Residents of Buckingham Springs v. Bucks County Assessment Office

60 A.3d 883, 2013 WL 141643, 2013 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 19
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 14, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 60 A.3d 883 (Residents of Buckingham Springs v. Bucks County Assessment Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Residents of Buckingham Springs v. Bucks County Assessment Office, 60 A.3d 883, 2013 WL 141643, 2013 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 19 (Pa. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEAVITT.

Residents of Buckingham Springs (Taxpayers) appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County (trial court) denying their tax assessment appeal. Taxpayers contend that their properties, which are manufactured houses, have been assessed too high because the real estate appraisal on which the assessment was based included the value of the land. This was improper because Taxpayers do not own the land on which these houses sit. In addition, Taxpayers contend that the judge presiding (Presiding Judge)1 over their appeal should have re-cused even though they declined his offer to do so pre-trial. Concluding that Taxpayers’ contentions lack merit, we affirm.

The record before the trial court on Taxpayers’ challenge to their property assessment was developed primarily by stipulation of the parties. The only taxing district to participate in Taxpayers’ appeal was the Central Bucks School District (School District), which did so by intervention.2 The stipulation established the background to the instant tax appeal.

Taxpayers own 415 manufactured houses located in the Buckingham Springs Development (Buckingham Springs) in Bucks County. Buckingham Springs consists of 157 acres of land, which includes a club house, a swimming pool, and substantial open land graced by ponds and fountains. The land in the development is owned by Buckingham Village, LTD, whose general partner is McKee Management Associates, Inc., which maintains the grounds and provides security, trash removal and snow removal to residents. Taxpayers own their houses but not the lots upon which [885]*885the houses sit. Taxpayers lease their lots from McKee Management. The current monthly lease ranges from $435 to $525 per month, depending on lot size. The land in Buckingham Springs and the improvements thereon is appraised at $2,123,080.

The manufactured houses in Buckingham Springs were sited between 1991 and 1998 and purchased through McKee Management at prices ranging from $80,000 to $125,000, depending on the options chosen by the initial purchasers. The manufacturer transported each house to the site, where it was attached to a concrete foundation and connected to utilities. The purchaser’s ownership of the house is recorded by means of a vehicle title issued by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.

Residents may sell their houses, but their purchasers must be approved by McKee Management and must agree to a one-year lease. A resident’s failure to pay the rent required under the lease could result in his house being removed from Buckingham Springs, but that has never happened.

Taxpayers’ houses have been assessed at values between $12,400 and $17,320, which are based upon fair market appraisals ranging from $125,000 to $180,000. Some houses in Buckingham Springs have sold for more than $180,000. Taxpayers contend that these appraisals are too high because they include the value of the lots on which their houses sit. This is improper, they argue, because Taxpayers do not own those lots. Buckingham Village, LTD is responsible for the real estate taxes on the land, and those taxes make up a part of the monthly lease payment. In effect, Taxpayers believe they are paying the same real estate tax twice. After losing their assessment appeal before the Board of Assessment, Taxpayers appealed to the trial court for de novo review. The trial court took evidence to supplement the stipulation of the parties.

At the hearing before the trial court, Felix Suchora, one of the Taxpayers, testified that approximately six years ago, he paid $214,900 for his home because he liked the location and amenities available in Buckingham Springs. He testified that if he ever has to remove his house from Buckingham Springs, its value will decrease by 50%. He believes that his appraised fair market value of $152,600 should be reduced by 50%.

Another Taxpayer, Marlene Ford, testified that in 2004 she looked at several mobile home parks where the houses ranged in price from $40,000 to $100,000. She bought her home in Buckingham Springs for $187,000 because of the low density placement of the houses and the available amenities. Her home is appraised at $180,000. She opined that this appraisal is too high, noting that a similar property recently sold for $130,000.

Taxpayers also presented the expert testimony of Tracy Kemeter, the owner of a mobile home financing and sales facility. He testified that he used the National Automotive Dealers Association Manufactured Housing Cost Guide (NADA Guide), in part, to opine on the value of Taxpayers’ homes.

Kemeter testified that the cost method, ie., the cost of the property, minus depreciation, plus any improvements, was the best method for appraising the value of a manufactured house. He did not believe the sales approach was appropriate because sales took into account both the value of the house and the value of the lease. Kemeter’s appraisal values were much lower than the County’s. In his opinion, a brand new manufactured house with square footage equal to the largest manu-[886]*886factored house in the development was worth at most $70,000. Accordingly, he opined that the appraisal values of all the properties in Buckingham Springs had been inflated by the County.

Kemeter acknowledged that the NADA Guide distinguishes between manufactured houses that constitute personal property and those used as year-round single-family dwellings. Specifically, the NADA Guide provides that a manufactured house that is not moved from an original delivery site has a physical life span similar to a site-built home; accordingly, its value is best measured by a real estate physical appraisal. The NADA Guide also provides that a manufactured house that is not moved can appreciate in value. Nevertheless, Kemeter dismissed the notion that the manufactured houses in Buckingham Springs could appreciate in value.

In response, the School District presented the expert testimony of George Seng-piel, a certified real estate appraiser. He was engaged by the School District to determine the value of Taxpayers’ houses without regard to the value of the land thereunder. He considered the cost approach, comparable sales approach and the income approach. He concluded that the comparable sales approach was the best approach for valuing the properties.

Sengpiel looked at the 70 sales within Buckingham Springs that had taken place in the preceding three-year period. Sales ranged in price from $70,000 to $220,000. At the time he did his work, 34 properties were listed for sale, with asking prices ranging from $78,000 to $220,000. Seng-piel stated that value is measured by supply and demand; stated otherwise, the fair market value is what a willing buyer will pay. After examining similar developments, he determined that, had Taxpayers’ properties included the house and land, they would have a market value of $275,000 to $375,000. This comparison was based on sales in an age-restricted community, with similar-sized slab homes, also located in Bucks County.

Sengpiel noted that the County’s records showed that each of Taxpayers’ properties had a land assessment of zero. Sengpiel explained that the location of any house will affect its fair market value; indeed, location is one of the most important elements in a valuation. This is why two identical houses in two different locations may have very different values.

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60 A.3d 883, 2013 WL 141643, 2013 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/residents-of-buckingham-springs-v-bucks-county-assessment-office-pacommwct-2013.