State, Department of Commerce, Community & Economic Development, Division of Corporations, Business & Professional Licensing v. Wold

278 P.3d 266, 2012 WL 1759304, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 71
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 2012
DocketS-13901, S-13952
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 278 P.3d 266 (State, Department of Commerce, Community & Economic Development, Division of Corporations, Business & Professional Licensing v. Wold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Department of Commerce, Community & Economic Development, Division of Corporations, Business & Professional Licensing v. Wold, 278 P.3d 266, 2012 WL 1759304, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 71 (Ala. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 2008, Alaska's Board of Certified Real Estate Appraisers imposed professional sanctions on an appraiser for violations of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP). The Board relied in large part on the views of a distinguished expert in Alaskan real estate appraisal who performed a "desk review" of the appraiser's work. The expert concluded that the appraiser committed numerous violations of the USPAP. Though we review the Board's findings with great deference, we conclude that none of the Board's findings of USPAP violations were supported by substantial evidence in light of the whole record. We thus affirm the superior court's reversal of the Board's findings of USPAP violations, and reverse the single violation that the superior court affirmed.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Kim Wold has been certified in Alaska as a general real estate appraiser since 1991. Three of Wold's appraisals are the subject of this case:

(i) the appraisal of a residential property at 315 Copper Road in Ketchikan, (the "Copper Road" property), which Wold completed in 1997 and supplemented in 1998;
(i) the appraisal of a partial interest in Entwit's Float, a marina facility in Ket-chikan (the "marina" property), which Wold completed in 1998; and
@) the appraisal of a luxury residential property on Ellis Island in Ketchikan (the "Ellis Island" property), which Wold completed in 2002.

*269 1. The Copper Road (1997, 1998) and marina (1998) appraisals

Both the Copper Road appraisal and the marina appraisal were prepared by Wold for use in the divorce proceedings between Leif Entwit and Linda Entwit. In order to estimate the market value of the Copper Road property, Wold performed an analysis that involved making significant downward adjustments in value to four comparable properties.

After Wold completed his appraisal, Leif Entwit hired a local contractor, Garnet Dima, to inspect the Copper Road residence. Dima found "signs of sagging" in the floor and estimated that correcting the problem would cost $25,000. Wold issued an updated appraisal, lowering his estimate of the property's value from $115,000 to $77,500 based on the cost to cure the sagging floor as well as the risk associated with effecting the cure.

Wold's marina appraisal relied primarily on the "cost approach" to determine valuation. Linda Entwit's attorney hired another appraiser, Julie Dinneen, to review the marina appraisal. - Dinneen's review criticized Wold's conclusion that marina improvements reflected "the highest and best use" of the property. 1 Dinneen concluded that Wold had violated the USPAP. She forwarded her review to the Division of Occupational Licensing (the Division}.

When the Entwit divorcee case went to trial, the court found that the Copper Road property had a value of $132,280 (as opposed to Wold's original estimate of $115,000 and revised estimate of $77,500) and the marina property had a value of $240,298 (as opposed to Wold's estimate of $150,000). The court concluded that Wold "unquestionably took on the role of advocate for Leif's litigation position."

2. The Ellis Island appraisal (2002)

Wold prepared the appraisal of the luxury Ellis Island residential property for use in pending litigation between neighbors. Wold again used the cost approach to value the property, arriving at a rounded value of $2,100,000.

The opposing attorneys hired another appraiser, Vince Coan, to review Wold's Ellis Island appraisal. - Coan concluded that Wold's appraisal violated various provisions of the USPAP. Coan forwarded his review to the Division.

B. Proceedings

The Division assembled an investigative file of Wold's work and forwarded it to appraiser Alfred Ferrara for expert review. In his 2003 reports, Ferrara concluded that Wold violated various USPAP rules. In 2004, the Division filed an accusation against Wold with the Board of Certified Real Estate Appraisers. The case was assigned to Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) David G. Stebing, who held hearings in December 2005 and February 2006. Before issuing a proposed decision, ALJ Stebing resigned. ALJ James T. Stanley replaced him.

After receiving and rejecting two proposed decisions by ALJ Stanley, the Board voted to decide the case themselves. The Board took no additional evidence, but both parties had an opportunity to present additional written argument. The Board's final decision and order "agreed with the ALJ's conclusions regarding the facts of the case and the violations proven by the evidence, but altered the license discipline sanctions to more appropriately reflect the seriousness of the offenses and the retraining the Board believes to be necessary." The Board found that Wold had violated the USPAP eight times, but found no violation on eleven other points. The Board imposed sanctions including a formal reprimand, fines, and 109 hours of classroom training at the Appraisal Institute in Chicago, Illinois.

Wold appealed the Board's decision to the superior court in Ketchikan in 2008. On December 14, 2009, following briefing and oral argument, Superior Court Judge Trevor Stephens reversed seven of the Board's eight findings that Wold had violated the USPAP, holding that these findings were not supported by substantial evidence. In May *270 2010, the superior court awarded Wold 50% of his reasonable attorney's fees.

The State appeals the superior court's partial reversal of the Board's decision. Wold cross-appeals the superior court's partial affirmation of the Board's decision and the superior court's attorney's fees decision.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

As we stated in our first and only other opinion reviewing a decision of the Board of Certified Real Estate Appraisers, the superior court sat as an intermediate court of appeal, we will independently review the merits of the [BJoard's administrative determination. We review findings of fact in appeals of administrative decisions under the 'substantial evidence' test." 2 "Substantial evidence is 'in light of the record as a whole, ... such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion'" 3 "In determining whether evidence is substantial, ... we must take into account whatever in the record fairly detracts from its weight." 4

The substantial evidence test for administrative factual findings has its roots in Alaska's Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which presents the "scope of review" for administrative adjudication as follows:

The [reviewing] court may exercise its independent judgment on the evidence.

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278 P.3d 266, 2012 WL 1759304, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-commerce-community-economic-development-division-alaska-2012.