Riverside Owner, LLC v. City of Richmond

711 S.E.2d 533, 282 Va. 62, 2011 Va. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 9, 2011
Docket100347
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 711 S.E.2d 533 (Riverside Owner, LLC v. City of Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riverside Owner, LLC v. City of Richmond, 711 S.E.2d 533, 282 Va. 62, 2011 Va. LEXIS 136 (Va. 2011).

Opinion

711 S.E.2d 533 (2011)
282 Va. 62

RIVERSIDE OWNER, L.L.C., et al.
v.
CITY OF RICHMOND.
City of Richmond
v.
Riverside Owner, L.L.C., et al.

Record Nos. 100347, 100703.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

June 9, 2011.

*534 Joshua D. Heslinga (Bradfute W. Davenport, Jr.; Russell V. Palmore, Jr., Richmond; Troutman Sanders, on briefs), for Riverside Owner, L.L.C., et al.

Debra L. Mallory, Colonial Heights (Allen L. Jackson, City Attorney; Diana R. Gaston, Assistant City Attorney; Tracy L. Taliaferro; Taliaferro & Mallory, Colonial Heights, on briefs), for City of Richmond.

Present: KINSER, C.J., LEMONS, GOODWYN, MILLETTE, and MIMS, JJ., and RUSSELL and KOONTZ, S.JJ.

OPINION BY Justice LEROY F. MILLETTE, JR.

The City of Richmond's Tax Abatement for Rehabilitated Real Estate Program (Program) provides a partial exemption from real estate taxes for qualifying rehabilitated property. Richmond City Code § 27-83(a).[1] To *535 qualify for a partial exemption, a property must increase in value by at least 40 percent because of rehabilitation no later than "December 31 of the third calendar year following the year in which [its owner's] application [for the Program] is submitted." City Code § 27-83(b). The amount of the partial exemption is the difference between the property's "base value" (assessed value before rehabilitation) and its "initial rehabilitated assessed value." City Code § 27-83(b)-(c), (g).

Since 1981, the City Assessor's office has determined a property's initial rehabilitated assessed value, not as of the date its rehabilitation is completed, but as of the date its owner's application for the Program is submitted. The principal question presented by these consolidated appeals is whether that policy is consistent with the requirements of City Code § 27-83 and its enabling statute, Code § 58.1-3221.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2000, City officials and a delegation of business leaders met with representatives of The Cordish Companies, a real estate development company, to propose several sites along the City's historic Canal Walk for rehabilitation. After inspecting the proposed sites, Cordish selected a site located on Brown's Island, which consisted of two dilapidated power plants. It then formed Richmond Power Plant, LLC to rehabilitate the Brown's Island site.

After nearly two years of negotiations, the City and Richmond Power Plant entered into a development agreement (Agreement) in 2003. The Agreement called for the construction of, among other things, a mixed-use building with a parking garage (Property). In exchange for Richmond Power Plant's rehabilitation of the power plants, the City promised, among other things, that "the [Property] shall qualify for the full benefit of the [Program]."

Richmond Power Plant applied for the Program in 2002. At that time, the City Assessor's office determined that the power plants each had a base value of $500. Construction on the Property began in 2003 and was completed two years later at a cost of approximately $63.8 million.

In August 2005, the Property was sold to Riverside Owner, L.L.C. for $85 million. One month later, the City Assessor's office conducted its final inspection of the Property and determined that, based on the cost of the rehabilitation, its office space had a value of $63.8 million. In May 2006, the City Assessor's office revised that amount to roughly $45.2 million for purposes of the Program. The difference in the two amounts was due to the application of the "Chandler policy."

In 1981, former City Assessor Richard A. Chandler established a new policy for determining a property's initial rehabilitated assessed value under the Program. Pursuant to the policy, he explained in an internal memorandum, "[t]he final estimate of value for rehabilitation credit will be determined as of the date of the application and computed only on the information which was available at the time the base value was established." The purpose of the policy, he further explained, was "to eliminate from the final estimate of value any enhancement created by something other than rehabilitation or physical improvement." The policy was not published in the Program's materials until 2006.

So, in accordance with the Chandler policy, the City Assessor's office took the value of the Property's office space as of 2005, when the rehabilitation was completed, and backdated it to 2002, when the Property's former owner, Richmond Power Plant, applied for the program.[2] Because of this backdating, the value of the office space was reduced from $63.8 million to approximately $45.2 million for purposes of the Program.

When Riverside Owner received its 2006 real estate tax bill for the Property, it discovered that it had not been awarded a partial exemption under the Program. The City later acknowledged that error and issued a revised tax bill that included a partial exemption based on the backdated value called for by the Chandler policy. Disagreeing with *536 that value, Riverside Owner paid the revised tax bill under protest and appealed to the City Assessor, challenging the Chandler policy. The City Assessor denied the appeal, concluding that the Chandler policy was consistent with Code § 58.1-3221 and City Code § 27-83, and was therefore "correct and legal."

In 2008, Riverside Owner and the Property's anchor tenant, Troutman Sanders LLP (collectively, Taxpayers), filed a "Complaint and Application for Relief from Erroneous Assessments of Taxes Upon Real Property" (Application), pursuant to Code § 58.1-3984. Among other things, they alleged that the Chandler policy was "ultra vires and an improper usurpation of legislative power by the City Assessor, and such policy [was] an improper methodology for setting the assessed value of rehabilitated improvements, and otherwise illegal." They sought a refund of the excess taxes that they paid because of the application of the Chandler policy, interest on the overpayments, and attorney's fees.

The circuit court, in accordance with Code § 58.1-3984, held a hearing on the Taxpayers' Application. Because the Taxpayers and the City agreed on the post-rehabilitation values of the Property's office and retail spaces if the Chandler policy were applied and if it were not, the sole issue before the circuit court was whether the policy was "not uniform in its application, or . . . otherwise invalid or illegal." Id. During the hearing, the Taxpayers presented the testimony of several witnesses, including Robert P. Englander, Jr., who, over the City's objection, was qualified as an "expert on real estate valuation and development and on the application of the [Program] to commercial and mixed use properties."

In a letter opinion, the circuit court held that the Chandler policy "depart[ed] from the requirement[s]" of Code § 58.1-3221 and City Code § 27-83, because it "relie[d] on values other than assessed ones" to determine the amount of the partial exemption "due to the [Taxpayers]."[3] Accordingly, the circuit court ruled in the Taxpayers' favor.

At a later hearing on the final order, the Taxpayers reminded the circuit court that it had not yet ruled on their claim for attorney's fees and asked that it do so. They argued that, as the prevailing party, they were entitled to attorney's fees under Section 9.5 of the Agreement. The circuit court disagreed, finding that the case was not brought pursuant to the Agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
711 S.E.2d 533, 282 Va. 62, 2011 Va. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riverside-owner-llc-v-city-of-richmond-va-2011.