Metropolitan Holding Co. v. Board of Review

482 N.W.2d 654, 167 Wis. 2d 134, 1992 Wisc. App. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 4, 1992
Docket90-2748
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 482 N.W.2d 654 (Metropolitan Holding Co. v. Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Holding Co. v. Board of Review, 482 N.W.2d 654, 167 Wis. 2d 134, 1992 Wisc. App. LEXIS 102 (Wis. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinions

[137]*137MOSER, P.J.

Metropolitan Holding Company (Metro), a partnership, appeals from a trial court denial of a certiorari review affirming the City of Milwaukee Board of Review's (Board) affirmance of the city tax assessor's valuation of Metro's property for city real property tax assessment purposes, effective January 1, 1988. The parties disagree as to the correct method of assessment for the Layton Garden Addition, a federally subsidized low-income elderly housing project. Metro asserts that a capitalization of income method based upon actual income and expenses is correct while the Board supports use of a capitalization of income based upon estimated market rents. The Board approved a total assessment of $4,483 million, valuing the land at $.711 million and improvements at $3,772 million; this reduced the assessor's total valuation of $4,766 million. Metro, in contrast, used the "Property's actual income and expenses" as a basis for the capitalization of income approach to assessment, calculating a total assessed value of $1,713 million.

Testimony before the Board shows the following facts. Layton Garden consists of three buildings, each containing seventy-eight one-bedroom apartment units and one two-bedroom unit, the latter of which is utilized by building managers. Layton Garden was built in 1972-73. It was, and is, financed under the Federal Housing Authority 236 program as low-rent elderly housing. The record reflects that Metro paid a ten-percent construction downpayment and in return obtained low-interest forty-year mortgages through the federal Housing and Urban Development Authority (HUD). The apartment buildings were constructed according to HUD regulations and/or restrictions. In addition, Metro and HUD agreed that Metro would rent the premises at below-market contract rentals (approximately $230 per [138]*138month). The elderly tenants generally pay thirty percent of the monthly rental and HUD pays the balance. HUD regulations further limit Metro's income to $6,000 per year over expenses for each building, any overage reverting to HUD. An additional restriction on the owners is that the tenants can only be removed for cause — cause being nonpayment of rent or waste. Removal of a tenant is further controlled by HUD regulations. Under the terms of the mortgage and HUD regulations, the owners may pre-pay the mortgage after twenty years (1993 in this case), thereby freeing the property from all HUD restrictions and allowing the owners to charge market rents. However, a federal congressional moratorium has been imposed on this part of the agreement.1 Neither side contests the fact that under HUD regulations, reeil estate taxes are an expense of operating subsidized housing that is considered in determining rental charges.

Both sides to this appeal agree to the following facts. First, the highest and best use of this property is residential rental units. Second, there is no active market for the sale of such properties, because of the federal servitudes on low-rent federally subsidized housing units. It follows that since there was no recent arms-length sale of this or comparable properties to provide the best information available for tax assessment purposes, a recent sale or comparable sales basis could not be employed in this instance.2 Third, the cost evaluation method is not proper for use in this tax assessment period although it is uncontroverted in the record that the cost of replacement for these buildings is approximately $5.5 million. Fourth, neither side contests the [139]*139historical fact that Metro insured these three premises for fire and casualty insurance in the amount of $4,384 million (replacement) at the time of the controverted January 1, 1988 assessment. Finally, the parties agree that the capitalization of income approach to tax assessment valuation is the proper method to apply. The difference between the parties is the basis upon which to calculate the relevant income. Metro does not contest the amount of comparable economic or market rents obtained, through an examination of south side City of Milwaukee multiple rental units, by the City assessor for his valuation; it does, however, contest the use of these values to arrive at the assessment valuation of the property.

Metro's valuation was predicated on the actual, or contract, rents with HUD. This valuation was made by Keith Munson, the President of National Appraisal Corporation, a state certified appraiser II, and assessor for a number of municipalities in southeastern Wisconsin. The record reflects that in Milwaukee County he was the assessor for the Villages of Fox Point, Bayside, River Hills, Hales Corners; in Waukesha County, for the cities of Oconomowoc and Delafield and the Town of Genesee; and in Racine County, for the City of Burlington and the Villages of Wind Point and Union Grove. Munson has previously been involved in the assessment of one subsidized housing property in Burlington, Wisconsin, in which the capitalization of income calculation, based upon economic or market rents, was used because the contract rents were very close to actual market rents.

The Board found that the city assessor correctly followed the statutory mandate3 and valued the subsi[140]*140dized housing by employing the income approach using comparable economic rents as required by the Wisconsin property assessment manual (Assessment Manual).4 In its written Findings of Fact and Determination5 approving the valuation of the city's assessor, the Board relied upon the method specified in the Assessment Manual, pursuant to sec. 70.32(1), Stats. The Assessment Manual expressly states that "subsidized housing must be valued according to the value it would command if it were free and clear of encumbrances"6 and that when the income approach is used "for the valuation of subsidized housing, market rents must be used, regardless of whether the contract rents are above or below market rent."7 The Board further found that Metro's appraisal used the contract rents in its income approach valuation and did not overcome the presumption that the Milwaukee Board of Assessors' valuation was correct.8 It therefore sustained the assessors' valuation of the three apartment units as noted above.

Metro petitioned the circuit court for certiorari review of the Board's assessment;9 the petition was denied. On appeal, Metro raises a number of claimed errors that relate to one dispositive issue: the use of market rents as opposed to contract rents in calculation of assessed value using the income capitalization [141]*141approach.10 Metro frames this issue as whether the Board's assessment is arbitrary because it is based on the directions found in the Assessment Manual created by the Department of Revenue and whether the Assessment Manual violates the tax uniformity clause found in the Wisconsin Constitution and fails to follow the Wisconsin tax statutes.11

In the context of this.case we first look to see whether the assessment procedure for subsidized housing12 set forth in the Assessment Manual comports with the Wisconsin Constitution's uniformity clause,13 the statutes involved and judicial decisions interpreting these statutes.14

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Related

Lindas v. Cady
499 N.W.2d 692 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1993)
Metropolitan Holding Co. v. Board of Review
495 N.W.2d 314 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1993)
Metropolitan Holding Co. v. Board of Review
482 N.W.2d 654 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
482 N.W.2d 654, 167 Wis. 2d 134, 1992 Wisc. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-holding-co-v-board-of-review-wisctapp-1992.