New Orleans Riverwalk Marketplace, LLC v. La. Tax Comm'n

243 So. 3d 1070
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 2018
DocketNO. 2017–CA–0968
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 243 So. 3d 1070 (New Orleans Riverwalk Marketplace, LLC v. La. Tax Comm'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Orleans Riverwalk Marketplace, LLC v. La. Tax Comm'n, 243 So. 3d 1070 (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Judge Daniel L. Dysart

This is an appeal by Erroll G. Williams, the Assessor for the Parish of Orleans *1072("Assessor") of a district court judgment reversing a ruling of the Louisiana Tax Commission ("Tax Commission") which found that plaintiff-appellee, the New Orleans Riverwalk Marketplace, LLC ("Riverwalk"), was not entitled to a refund of taxes it paid in 2012. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the district court's judgment and find that Riverwalk is not entitled to a refund of its 2012 ad valorem tax payment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

According to the Riverwalk's Petition for Judicial Review and Appeal of Decision of the Louisiana Tax Commission (the "Petition") filed on March 17, 2016, the City of New Orleans (the "City") issued tax bill numbered 103100121 to Riverwalk for the 2012 tax year. The bill assessed Riverwalk's property interest as follows: $2,284,450 for the land and $158,670.00 for the improvements. Riverwalk paid the tax bill in January, 2012.

According to the Petition, after the bill was paid, "Riverwalk and the Assessor determined that the land assessed in [the tax bill], and which was assessed and taxed to Riverwalk in the subject tax bill, was actually owned by the Port of New Orleans ["the Port"]."1 Riverwalk maintained that the land was exempt from taxation under the Louisiana Constitution. The Assessor corrected the error and made appropriate adjustments for the year 2013, and for each year thereafter.

On October 20, 2014, Riverwalk requested a refund from the Tax Commission. A hearing on Riverwalk's refund request was held by the Tax Commission on December 8, 2015. The Tax Commission issued its ruling on February 12, 2016, denying Riverwalk's "request for refund of taxes paid in error." Its ruling was based on the "evidence presented by all parties ... and based upon the entirety of the record," and the Tax Commission's finding that "Riverwalk accepted the valuation and withdrew [its] appeal." More particularly, the Tax Commission found as follows:

The request [by the Riverwalk for a refund of the 2012 ad valorem taxes paid to the City] was made timely; however, the request was made subsequent to the withdrawal of an appeal to the Orleans Parish Board of Review.
The Riverwalk appealed to the Board and indicated a total requested assessed value of $1,884,050. T.J. Schoenemann of Thomas Reuters, Inc., a Property Tax Service, represented Riverwalk at the time of the appeal. Mr. Schoenemann formed his value using the income approach, a very reliable approach to value land and improvement as a total. Riverwalk later withdrew the appeal and accepted the assessor's value of $2,273,080.
Mr. Schoenemann's appeal withdrawal states, "Please accept this correspondence as acceptance of the 2012 valuation or assessment number 103100121 and withdrawal of the pending protest ...." Emphasis is given to "acceptance of valuation", not land valuation or improvement valuation, but the acceptance of the 2012 valuation of Assessment Number 103100121.

Riverwalk then filed the instant action in Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans on March 17, 2016, seeking a reversal of the Tax Commission's ruling and further seeking a refund of the taxes it maintains it erroneously paid. Named as defendants in this suit are the Tax Commission; the Assessor; Norman Foster, in his capacity as the City's ex-officio tax collector; and the City.

*1073After briefing by the parties, a hearing was held on the Petition on May 5, 2017. The district court issued a final judgment on May 22, 2017, reversing the Tax Commission's denial of Riverwalk's request for refund, granting Riverwalk's request and ordering Mr. Foster, as the City's tax collector, to refund $369,648.22 to Riverwalk.2

A suspensive appeal was timely taken by the Assessor.

Record on appeal

The record before us includes the following documents (the Administrative Record) and information submitted to the Commission and filed in the record in Civil District Court (listed in date order, where the date is known):

- A November 12, 2012 form 3103.A, Appeal to the Tax Commission, appealing the Board of Review on the assessment of Riverwalk's property. The form lists the Assessor's original fair market value of the improvement at $5,121,200 and the revised fair market value by the Board of Review at $3,000,000.
- A Form 3507 A Claim for Refund of Taxes Paid in Error (undated) indicating that the amount of taxes paid in error on January 17, 2012 was $368,648.22.
- A March 15, 2013 letter from the Assessor to Riverwalk advising that an assessment appeal for the 2013 tax year had been submitted to the Tax Commission and enclosing the Tax Commission 3103.A form and the Assessor's plea document.- A November 11, 2013 letter from the Assessor to Riverwalk advising that an assessment appeal for the 2014 tax year had been submitted to the Commission and enclosing the Commission 3103.A form and the Assessor's plea document.
- A 2014 Appeal to the Tax Commission summarizing the Assessor's fair market value, calculated at $84.13 per square foot (based on comparable sales data and the Board of Review's appraisal) and requesting that the Board of Review reject the request to lower the assessment and to uphold the Commission's 2014 assessment of $2,284,450 on the land and $768,180 on the improvements.
- A July 29, 2014 Tax Commission Decision following a June 3, 2014 hearing at which the Assessor challenged the value of Riverwalk's property; the Tax Commission agreed with the Assessor (in its Form 3103.A, above) that the fair market value for the improvements was $5,121,000 for the 2013 tax year.
- An October 14, 2014 letter from Scott Sonnier, attorney for Riverwalk, to the Commission, requesting a refund because the "taxes were paid on property that was erroneously assessed to the taxpayer." Attached as exhibits to this letter are:
- A City of New Orleans ad valorem tax bill for the year 2012 for $395,345.70;
- A copy of a January 17, 2012 check from Riverwalk paying the City the sum of $395,345.70; and
- A copy of the Orleans Parish Assessor's Office valuation summary for the Riverwalk's property for 2012 through 2014 and reflecting that the assessed value of the land for 2013 and 2014 is $0 (and reflecting a valuation of the land in 2012 of $2,284,450).
- A February 6, 2015 letter from the Assessor to the Commission regarding Riverwalk's request for a refund of the *1074property taxes. The letter noted that the "taxpayer had consistently paid the taxes each year which included the land and building assessments because this allocation reduced the assessment of the building's valuation by 5%. After the property was sold in 2010 to the Howard Hughes Corporation, "[t]he practice of allocating the majority of the building value to the land assessment was obvious because it was common knowledge that the land along the riverfront ...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 So. 3d 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-riverwalk-marketplace-llc-v-la-tax-commn-lactapp-2018.