Southlake Indiana LLC v. Lake County Assessor

CourtIndiana Tax Court
DecidedDecember 8, 2020
Docket18T-TA-30
StatusPublished

This text of Southlake Indiana LLC v. Lake County Assessor (Southlake Indiana LLC v. Lake County Assessor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southlake Indiana LLC v. Lake County Assessor, (Ind. Super. Ct. 2020).

Opinion

ATTORNEYS FOR PETITIONER: ATTORNEYS FOR RESPONDENT: DAVID A. SUESS MARILYN S. MEIGHEN BENJAMIN A. BLAIR ATTORNEY AT LAW FAEGRE DRINKER BIDDLE Carmel, IN & REATH LLP Indianapolis, IN BRIAN A. CUSIMANO ATTORNEY AT LAW Indianapolis, IN ______________________________________________________________________

IN THE INDIANA TAX COURT ______________________________________________________________________ ) SOUTHLAKE INDIANA, LLC, ) FILED ) Petitioner, ) Dec 08 2020, 2:52 pm

) CLERK Indiana Supreme Court v. ) Case No. 18T-TA-00030 Court of Appeals and Tax Court ) LAKE COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Respondent. ) ______________________________________________________________________

ON APPEAL FROM A FINAL DETERMINATION OF THE INDIANA BOARD OF TAX REVIEW

FOR PUBLICATION December 8, 2020

WENTWORTH, J.

Southlake Indiana, LLC has appealed the final determination of the Indiana Board

of Tax Review valuing its real property for the 2011 through 2014 tax years. 1 Upon

review, the Court affirms in part, and remands in part.

1 Substantial portions of the administrative record in this case have been designated as confidential. Consequently, this opinion will provide only that information necessary for the reader to understand its disposition of the issues presented. See IND. ST. ACCESS RULE 9(A)(2)(d) (2020). FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Southlake owns the Southlake Mall, a super-regional shopping mall located in

Hobart, Indiana, that opened in 1974. For purposes of this appeal, the Mall is comprised

of twelve parcels that make up its land, surface parking lots, and retention ponds; the

Mall’s inline retail space and attached JCPenney and Dick’s Sporting Goods stores; a

detached movie theatre, Gander Mountain store, and Firestone store; and several other

freestanding buildings situated on outparcel lots that are used as restaurants, a jewelry

store, and a bank. (See generally Pet’r Pet. Jud. Rev. Fin. Determination Ind. Bd. Tax

Rev. at 3 ¶¶ 11-12; Cert. Admin. R. at 741-42, 1067-1108.)2

In February of 2014, the Ross Township Assessor issued Form 113 Notices of

Assessment Change to Southlake that retroactively increased the assessed values of

eight of the twelve parcels from a combined $110,432,100 in 2010 to $239,200,000 for

each of the 2011, 2012, and 2013 tax years. Southlake appealed those assessment

increases, as well as the combined $3,690,500 assessment assigned to the remaining

four parcels for the 2013 tax year. After the Lake County Property Tax Assessment Board

of Appeals (PTABOA) denied the appeals, Southlake sought relief with the Indiana Board.

While those appeals were pending at the Indiana Board, Southlake filed an appeal

with the PTABOA challenging the Mall’s 2014 assessed value on all twelve parcels. The

PTABOA did not act on the 2014 appeals and Southlake subsequently transitioned them

to the Indiana Board pursuant to Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-1(o). The Indiana Board

conducted a hearing on all of Southlake’s appeals in June and July of 2017.

2 The parcels that reflect the Mall’s three other department store anchors, another restaurant, and a Kohl’s store, are not included in this appeal. (See Pet’r Pet. Jud. Rev. Fin. Determination Ind. Bd. Tax Rev. at 3 ¶¶ 11-12; Cert. Admin. R. at 741.)

2 The Assessor’s Evidentiary Presentation to the Indiana Board

During the Indiana Board hearing, the Lake County Assessor (“Assessor”)

acknowledged that he bore the burden of proving that the assessment increases were

correct because the Mall’s assessed value increased by more than 5% between 2010

and 2011. (See Cert. Admin. R. at 3661-62.) See also IND. CODE § 6-1.1-15-17.2(a), (b)

(2017) (explaining the burden of proof at the time the Indiana Board conducted its

hearing). To meet that burden, the Assessor presented an appraisal, completed in

conformance with the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP),

that valued the Mall for each of the years at issue. The Assessor also presented the

testimony of Mark Kenney, a member of the Appraisal Institute (MAI), who prepared the

appraisal.

Kenney’s appraisal used the income capitalization approach to value the Mall.

(See, e.g., Cert. Admin. R. at 1673, 1801-79, 3760-64.) The income approach, one of

three generally accepted appraisal techniques for valuing real property, applies to

“income producing properties that are typically rented[ and] converts an estimate of

income, or rent, [a] property is expected to produce into value through a mathematical

process known as capitalization.” 2011 REAL PROPERTY ASSESSMENT MANUAL

(incorporated by reference at 50 IND. ADMIN. CODE 2.4-1-2 (2011)) at 2. Generally

speaking, when an appraiser uses this approach to value a property, he first estimates

the property’s net operating income (“NOI”) by deducting a vacancy and collection loss,

as well as operating expenses, from its potential gross income. See Appraisal

Institute, THE APPRAISAL OF REAL ESTATE 478-88 (14th ed. 2013) (explaining, among other

things, that potential gross income includes rents for space in a property as well as “all

3 other forms of income to the real property – e.g., income from services supplied to the

tenants, such as secretarial service, switch-board service, antenna connections, storage,

and garage space, and income from coin-operated equipment and parking fees”)

(emphasis added). The appraiser then selects an appropriate capitalization rate to apply

against the property’s NOI. See generally id. at 492.

To estimate potential gross rental income from both the Mall’s inline spaces and

freestanding buildings on the outparcels, Kenney relied exclusively on their actual

contract rents that he then averaged within tenant size categories. (See, e.g., Cert.

Admin. R. at 1801-21 (listing the contract rents per square foot and lease terms for each

tenant for each of the years at issue), 1825 (concluding to one averaged rental estimate

for all tenants within specified square footage categories), 1842, 1845, 1848, 1851

(indicating that the averaged values were then used to calculate the Mall’s effective gross

income (“EGI”) for each of the years at issue), 4135-38, 4153-57.) To estimate the

potential gross rental income from the JCPenney and Dick’s Sporting Goods stores (as

well as two restaurants, the movie theatre, and the Firestone store), Kenney relied on

“comparable department store and ‘big box’ store . . . rents[.]” (See, e.g., Cert. Admin. R.

at 1822-25, 3848-50, 4091-92, 4117-18.)

In addition to these rental income estimates, Kenney estimated other forms of

income to the Mall’s real property, namely the income from “specialty leasing,” i.e., retail

merchandising units (“RMUs”), kiosks, inline spaces occupied by temporary tenants

(“TILs”), and “Brand/Media.” (See, e.g., Cert. Admin. R. at 1827-30, 1842, 1845, 1848,

4 1851, 3851-63, 4158-63.) After conducting a cost-of-occupancy analysis 3 to confirm that

the Mall’s health was consistent with typical industry parameters, Kenney applied a single

vacancy and collection loss rate to his overall income conclusion to arrive at the Mall’s

EGI. (See, e.g., Cert. Admin. R. at 1830-33.)

From EGI, Kenney subtracted operating expenses – which he estimated based on

the property’s actual operating history – to arrive at the Mall’s NOI. (See, e.g., Cert.

Admin. R. at 1833-36, 1841-52.) Kenney included a management fee in his expense

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