Plaza Assocs., Ltd. v. Montgomery Cty. Aud.

2013 Ohio 1373
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 2013
Docket25275
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 Ohio 1373 (Plaza Assocs., Ltd. v. Montgomery Cty. Aud.) 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.

Bluebook
Plaza Assocs., Ltd. v. Montgomery Cty. Aud., 2013 Ohio 1373 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as Plaza Assocs., Ltd. v. Montgomery Cty. Aud., 2013-Ohio-1373.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT MONTGOMERY COUNTY

PLAZA ASSOCIATES LTD. : : Appellate Case No. 25275 Plaintiff-Appellant : : Trial Court Case No. 2010-CV-8210 v. : : MONTGOMERY COUNTY AUDITOR, : (Civil Appeal from et al. : (Common Pleas Court) : Defendant-Appellees : : ...........

OPINION

Rendered on the 5th day of April, 2013.

...........

DAVID M. RICKERT, Atty. Reg. #0010483, Dunlevey Mahan & Furry, 110 North Main Street, Suite 1000, Dayton, Ohio 45402-9837 Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant, Plaza Associates Ltd.

MATHIAS H. HECK, JR., by LAURA G. MARIANA, Atty. Reg. #0063204, Montgomery County Prosecutor’s Office, Appellate Division, 301 West Third Street, Post Office Box 972, Dayton, Ohio 45422 Attorney for Defendant-Appellees, Montgomery County Auditor and Montgomery County Board of Revision

DEREK HAGGERTY, Atty. Reg. #0086312, and JAMES STUCKO, JR., Atty. Reg. #0060964, Scott, Scriven & Wahoff, LLP, 50 West Broad Street, Suite 2600, Columbus, Ohio 43215 Attorneys for Defendant-Appellee, Miamisburg City School District Board of Education .............

HALL, J.

{¶ 1} This case concerns the 2009 value for tax purposes of the Holiday Inn Dayton

Mall, located in Miamisburg, Ohio, in Montgomery County. 1 The Montgomery County

Auditor had determined that the true market value of this property for 2009 tax purposes was

$5,434,170.00. Appellant filed a complaint contesting the auditor’s valuation with the

Montgomery County Board of Revision. Evidence was presented from an appraiser hired by

the appellant that valued the property at only $2.6 million. However, there was also evidence

that the property was being marketed by appellant for the price of $5,500,000.00. The county

Board of Revision valued the property at $4,890,000. The trial court concluded that the

appraisal was not probative evidence of the hotel’s value and adopted the value determined by

the board. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by rejecting the appraisal

and adopting the board’s determination of value. We affirm.

I. Background

{¶ 2} For 2009, the county auditor appraised the hotel’s value as $5,434,170. The

appellant, the hotel’s owner, Plaza Associates Ltd., filed a complaint against valuation,

claiming that the value of the hotel was only $2 million. The appellant hired an appraiser,

Marshall Brulez, from the commercial real estate services firm CB Richard Ellis, to appraise

the hotel. Brulez pegged the hotel’s 2009 value for tax purposes at $2.6 million. The appellant

amended its complaint to match this value.

1 The property sits in the Miamisburg City School District. The district’s board of education and the auditor are the appellees. [Cite as Plaza Assocs., Ltd. v. Montgomery Cty. Aud., 2013-Ohio-1373.] {¶ 3} A hearing was held before the Board of Revision. The appellant presented the

appraisal–Brulez’s testimony and his written appraisal report. The appellant also presented the

testimony of the hotel’s manager, Ron Monte,2 who testified that the hotel’s vacancy rate had

been increasing in recent years. The record contains notes from the Board of Revision stating,

“Appraisal is not considered due to above concerns. Value reduced to account for additional

vacancy.” The “above concerns” noted were that the appraiser only visited the property on the

day of the hearing, after preparation of his report; the property was “Marketed currently at

$5,500,000"; “Income & Expense blended bet actual & market data”; and “only 2 sale comps

were in Ohio.” The Board of Revision reduced the hotel’s value to $4,890,000.

{¶ 4} The appellant appealed the board’s value determination to the trial court,

which did not take additional evidence. The court rejected the appraisal, referring to the same

reasons identified by the board, and concluded that “the appraisal submitted by Appellant is

not probative evidence of (sic) that true value of the property differs from that set by the Board

of Revision.” Noting that the Board of Revision had already lowered the value to account for

the hotel manager’s low-vacancy-rate testimony, the trial court adopted the board’s value

determination.

II. Review of the Alleged Error

{¶ 5} In the sole assignment of error, the appellant alleges that the trial court erred

by rejecting the appraisal and by adopting the Board of Revision’s value determination.

A. The Rejection of the Appraisal

{¶ 6} Brulez is the managing director of CB Richard Ellis’s Michigan office and is

2 The trial court’s decision spells the manager’s last name this way. But in the hearing transcript it is spelled “Monty.” 4

licensed in Ohio as a real-estate appraiser. He testified that he has been appraising hotels

“almost since the beginning of [his] career in the mid ‘80s.” (Tr. 6). Helping Brulez was Eran

Singer. Singer is a senior real-estate analyst and appraiser and, though not licensed in Ohio, is

licensed in Michigan as a real-estate appraiser. Brulez testified that Singer did the primary

research for the appraisal. Brulez also said that he and Singer “specialize in doing hotels.”

(Id.).

{¶ 7} The “Self Contained Appraisal Report” is signed by both Brulez and Singer

and consists of 85 pages plus seven addenda that contain supporting documents and reports.

The introduction states that the appraisal is intended to be used in assessing the 2009 value of

the hotel’s real estate for tax purposes. The report notes that the hotel has not sold recently but

that in September 2008 a contract was signed to purchase the hotel for $5.4 million, though

the sale did not go through. Following the introduction are 20 photographs taken of the hotel’s

inside and outside. Then the report presents the analysis of several factors that affect the

hotel’s value: the Dayton area (an economic survey of the Dayton metro area as of October

2008); the hotel’s neighborhood; the hotel market in the Dayton area and nationally (citing

historical trends reports that examine the hotel and five other Dayton-area hotels that compete

with it, showing trends in the hotels’ occupancy rate, average daily rate, revenue per available

room, supply, demand, and revenue); the physical site; improvements; zoning; tax and

assessments; and the highest and best use of the property. The report then discusses the two

relevant approaches to hotel valuation–the income-capitalization approach and the

sales-comparison approach.

{¶ 8} The report explains that the income-capitalization approach “reflects the 5

subject’s income-producing capabilities.” (Appraisal Report, at 43). This approach estimates

an income-producing property’s value by converting its future income into a value. The

conversion is done by capitalizing the property’s net income. The analysis relies heavily on a

property’s operating data–its income and expenses. Here, the operating data used in the

analysis came from the hotel manager, who testified that he gave Brulez reports that contained

this data. The manager further testified that the information in the reports is accurate. The

income-capitalization analysis concludes that the hotel’s 2009 value is $2.6 million.3

{¶ 9} The sale-comparison approach, explains the report, uses “sales of comparable

properties, adjusted for differences, to indicate a value for the subject.” (Id. at 42).

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