Missouri Real Estate Appraisers Commission v. Mark A. Funk

492 S.W.3d 586, 2016 Mo. LEXIS 206, 2016 WL 3549594
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 28, 2016
DocketSC95255
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 492 S.W.3d 586 (Missouri Real Estate Appraisers Commission v. Mark A. Funk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Real Estate Appraisers Commission v. Mark A. Funk, 492 S.W.3d 586, 2016 Mo. LEXIS 206, 2016 WL 3549594 (Mo. 2016).

Opinions

Laura Denvir Stith, Judge

The Missouri Real Estate Appraisers Commission (“Commission”) sought review of the Administrative Hearing Commission’s (“AHC”) decision awarding attorney’s fees to Mark Funk under section 536.0871 for fees he incurred as the prevailing party in the underlying civil action arising from the Commission’s denial of his application for certification as a state-certified appraiser. The AHC awarded the fees based on its determination that the Commission’s decision to appeal the AHC’s grant of appraiser certification to Mr. Funk was. not substantially justified because a court is required to defer to the AHC’s factual and credibility findings. The circuit court correctly reversed that decision, and its judgment is affirmed.

A prevailing party in an agency proceeding normally must apply for attorney’s fees from that agency within 30 days of its decision, and the fee request will be held in abeyance until final disposition of the case where, as here, the case is appealed. § 536.087.3 and 4. Because Mr..Funk represented himself when he prevailed before the AHC, he did not incur attorney’s fees at the agency level, however, and the requirement to apply for attorney’s fees with the agency simply has no application. Instead,-he should have applied for fees with the court of appeals, which is the first forum in which he prevailed while represented by an attorney. Because Mr. Funk wrongly submitted his application to the AHC within 30 days of the final and unre-viewable decision rendered by the court of appeals, and only requested attorney’s fees from the court of appeals after that request was rejected by the AHC and the deadline for seeking fees from the court of appeals had expired, he failed to timely request attorney’s fees.

This Court need not consider whether an exception to the 30-day deadline should be recognized in the unique circumstances just described, for, in any event, the application for attorney’s fees should have been denied. The AHC erred in holding that the right to attorney’s fees depends on whether the Commission’s decision to appeal the AHC’s.decision was substantially justified. This Court held in Greenbriar Hills Country Club v. Director of Revenue, 47 S.W.3d 346, 354-58 (Mo. banc 2001), that under section 536.087.3, attorney’s fees will be awarded to the prevailing par[589]*589ty upon timely application unless the state’s position in denying relief based on the record in the initial agency proceeding is shown to be substantially justified. Here, the record shows that the Commission’s position in the original proceeding was reasonably based on fact and law and was substantially justified. The AHC erred as to the law in considering evidence that was not before the Commission when it made the decision to deny Mr. Funk’s application and in considering whether the Commission should have appealed the AHC’s decision, Those are not the issues that must be decided when determining substantial justification.

/. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case has a lengthy and somewhat tortured procedural history. In January 2007, Mark Funk applied to the Missouri Real Estate Appraisers Commission for state certification as a real estate appraiser pursuant to section 339.513, As a required part of the application, Mr. Funk submitted a log. Among the materials in Mr. Funk’s log were two appraisal reports that Mr. Funk had prepared during 2006.

At the Commission’s request, Mr. Funk met with it to discuss the reports. At that meeting, Commission members questioned Mr. Funk about their concerns as to the adequacy of his two 2006 appraisal reports. The members’ questions focused on whether the reports contained adequate analyses of the leases; why neither report contained an explanátion of the reasoning for the capitalization rate used; and why both reports determined the capitalization rate based on out-of-date data, failed to .use proper units of comparison, lacked information supporting the adjustments made, used inconsistent rental amounts, and lacked other supporting data. Mr. Funk disclosed during the meeting that he actually had based the capitalization rate used in one report on an undisclosed lease of a side property rather than on the data included in the report.

In August 2007, the Commission notified Mr. Funk in writing that it denied his application for state certification. The notice stated that based on his appearance before the Commission, Mr. Funk had “not demonstrated a sufficient knowledge of appropriate appraisal methods and techniques.” The notice also noted numerous deficiencies in Mr. Funk’s 2006 appraisal reports:

[Mr. Funk] failed to correctly apply appraisal techniques that are necessary to producé a credible appraisal .;. failed to adequately analyze, support or develop [Mr. Funk’s] opinions of value-. - The report also did not include sufficient information, explanation or analysis to support [Mr. Funk’s] adjustments or subsequent value consideration.... For example, the Warrensburg Report revealed that [Mr. Funk] failed to adequately or properly complete, support or analyze the sales comparison and income approaches included in the appraisal report. Additionally, {Mr. Funk] also failed to adequately or properly analyze comparable sales data in the appraisal report. [Mr. Funk] also failed to adequately or properly analyze the current lease(s) arid [his] determination of capitalization appears to be. incorrect_
The Warrensburg report also failed to include sufficient information necessary to allow an intended user to understand the report properly— As a result of the foregoing, the Warrensburg Report was potentially ihisleading .. /‘The War-rensburg report also failed to include sufficient information necessary to- allow an intended user to understand the report properly.

[590]*590The notice finally informed Mr. Funk that the errors‘and deficiencies in the reports he submitted contained multiple violations of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) and gave it cause to deny his application pursuant to numerous statutes and regulations:

• Section 339.532.1, which gives the Commission the authority to “refuse to issue or renew any certificate or license issued pursuant to sections 339.500 to 339.549 for one or any combination of causes stated in subsection 2 of this seetion[.]”
• Section 339.532.2, subdivisions (2), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), and (14), which provides that issuance of a certificate can be refused for multiple reasons the Commission found to be present.2
• Section 339.535, which requires, “State-certified real estate appraisers . . . shall comply with the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice.... ”
• Section 339.511.3, which provides, “Each applicant for licensure as a ... state-certified general real estate, appraiser shall have demonstrated the knowledge and competence, necessary to perform appraisals of residential and other real estate as the Commission may prescribe by rule....”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
492 S.W.3d 586, 2016 Mo. LEXIS 206, 2016 WL 3549594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-real-estate-appraisers-commission-v-mark-a-funk-mo-2016.