Metropolitan Jacobson Development Venture v. Board of Review

524 N.W.2d 189, 1994 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 234, 1994 WL 659052
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 23, 1994
Docket93-557
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 524 N.W.2d 189 (Metropolitan Jacobson Development Venture v. Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Jacobson Development Venture v. Board of Review, 524 N.W.2d 189, 1994 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 234, 1994 WL 659052 (iowa 1994).

Opinion

TERNUS, Justice.

Appellants, Metropolitan Jacobson Development Venture and Washington Avenue Venture, own commercial warehouse properties in the City of Des Moines. They challenged the assessments 1 of these properties as excessive and inequitable. The district court agreed and reduced the assessed values.

The property owners appealed claiming that the reduced assessments are still inequitable because the properties are assessed at a greater percentage of market value than are comparable properties. The Board of *191 Review of the City of Des Moines cross-appealed claiming that the court erred in reducing the 1991 assessed values of the properties.

We agree with the trial court’s determination that the 1991 assessed values of these properties are excessive. Because we conclude that a different ratio of assessed to market value should be used to arrive at the assessed values for the subject properties, we modify the assessed values decreed by the trial court. Therefore, we affirm as modified.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Two sets of properties are involved in this ease. Metropolitan Jacobson owns a three-building warehouse complex on McDonald Avenue. Because each warehouse was built at a different time, the city assesses and taxes each as a separate parcel. They are known locally as 4121, 4141 and 4161 McDonald Avenue.

The second set of properties consists of two buildings located on East Washington Avenue. They are assessed for tax purposes as one parcel so we refer to them as one property. Washington Avenue Venture owns the East Washington property.

A.The prior appeals. The property owners first sought relief from property tax assessments on 4161 McDonald Avenue and the East Washington property in 1986, 1987, and 1988. In these appeals, the property owners claimed that the properties were assessed at more than their market values. They also claimed that the ratio of assessed value to market value was higher for their properties than for comparable properties.

The district court in the earlier case entered a decree establishing fair market values for the subject properties and comparable properties. Based on these findings, the court ordered that the assessed values be reduced. In a subsequent ruling on a post-trial motion, the court further reduced the assessed values by establishing a lower ratio than the one used by the Board. The court of appeals affirmed the district court’s decision. Metropolitan Jacobson Dev. Venture v. Board of Review, 476 N.W.2d 726 (Iowa App.1991).

B. Subsequent assessments. The 1989 assessments for these properties were completed in April and May of 1989, shortly after the district court’s initial decision in the earlier appeals. Despite the court’s ruling, the city did not change the assessments on any of the properties to the court-established values.

' When the 1989 assessments were appealed to the Board of Review, the city assessor instructed the deputy assessor to reassess the McDonald Avenue properties. The assessor’s office then generated its own fair market values rather than using the lower values set by the district court in the prior appeals. It also chose a ratio of assessed value to market value substantially higher than the one used by the court only two months earlier. As a result, the 1989 assessments were significantly higher than the 1988 assessments set by the court.

No effort was made to correct the 1989 assessment on the East Washington property. Thus, the 1989 assessment for this property remained at the original 1988 level that had been found inequitable and excessive.

In 1990, the city assessor assessed the McDonald Avenue properties the same as in 1989. The assessment was raised on the East Washington property in 1990, bringing its assessment to 115.9% of its fair market value as established by the court less than two years earlier.

In 1991, each of the McDonald Avenue properties received a significant increase in assessment. The assessment on the East Washington property remained the same in 1991 as it was in 1990.

C. Administrative and judicial review of assessments. The property owners appealed these assessments to the Board of Review. 2 See Iowa Code § 441.37 (1993). The Board reduced the 1991 assessment on the Washington Avenue property. The other assessments were not changed.

*192 The property owners then appealed to the district court. See id. § 441.38. The appeals were consolidated for purposes of trial in the district court. See id. §§ 441.38-.39. After hearing evidence, the district court concluded that the fair market values for all the properties remained the same in 1989 through 1991 as they had been in 1988. The court found no change in the physical characteristics of the properties, the tenant mix of the properties or the market conditions for sale or lease of the properties that would justify an increase in market value.

The court also decided that the properties were assessed at a higher percentage of their market value than any of the comparable properties. Consequently, it ordered the assessor to use a percentage no higher than the highest percentage used for any of the comparable properties in each year.

The result of the court’s decree was a reduction in the assessed values on all but one of the properties for each year appealed. (The 1989 assessed value of 4121 McDonald Avenue was increased.) The property owners appealed because they thought the assessed values should be even lower by using a smaller ratio of assessed value to market value. The Board cross-appealed because it believed the court should have found an increase in the market values of these properties in 1991.

This case was tried in equity. Iowa Code § 441.39 (1993). Therefore, our review is de novo. Iowa R.App.P. 4. We give weight to the trial court’s findings of fact but are not bound by them. Iowa R.App.P. 14(f)(7). We are especially deferential to the court’s assessment of the credibility of witnesses. Id.

II. Excessive Assessments Claim: Do the 1991 Assessed Values Exceed the 1991 Fair Market Values?

One basis upon which an assessment may be appealed is that “the property is assessed for more than the value authorized by law.” Iowa Code § 441.37(l)(b) (1993). The value authorized by law is the “fair and reasonable market value” of the property. Id. § 441.21(l)(a), (b). Consequently, an assessment is excessive if it is higher than the market value of the property. See id. § 441.37(l)(b).

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524 N.W.2d 189, 1994 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 234, 1994 WL 659052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-jacobson-development-venture-v-board-of-review-iowa-1994.