Madison County Assessor v. Kohl's Indiana LP

CourtIndiana Tax Court
DecidedAugust 22, 2025
Docket24T-TA-00009
StatusPublished

This text of Madison County Assessor v. Kohl's Indiana LP (Madison County Assessor v. Kohl's Indiana LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison County Assessor v. Kohl's Indiana LP, (Ind. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

ATTORNEYS FOR PETITIONER: ATTORNEYS FOR RESPONDENT: MARILYN S. MEIGHEN BRENT A. AUBERRY ATTORNEY AT LAW DAVID A. SUESS Carmel, IN ABRAHAM M. BENSON BRIGHAM E. MICHAUD BRIAN A. CUSIMANO FAEGRE DRINKER BIDDLE & REATH ZACHARY D. PRICE LLP ATTORNEY AT LAW Indianapolis, IN Indianapolis, IN

IN THE INDIANA TAX COURT

MADISON COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) FILED Petitioner, ) Aug 22 2025, 1:18 pm ) CLERK v. ) Case No. 24T-TA-00009 Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals ) and Tax Court

KOHL’S INDIANA, LP, ) ) Respondent. )

ON APPEAL FROM A FINAL DETERMINATION OF THE INDIANA BOARD OF TAX REVIEW

FOR PUBLICATION August 22, 2025

MCADAM, J.

This case is about the evidence required to satisfy the burden of proof in property

tax valuation appeals. The parties in this case each presented an expert appraisal

valuing the taxpayer’s property. The Indiana Board of Tax Review systematically

evaluated each appraisal and found both to be extensively and fundamentally flawed.

Despite these concerns, it determined that both appraisals satisfied the burden of proof because each was prepared by an expert in accordance with generally accepted

appraisal principles and the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice

(“USPAP”). Finding the burden met, the Board simply compared the parties’ two

appraisals and decided that the taxpayer’s was more convincing because its flaws were

“somewhat less egregious” than those in the Assessor’s. On appeal, the Assessor

argues that the Board erred by according the appraisals persuasive status based solely

on their pedigree as expert appraisals. He contends that the Board’s decision to reduce

the assessment to the taxpayer’s appraisal does not follow from its own findings

regarding the fundamental flaws in that appraisal. The Court holds that the Board

misapplied the law by applying a per-se-burden-of-proof standard that elevated the form

of the appraisals over their substantive analysis and reverses the Board’s decision on

that basis.

RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Kohl’s Indiana, LP owns and operates a retail department store in Anderson,

Indiana. The property was assessed at $4,513,400 for 2019, $4,517,000 for 2020, and

$4,517,000 for 2021. Believing these values to be too high, Kohl’s appealed to the

Madison County Property Tax Board of Appeals, which upheld the 2019 and 2020

assessments but did not act on the 2021 assessment challenge. Kohl’s then appealed

all three assessments to the Indiana Board of Tax Review.

The Indiana Board held a five-day hearing, at which both parties presented

expert appraisals and testimony from the appraisers who prepared them. Both

appraisals estimated the value of the property under each of the three standard

valuation approaches—the sales comparison approach, the income approach, and the

2 cost approach—before combining these estimates to reach a single reconciled value for

each year. 1 The Kohl’s appraisal gave the sales comparison approach the most weight

and valued the property at $2,360,000 for 2020, and $2,380,000 for 2021. The

Assessor’s appraisal assigned equal weight to all three approaches and valued the

property at $4,800,000 for 2020, and $4,900,000 for 2021. 2

In its two final determinations, the Indiana Board thoroughly scrutinized the

appraisals presented by each party, finding a litany of flaws in both. 3 (See generally

Cert. Admin. R. at 949-50 ¶ 1, 985-97 ¶¶ 81-115.) The Court’s decision here focuses on

the Board’s critique of the Kohl’s appraisal as only its analysis is necessary to resolve

the issues presented in this case because the Board determined that it was more

1 The three standard approaches are generally accepted appraisal techniques for valuing real property. The sales comparison approach “estimates the total value of the property directly by comparing it to similar, or comparable, properties that have sold in the market.” 2021 REAL PROPERTY ASSESSMENT MANUAL (“2021 Manual”) (incorporated by reference at 50 IND. ADMIN. CODE 2.4-1-2 (2020)) at 2; 2011 REAL PROPERTY ASSESSMENT MANUAL (“2011 Manual”) (incorporated by reference at 50 IND. ADMIN. CODE 2.4-1-2 (2011)) at 2. The income approach examines “income producing properties that are typically rented [and] converts an estimate of income, or rent, [a] property is expected to produce into value through a mathematical process known as capitalization.” 2021 Manual at 2; 2011 Manual at 2. The cost approach “estimates the value of [any] land as if vacant and then adds the depreciated cost new of the improvements to arrive at a total estimate of value.” 2021 Manual at 2; 2011 Manual at 2. 2 Although the tax years on appeal are 2019, 2020, and 2021, the appraisals only estimate values for 2020 and 2021. The parties stipulated below to value the property for the 2019 tax year at 98% of the 2020 tax year value. (See Cert. Admin. R. at 950 ¶ 3 & n.3.) 3 The Board issued two final determinations in this case. In the first final determination, the Board laid out the evidence presented, analyzed both appraisals in detail, concluded that the Kohl’s appraisal was more persuasive than the Assessor’s appraisal, and reduced the assessment to match the Kohl’s appraisal. After briefing and oral argument, this Court remanded the case to the Board after finding that the Board had failed to explain the reasons that the evidence supported its ultimate findings. See Madison Cnty. Assessor v. Kohl’s Indiana, LP, 247 N.E.3d 845 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2024). The Board then issued a supplemental final determination filed with the Court on February 4, 2025 (see Feb. 6, 2025 Order) and explicitly incorporated the first determination “including all factual findings, conclusions of law, and ultimate conclusions of value.” (Feb. 4, 2025 Notice of the Indiana Board Order on Remand and Final Determination at 9 ¶ 27 [hereinafter cited as “Final Det. II”].) The Court therefore considers both determinations together in this opinion.

3 persuasive than the Assessor’s appraisal.

Surveying the Kohl’s appraisal, the Board concluded that none of the three

valuation approaches (sales comparison, income, or cost) in the Kohl’s appraisal

“produce[d] particularly strong value conclusions.” (Cert. Admin. R. at 987 ¶ 86.)

According to the Board, the “sales comparison and income approaches suffer[ed] from

a lack of good comparable sales and leases and poorly supported decisions regarding

adjustments,” while the cost approach was “an even less reliable indicator of value”

because it was “too reliant on the other two approaches.” (Cert. Admin. R. at 987 ¶ 86.)

In examining the Kohl’s sales comparison approach, the Board identified flaws in

each of the eight comparable sales used to derive a valuation. It concluded that the

analysis was “minimally probative” of the property’s value because these sales were

“not particularly comparable” to the subject property and that the attempts to adjust the

prices of the comparable sales to account for those differences were “poorly supported.”

(Cert. Admin. R. at 987 ¶ 86; see also Cert. Admin. R. at 989 ¶ 92.) The Board found

that two of the sales (Sales 1 and 6) “detract[ed] from the reliability of [the] analysis”

because the properties sold were “not big box stores,” like the Kohl’s property, and

therefore competed in a different part of the market. (Cert. Admin. R. at 987 ¶ 87.) It

“reach[ed] the same conclusion about the majority of [the] remaining sales” because the

sale properties had a different post-sale use than the Kohl’s property. (Cert. Admin. R.

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Bluebook (online)
Madison County Assessor v. Kohl's Indiana LP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-county-assessor-v-kohls-indiana-lp-indtc-2025.