SHR St. Francis, LLC v. City and County of San Francisco

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 2023
DocketA163847
StatusPublished

This text of SHR St. Francis, LLC v. City and County of San Francisco (SHR St. Francis, LLC v. City and County of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SHR St. Francis, LLC v. City and County of San Francisco, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 8/17/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

SHR ST. FRANCIS, LLC, et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A163847 v. CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN (City & County of San Francisco FRANCISCO, Super. Ct. No. CGC-20-582772) Defendant and Respondent.

In 2015, there was a change in ownership of the Westin St. Francis, a luxury hotel located in defendant and respondent City and County of San Francisco (San Francisco or City), triggering a reassessment for property tax purposes. To assess the taxable value of the hotel, the San Francisco Assessor (Assessor) used the income approach—which “ ‘rests upon the assumption that in an open market a willing buyer of the property would pay a willing seller an amount approximately equal to the present value of the future income to be derived from the property.’ ” (Olen Commercial Realty Corp. v. County of Orange (2005) 126 Cal.App.4th 1441, 1446.) The approach required the Assessor to “estimate[] the future income stream a prospective purchaser could expect to receive from the enterprise [operated on the property] and then discount[] that amount to a present value by use of a capitalization rate.” (GTE Sprint Communications Corp. v. County of Alameda (1994) 26 Cal.App.4th 992, 996 (GTE Sprint).)

1 Plaintiffs and appellants SHR St. Francis, LLC, and Strategic Hotels and Resorts, LLC (Strategic) (collectively, the Strategic Plaintiffs), the owners of the hotel, challenged the new assessment in an appeal to the San Francisco Assessment Appeals Board (Board). After adjusting the capitalization rate, the Board largely upheld the new assessment. The Strategic Plaintiffs now contend the assessed value of the hotel is too high because it improperly subsumes the value of four nontaxable, intangible assets: (1) the hotel’s management agreement; (2) income from guests who cancel their reservations (cancellations), do not show up for their reservations (no shows), or leave the hotel before their reservation is over (attrition) (collectively, cancellation/no show/attrition income); (3) in-room movies; and (4) guest laundry services. The City counters that the assessed value is correct because its deduction of the fees or expenses associated with the asset from the hotel’s future income stream fully removed that asset’s value from the assessed value, because the asset is taxable as an intangible attribute of the property, or because the asset did not generate any excludable income. We find that the method used by the City to exclude the value of nontaxable, intangible assets from the assessed value of the hotel—i.e., the deduction of fees or expenses associated with the asset from the hotel’s future income stream—is legally incorrect. As a result, the assessed value of the hotel improperly subsumed the value of the management agreement, in-room movies, and guest laundry services. We, however, find that the assessed value properly included the cancellation/no show/attrition income because that asset is a taxable attribute of the property. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part and remand for a redetermination of the taxable value of the hotel.

2 BACKGROUND The Westin St. Francis is the third largest hotel in San Francisco. It has 1,195 rooms and is located in Union Square. The hotel consists of two buildings on two lots. The first building is 14 stories and was built in 1904; the second building is 31 stories and was built in 1972. The Westin Hotel Company (Company) operates the hotel pursuant to a management agreement. Under that agreement, the Company, among other things, manages and maintains the hotel, handles all personnel and employment matters, provides advertising and promotional services, and provides and manages all computer services, including reservations. In return for those services, the Company receives a base management fee and an incentive management fee (collectively, the management fees). In addition to renting its rooms, the Westin St. Francis generates income from several other sources. As relevant here, the hotel receives income from guest cancellations, no shows, and attrition. The hotel also profits from in-room movies and guest laundry services provided by third party vendors to its guests. In December 2015, BRE Diamond Hotel LLC, a subsidiary of Blackstone, purchased Strategic, the owner of the Westin St. Francis and other luxury hotels. The transaction resulted in a change in ownership, triggering a reassessment by the Assessor, who assessed the hotel’s value at approximately $795 million. The Strategic Plaintiffs appealed this assessment to the Board, contending the Assessor improperly subsumed the value of four nontaxable, intangible assets into the taxable value of the hotel: (1) the management agreement; (2) cancellation/no show/attrition income; (3) in-room movies; and (4) guest laundry services. According to the Strategic Plaintiffs, the Assessor

3 should have deducted the net income generated by each of those assets from the future income stream used to value the hotel.1 The Board disagreed, finding that “[t]he deductions on the operating statement already accounted for all intangibles.” First, the Board found that deduction of the management fees fully removed the “value” of the “management services.” Second, the Board found that the cancellation/no show/attrition income was taxable because it “is similar to income derived from guests who completed their stays at the hotel.” And to the extent that income was not taxable, it was accounted for through “existing deductions.” Third, the Board found that in-room movies are a taxable asset because the income from those movies is “just an incidental component of the income from the rooms themselves.” Finally, the Board found that guest laundry services are a taxable asset because they are “a normal part of operating a hotel of the caliber of the Westin” St. Francis and because the income from those services is “no different from the income from room reservations.” The Board did, however, increase the capitalization rate from five percent to 5.25 percent to account for “comparable sales” and “to further account for the value of the intangibles.” This reduced the taxable value of the hotel to approximately $785 million. The Strategic Plaintiffs then filed a verified complaint for refund, alleging that the City failed to remove from the assessed value of the hotel the full value of the same four intangible assets they had identified in their appeal to the Board. The complaint sought a refund of “property taxes paid”

1 The Strategic Plaintiffs argued that the net profit generated from the

management agreement equaled 20 percent of the management fees. It also calculated the cancellation/no show/attrition income as $545,000, and the net profits generated from in-room movies and guest laundry services as $196,065 and $533,600, respectively.

4 and a remand to the Board “to determine the assessed value of only the tangible taxable property.” The trial court upheld the Board’s determination. In rejecting any further deductions for the value of the management agreement beyond the management fees, the court found that the Strategic Plaintiffs did not produce credible evidence that the assessment improperly subsumed any portion of the fair market value of that agreement. As to the cancellation/no show/attrition income, the court found that this income, like the “income from guests who complete[] their stays,” is “derived from the real property” and therefore taxable. Finally, the court agreed with the Board that income from in-room movies and guest laundry services is no different than income from room reservations and is therefore taxable. The Strategic Plaintiffs timely appealed. DISCUSSION A. Standard of Review “The proper scope of review of assessment decisions is well established.

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SHR St. Francis, LLC v. City and County of San Francisco, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shr-st-francis-llc-v-city-and-county-of-san-francisco-calctapp-2023.