Pinelake Housing Cooperative v. City of Ann Arbor

406 N.W.2d 832, 159 Mich. App. 208, 1987 Mich. App. LEXIS 2396
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1987
DocketDocket 85376
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 406 N.W.2d 832 (Pinelake Housing Cooperative v. City of Ann Arbor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinelake Housing Cooperative v. City of Ann Arbor, 406 N.W.2d 832, 159 Mich. App. 208, 1987 Mich. App. LEXIS 2396 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

This appeal involves consideration of the method adopted by the Tax Tribunal to assess the value of two low-income, government-subsidized housing projects for property tax purposes.

Petitioners, Pinelake Housing Cooperative and Forest Hills Housing Cooperative, are both located in the City of Ann Arbor, which is the respondent in this matter. Pinelake contests its tax assessments for 1981, 1982, and 1983. Forest Hills disputes its assessments for 1981, 1982, 1983, and 1984. Respondent contends that the true cash value of the projects is roughly three times the amount which the petitioners assert is the proper valuation for each of the tax years in question.

Pinelake and Forest Hills received separate hearings before a Tax Tribunal hearing officer. With the exceptions of the values derived, the hearings were virtually identical. The attorneys, the experts, and their propounded theories were [211]*211the same. By agreement of all of the parties, the hearing officer authored a single proposed judgment. From that point, the cases have been consolidated.

i

Pinelake is a federally-regulated low-income housing cooperative, consisting of 129 units. When built in 1975, the original mortgage balance was $2,871,900, payable at seven percent interest over forty years, and represented one hundred percent of the property’s cost. The mortgage was guaranteed by the federal government through the Department of Housing and Urban Development pursuant to §236 of the National Housing Act of 1959, as amended, 12 USC 1715z-l. The most significant aspect of hud’s participation in the project is an "interest-reduction” subsidy, which pays all except one percent of the interest due on the mortgage note.

The cooperative association contracted for the construction of the complex and owns the buildings and the land. Residents gained the right to possess units by purchasing membership certificates. To qualify as a member, an individual’s income must be below limits set by hud.

A membership certificate conveys some indicia of ownership to the occupants. The conveyed interest is analogous to owning a share in a corporation; a member does not own the specific unit in which he lives, but rather an intangible portion of the whole.

When a member leaves the co-op, he may transfer his interest to another person who meets the income requirement and other requirements of the co-op. However, members are not free to set their own price. Rather, the bylaws of the cooperative [212]*212establish the "transfer value.” Originally, the transfer value was to have increased annually at a fixed rate after the fourth year of the project. However, sometime between 1979 and 1981, hud granted Pinelake’s request to freeze the transfer value at a range between $688 and $820, depending on apartment size.

Another indicium of ownership is that the members gain some measure of control in the management of the cooperative. They can vote for directors and can run for such offices. The board of directors makes management and administrative decisions within the limits of the regulatory agreement with hud. However, control ultimately lies in the hands of hud, which reviews the co-op’s budget line by line and has power to reject any portion of it, to increase the percentage of income which a member must pay as monthly "carrying charges” (what the members pay instead of rent), to freeze the transfer value of a membership, and to require the co-op to make increased payments to reserves and so forth.

The carrying charges are applied to the co-op’s operating expenses and the mortgage. The carrying charges are adjusted annually and are set at a level sufficient to cover the operating expenses and the co-op’s obligation on the one percent mortgage. The charges are not designed to generate any "profit.” If expenses increase or decrease, the carrying charges are adjusted in the following year’s budget.

Despite the substantial federal subsidy, Pinelake is not without problems. As previously mentioned, the transfer value of its memberships was frozen sometime between 1979 and 1981 at the request of the cooperative at a range of between $688 and $820. The freeze was necessitated by the fact that Pinelake was having trouble finding low-income [213]*213individuals to fill vacancies who had sufficient cash on hand to pay both the membership fee (transfer value) and the first month’s carrying charge. Together . these amounts were over $1,000 in all cases. In 1980, Pinelake lost between two percent and three percent of its potential income due to vacancies. In 1981, vacancy loss rose to 9.5 percent. In 1982, vacancy loss represented 11.8 percent. Pinelake also experienced collection problems during those years. However, collection losses were smaller than vacancy losses.

Verna Spath, the co-op’s president, testified that "very, very frequently” the residents do not give the required sixty-days notice of their intention to leave but instead simply stop paying the monthly carrying charge. By the time the residents move, the past due carrying charges plus the amount charged for damage to the unit "almost always” exceeds the transfer value of the membership.

Brady Caputo, the co-op’s manager, testified that it costs an average of $1,500 to rehabilitate a unit after a member moves out. He also testified that, since the project was nine years old, it was beginning to require large maintenance expenditures. The tile floor and carpeting in the units needed to be replaced. The porches and sidewalks were in need of repair. The exterior needed repainting. Refrigerators were beginning to wear out.

Laurence Allen, petitioners’ appraiser, testified that Pinelake was "generally in poor condition.”

Steven Breshgold, the co-op’s accountant, testified that the co-op was one month behind in paying bills.

ii

Forest Hills is a similar but larger (306 units) cooperative housing project, subject to the same [214]*214regulations. It was developed in five phases. The first occupants moved in in 1971. The original amount of the five mortgages totaled $6,477,800.

The makeup of Forest Hills’ member population is somewhat different than that of Pinelake’s. While eighty percent of the units at Pinelake were occupied by single-parent families, Forest Hills has a "high rate of couple occupants.” Laurence Allen, petitioners’ appraiser, testified that he considered Forest Hills to be superior to Pinelake in both location and "property.”

Unlike Pinelake, at the time of the hearing, Forest Hills had not frozen the transfer value of its membership. However, Forest Hills permits new members to initially pay only fifty percent of the membership fee, with the balance being paid off in installments. Even so, Forest Hills found that the high initial cash payment was burdensome and was in the process of seeking approval from hud to freeze the transfer value. Forest Hills’ vacancy losses for both 1980 and 1981 were less than one percent. Vacancy losses were 5.9 percent for 1982 and 4.5 percent for 1983.

Terry Lewis, Forest Hills’ president, testified that the co-op repurchases the membership when a resident leaves. She testified that repurchases were necessary because the co-op had a one-third annual turnover rate. She did not believe memberships would be marketable if new members were not guaranteed a buyer at resale.

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Pinelake Housing Cooperative v. City of Ann Arbor
406 N.W.2d 832 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
406 N.W.2d 832, 159 Mich. App. 208, 1987 Mich. App. LEXIS 2396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinelake-housing-cooperative-v-city-of-ann-arbor-michctapp-1987.