at a fair and realistic value of the property involved so that all property owners contribute equitably to the public fisc” (id.).

This simpliciter stages the issues raised at this juncture of the tax certiorari brought by petitioners. Before one can intelligently discuss market value and the appropriate methodologies to establish that value in a particular case, one must understand the object of the valuation. Petitioners claim that respondents have failed in this regard, resulting in an excessive valuation.

The facts upon which petitioners make this claim are straightforward and largely undisputed. The parcel at issue designated by respondents as tax account parcel No. 72117-00-890891 consists of approximately five acres of land known as 6483 Catchpole Road located in the Town of Huron, Wayne County. This parcel was conveyed to petitioners by deeds dated September 18, 1990, and recorded September 20, 1990, in the Wayne County Clerk’s Office at liber 851 at pages 818 and 820.

The parcel adjoins Great Sodus Bay and benefits from substantial waterfront. The petitioners developed the parcel commercially to where it now hosts a restaurant named Cutter’s Restaurant and a marina named Oak Park Marina. The restaurant and marina are separate operating entities, the latter by a corporation known as Oak Park Marina, Inc. (the corporation), also owned by petitioners. The marina operations use substantial upland improvements on the parcel, including buildings devoted to boat maintenance, repair, storage, and launching, as well as facilities for retail sales of fuel and boating accessories. The marina operations also include a dockage facility extending into Sodus Bay. This dockage facility consists of four main piers extending from the shoreline, the most southerly two being 420 feet long and the northerly two being 300 feet long. The piers are 100 feet distant from each other at the shoreline and as extended into the bay. Affixed to the end of each of these main piers are perpendicular pier extensions that form a “T” configuration. Three of the pier extensions creating the top of the “T” are 90 feet long, and the fourth attached to [476]*476one of the 420-foot main piers is 390 feet long. Extended laterally from all sides of the four “T” piers are approximately 125 docks, 30 or 40 feet in separate length, creating individual boat slips on each side. The total general effect is to create a dockage facility encompassing a square of water area 420 feet by 420 feet with a berthing capacity for approximately 250 boats.

The piers and docks are supported by flotation material incorporated into the construction, secured in location by apparatus anchored in the bay. The piers and docks are installed and removed on a seasonable basis to allow for the freezing of Sodus Bay during the winter and the' consequent damage that would be caused if the dockage was left to the mercy of the expanding, shifting, and heaving ice. The docks are attached to the shore at a breakwall from which electrical service extends for convenience of the boaters. When installed, the dockage is used primarily for seasonal slip rentals with some space left available for transient boaters.

II. Nature of Property Interest Being Assessed

The dockage facility has not gone unnoticed by the town assessors. In 1998, the assessors undertook a comprehensive reassessment of petitioners’ parcel. With the aid of recommended assessment methodology and computations provided by the New York State Office of Real Property Services, the Town arrived at a total assessment by first establishing the market value of the dockage facility to be the equal of the ostensible number of rental slips (250) times the market value of $3,300 per slip, for a total of $825,000. The Town claims that the market value per slip was extrapolated from reported statewide and regional marina sales data, substantially discounted in petitioners’ favor and much less than an income approach would warrant in this case, a value of $1,477,700 using the estimated figures and methodology employed by the State in its field valuation of the marina. The “extremely conservative” valuation of $825,000 was assigned as the land value of the four acres of the five-acre parcel that were devoted to commercial use and to which the docks are attached. The remaining one acre of nonwaterfront land improved by a private residence was assigned a separate value of $93,750.1 To these values were added the upland improvements made upon the commercial part of the [477]

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Related

Montgomery v. Board of Assessment Review
30 A.D.3d 747 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2006)

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10 Misc. 3d 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lupo-v-board-of-assessors-of-huron-nysupct-2005.