Questar Pipeline Co. v. Utah State Tax Commission

850 P.2d 1175, 210 Utah Adv. Rep. 27, 1993 Utah LEXIS 71, 1993 WL 112356
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1993
Docket900592
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 850 P.2d 1175 (Questar Pipeline Co. v. Utah State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Questar Pipeline Co. v. Utah State Tax Commission, 850 P.2d 1175, 210 Utah Adv. Rep. 27, 1993 Utah LEXIS 71, 1993 WL 112356 (Utah 1993).

Opinion

HOWE, Associate Chief Justice:

Questar Pipeline Company seeks review of a decision of the Utah State Tax Commission assessing the fair market value of Questar’s operating property for 1988 at $296 million.

Questar Pipeline is a Utah corporation engaged in the interstate transportation, sale, and storage of natural gas in Utah, Wyoming, and Colorado. When the 1988 assessment was made, it was a wholly owned subsidiary of Entrada Industries, a wholly owned subsidiary of Questar Corporation whose common stock was publicly traded. Questar Pipeline’s plant and equipment represented approximately 29% of Questar Corporation’s total assets. Its revenues accounted for approximately 33% of the parent corporation’s gross revenues, and its payroll was approximately 20% of Questar Corporation’s total payroll.

In April 1988, the Property Tax Division of the Tax Commission assessed the taxable properties of Questar Pipeline at $300 million. Questar paid taxes based on that assessment under protest and petitioned for a hearing and redetermination of its assessment. Prior to the hearing but after the parties had engaged in discovery, the Division and Questar narrowed the issues by stipulating to the validity of certain formal calculations. They stipulated that if the cost method of appraising was fol *1176 lowed, the fair market value would be $210 million; if the income method was used, $303 million; and if the market (stock and debt) method was used, $312 million. The parties further stipulated that they would not challenge the underlying calculations of each method. Instead, the issue at the hearing would be the reconciliation of these values or the weight to be assigned to each method to arrive at a fair market value for Questar’s property. After hearing expert testimony from both parties, the Tax Commission fixed the fair market value at $296 million.

Both parties agree that our standard of review is governed by Utah Code Ann. § 63-46b-16(4)(g), providing that relief shall be granted on review only if a person seeking judicial review has been substantially injured by agency action that is not supported by “substantial evidence.” The parties further agree that it was the Commission’s task to determine the “fair market value” of the subject property as that term was defined in Utah Code Ann. § 59-2-102(2) 1 at the time of the assessment in April 1988:

“Fair market value” means the amount at which property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell and both having reasonable knowledge of the relevant facts.

It is conceded that there are few, if any, comparable sales of large multistate regulated entities such as Questar, and thus surrogate measures must be used to determine the fair market value.

In its findings of fact, the Commission summarized the position of Questar as follows: A 78.8% weight should be placed upon the cost method evaluation, with 10.6% being placed on each of the other two approaches. When these weights are applied to the stipulated values, the reconciliation renders a result of $231 million as Questar’s value for its property. Questar supported the cost approach primarily because the Federal Energy Regulation Commission (FERC) set the rate base of Ques-tar on the depreciated cost of its facilities.

The position of the Division was summarized in the Commission’s findings of fact as follows: The market and income methods more accurately reflect the conditions of the market than does the cost method favored by Questar, which depends on a mechanical, mathematical weighing that does not reflect the fluctuations and conditions of the actual market. Based on that fact, the Division came up with a correlated value for the properties of $300 million.

The Commission found, based on the evidence before it, that the cost approach was the least reliable and the income and market approaches the most reliable:

The Tax Commission finds that in a case such as this, the market and income approaches to value are more reflective of actual market conditions than is the cost approach to value. This is because the cost approach is generally considered in the appraisal profession as a reliable indicator of value only when sufficient data and conditions are not present for the other two approaches. In this case, there is a more than sufficient amount of data to support a valuation based upon the market and income approaches. While the cost approach may appear to some, in a strict mathematical sense, to be more technically correct, it does not necessarily follow that that approach is also the most reflective of actual market conditions. Market values do not always conform to precise mathematical formulations.

The Commission fixed the reconciled value of Questar’s properties at $296 million.

Questar attacks the Commission’s findings in the form of a number of arguments that we will consider seriatim. First, the findings are assailed on the ground that the record as a whole does not support reliance on the market and income approaches and that rejection of the cost method is not reasonable because any buyer would know that he or she would earn a return only on the rate base fixed by FERC, which is, with minor adjustment, *1177 the same as the result produced by the cost method in this proceeding. While Questar concedes that “cost” is neither dispositive of fair market value nor a cap, it argues that cost must be dealt with in arriving at a value based on the record as a whole.

This attack on the findings requires us to examine the evidence presented to the Commission. Three experts testified for the Division and expressed strong preference for the income and market (stock and debt) approach. Dr. Steve Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University, testified that the stock and debt approach was superior,

giving the objective of attempting to determine the fair market value, because it is a market based indicator whereas the other two are not.... [T]he primary aspect that makes it superior is that it provides an anchor when valuing property ... that’s determined by a consensus of people who are actually putting their own wealth at risk in the market place, buyers and sellers who are actively engaged in the market.

Dr. Hanke emphatically rejected the cost approach, stating that it was “totally unacceptable in principle” and “has nothing to do with what people would pay for an asset and should never be used.” He opined that “there is no causal link between cost and market value.”

Michael Goodwin, an independent fee appraiser, agreed with Dr. Hanke that the stock and debt and income approaches were superior to the cost approach. His opinion was that the “cost indicator is not a very refined indicator of value and it does not have a great deal of reliability in indicating market value.

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Bluebook (online)
850 P.2d 1175, 210 Utah Adv. Rep. 27, 1993 Utah LEXIS 71, 1993 WL 112356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/questar-pipeline-co-v-utah-state-tax-commission-utah-1993.