Otr v. Brd. of Rev. of Hamilton C., Ohio, Unpublished Decision (6-30-2000)
This text of Otr v. Brd. of Rev. of Hamilton C., Ohio, Unpublished Decision (6-30-2000) (Otr v. Brd. of Rev. of Hamilton C., Ohio, Unpublished Decision (6-30-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
On April 1, 1997, OTR became the sole owner of the property when it purchased ATDC's thirty-percent interest for $18,300,000. Before the closing date of the purchase, however, ATDC filed a complaint with the county auditor seeking a reduction in the assessed value of the property for the 1996 tax year. Pointing to the purchase price in the pending transaction, ATDC maintained that the property's assessed value should be reduced from $78,000,029 to $61,000,000.
Following a hearing on ATDC's complaint, the BOR concluded that a reduction in the property's value was not warranted. OTR, having then become the sole owner of the property, appealed the decision to the Board of Tax Appeals (BTA). According to the parties, that appeal has yet to be decided by the BTA.
In March, 1998, OTR filed its own complaint with the BOR, seeking a reduction in the assessed value of the property for the 1997 tax year. OTR's cited justification for this request was the same as that cited the previous year by ATDC: the $18,300,000 purchase price for the one-third interest in the property. Without reviewing its merits, the BOR dismissed OTR's complaint, concluding that R.C.
Pursuant to R.C.
No person * * * shall file a complaint against the valuation * * * of any parcel * * * if it filed a complaint against valuation * * * of that parcel for any prior tax year in the same interim period, unless the person * * * alleges that the valuation * * * should be changed due to one or more of the following circumstances * * * and that the circumstances were not taken into consideration with respect to the prior complaint:
The property was sold in an arm's length transaction, as described in section
5713.03 of the Revised Code;
The property lost value due to some casualty;
Substantial improvement was added to the property;
An increase or decrease of at least fifteen percent in the property's occupancy has had a substantial economic impact on the property.
In the instant case, it was undisputed that the relevant triennium or interim period was 1996, 1997, and 1998. It was also undisputed that two complaints, both citing the 1997 purchase as the proposed basis for reducing the property's value, were filed within the triennium. Accordingly, the only issues requiring determination by the trial court were (1) whether OTR was the same "person" that had filed the 1996 complaint; and (2) whether the 1997 purchase was considered with respect to ATDC's original complaint.
Before the trial court, OTR argued that it was not the same "person" as ATDC and that R.C.
Having reviewed the record, we are unable to conclude that the trial court acted so unreasonably, arbitrarily, or unconscionably as to have abused its discretion in determining that OTR had standing to challenge the auditor's 1997 valuation of its property.1 Accordingly, we overrule the first assignment of error.
In the second assignment of error, appellants assert that the trial court erred in failing to permit them to supplement the record with the transcript of the proceedings before the BTA on the 1996 complaint. Appellants correctly note that R.C.
____________________ Per Curiam
Gorman, P.J., Sundermann and Winkler, JJ.
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Otr v. Brd. of Rev. of Hamilton C., Ohio, Unpublished Decision (6-30-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otr-v-brd-of-rev-of-hamilton-c-ohio-unpublished-decision-6-30-2000-ohioctapp-2000.