Shoosmith Bros. v. County of Chesterfield

601 S.E.2d 641, 268 Va. 241, 2004 Va. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 17, 2004
DocketRecord 032572.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 601 S.E.2d 641 (Shoosmith Bros. v. County of Chesterfield) 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
Shoosmith Bros. v. County of Chesterfield, 601 S.E.2d 641, 268 Va. 241, 2004 Va. LEXIS 125 (Va. 2004).

Opinion

LACY, Justice.

In this appeal, we consider whether the trial court erred in sustaining the County's assessment of real property operated as a landfill.

I.

Shoosmith Brothers, Inc. (Shoosmith) owns a 1,163 acre parcel of land in Chesterfield County. Although the parcel is designated as a single tax parcel for real estate taxation purposes, the parcel is divided into separate tracts based on the use of those tracts to determine its fair market value.

For the past 27 years Shoosmith has used 200 acres of the parcel as a sanitary landfill under a conditional use permit Shoosmith obtained from the County and a Solid Waste Facility Permit it obtained from the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. In 1993, the County applied the income capitalization method (income method) of assessment to the landfill property and assessed the 200 acres at a fair market value of $12,987,600. The 1993 valuation has remained constant and was the assessed value of the landfill for the 2001 tax year.

In March 2001, Shoosmith filed an Application for Review of the Assessment of the landfill property asserting that the property was not assessed at its fair market value because "business income [was] used rather than the real estate's rental income to estimate real estate value." Following a hearing, the Board of Equalization upheld the County's use of the income method and the 2001 assessment of $19,859,935 for the entire 1,163-acre parcel. Shoosmith appealed that decision to the circuit court, claiming the County improperly assessed the 200-acre landfill property.

At trial, Shoosmith's expert witness, Ivo H. Romenesko, testified that, in his opinion, the County's assessment included the value of the property and of Shoosmith's ongoing landfill business, which meant the County was assessing the value of the permits. According to Romenesko, the fair market value of the landfill property should be based on the value of the land without the permits. To determine the proper value of the 200 acres, Romenesko examined the sale of four properties zoned agricultural or residential which Romenesko considered comparable and concluded that the value of the landfill property was approximately $5,000 per acre or $1,000,000. 1

The County's Commercial and Industrial Appraisal Supervisor, Jeffrey Overbey, testified that he applied the income method of assessment, although it was "not the only approach," because it was "the preferred approach and the most accurate approach." He testified that he did not consider the income method as an appraisal of a "going concern," and that, while the state and county permits affected the value of the property, the permits were not separately valued for real estate purposes. Overbey testified that income-producing property such as a landfill is "bought and sold based on the income stream that it generates" and that the income method of assessment rather than the cost method is preferable. He also stated that the sales of undeveloped agricultural or residential land that Shoosmith's expert advanced were not comparable sales because their values were not indicative of the market value of income-producing property.

Overbey explained that, after determining that the highest and best use of the property was that of a landfill, he conducted the assessment following the methodology prescribed in an article styled "Appraisal of Sanitary Landfills," by Robert L. Foreman, MAI, SRPA, a professional real estate appraiser, which appears as Chapter 50 of the third edition of the Encyclopedia of Real Estate Appraising at pages 1077-1092 (Edith J. Friedman, ed., 1978) (Foreman article).

*643 The Foreman article stated that "[t]he only appropriate method of appraising a sanitary landfill is to arrive at the present worth of the income stream ... [plus] the present worth of the reversion after the site has been filled" and that "[s]ophisticated assessing agencies" appraise a landfill on this basis. Id. at 1083, 1085.

The methodology set out in the Foreman article requires determining the annual gross income of the landfill property, deducting the costs expended to produce the income to determine the "net income" generated by the real estate, projecting the net income for the useful life of the landfill property, and discounting the projected income stream to the present value of the real estate by using a discount rate. Id. at 1083. Applying this formula, Overbey estimated the annual gross income of the landfill property at $13,125,000 and applied an estimated costs expended factor of 75.2%, which resulted in an estimated net income of $3,250,000. 2 Overbey then projected the net income over the remaining life of the landfill, approximately 25 years, and applied a 25% discount rate. Overbey assessed the value of the 200 acres at $12,987,600.

J. Brian Bergan, a property tax consultant for the Commonwealth who consulted with Chesterfield County on the Shoosmith landfill assessment, testified that the cost and comparable sales methods of assessment were not appropriate for assessing Shoosmith's landfill because there was "no substantiation" for the cost methodology and a lack of comparable sales that could be considered.

Following the hearing, the circuit court concluded that the County had used an appropriate assessment methodology and that the assessment was a "reasonable assessment of the fair market value" of the landfill property. Shoosmith filed an appeal raising a number of assignments of error. We granted the appeal, limited to whether the trial court erred in (1) holding that the County's method of assessment was appropriate and that the County Assessor's assessment of the property was proper; (2) upholding the County's 2001 assessment of the 200-acre landfill property; or (3) refusing to accept Shoosmith's expert testimony of the fair market value of the landfill property.

II.

The parties do not dispute the principles which we apply when reviewing a challenge to a tax assessment. We presume that a county's tax assessment is correct, and the burden is on the taxpayer to rebut the presumption by showing by a clear preponderance of the evidence that its property is assessed at more than fair market value. Shoosmith agrees that it must show that the County committed manifest error or totally disregarded controlling evidence in its determination of fair market value. Tidewater Psychiatric Institute, Inc. v. City of Virginia Beach, 256 Va. 136 , 140-41, 501 S.E.2d 761 , 763-64 (1998).

Shoosmith asserts that the County committed manifest error by using the income method of assessment in assessing the landfill property. Shoosmith's rationale for its position can be summarized as follows. Under Article X, § 2 of the Constitution of Virginia, real estate and tangible personal property shall be assessed and taxed at their fair market value.

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Bluebook (online)
601 S.E.2d 641, 268 Va. 241, 2004 Va. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoosmith-bros-v-county-of-chesterfield-va-2004.