Susan a Gressa v. Independence Township

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 2022
Docket359545
StatusUnpublished

This text of Susan a Gressa v. Independence Township (Susan a Gressa v. Independence Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan a Gressa v. Independence Township, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

SUSAN A. GRESSA, UNPUBLISHED November 10, 2022 Petitioner-Appellant,

v No. 359545 Tax Tribunal INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP, LC No. 21-000547

Respondent-Appellee.

Before: GARRETT, P.J., and O’BRIEN and REDFORD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner appeals as of right the Michigan Tax Tribunal’s (MTT) final opinion and judgment (FOJ), valuing the true cash value (TCV) of her home (the property) at $515,000, and the state equalized value1 (SEV), and taxable value (TV) of the property, at $257,500. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Petitioner purchased the property in October 2020 for $535,000 in an arm’s-length transaction. Shortly after closing, petitioner removed a shed from the property. Petitioner answered a questionnaire from respondent which provided information for tax appraisal purposes. Of relevance, petitioner noted that the property had a generator, a finished basement of approximately 1,500 square feet, and a shed of about 100 square feet. Petitioner asserted she answered this questionnaire the day after she closed on the property and relied on the property’s online listing for her answers.

An assessor assessed the property’s SEV and TV as $201,400. Petitioner appealed the assessment to the March 2021 Independence Township Board of Review (BOR), and provided a mortgage appraisal at the BOR’s request. The BOR increased the SEV and TV to $267,500. The BOR explained that the adjustment was “based upon the appraisal provided by the petitioner.” That led to the filing of a petition to the MTT for review in which petitioner alleged that the BOR

1 The SEV is also known as the assessed value.

-1- erred by considering the sale price when changing the property’s SEV. Petitioner claimed that she paid too much for the property and argued that the mortgage appraisal did not necessarily indicate the property’s TCV. She contended that the BOR’s SEV exceeded 50% of the TCV and failed to uniformly assess the property like similar properties. Petitioner asserted that the property’s TCV equaled $380,000, rendering the SEV of $190,000.

Petitioner argued that the property’s sale price could not be the sole factor used by the assessor or BOR, when determining the property’s TCV. Regarding the BOR’s reliance on petitioner’s mortgage appraisal, petitioner did not include the mortgage appraisal in her petition, and only provided it when requested. When the BOR requested the appraisal, petitioner claimed it unreliable, but the BOR requested petitioner send the appraisal anyway. Petitioner asserted that the BOR based its entire valuation on this appraisal and had no legally permissible reason to change the SEV.

Petitioner submitted a table and commentary highlighting her alleged valuation errors with corrected values for the shed, the basement’s smaller square footage, the generator which she brought from her old property, and a corrected value for the property’s effective age. Petitioner claimed that the property had structural defects, including broken trusses, a roof problem, and a bat and mice infestation in the attic, all of which necessitated additional costs not properly considered by the assessment.

In response, respondent noted that many of the claimed erroneous valuations were provided by petitioner in her responses to the questionnaire. It pointed out that petitioner never obtained a demolition permit to remove the shed and that petitioner’s permit to install the generator listed the generator as new. Respondent agreed to correct the valuation to reflect the proper effective age of the generator, but explained that petitioner had denied entry to determine the generator’s age. Respondent asserted that the property’s effective age was “reduced to reflect interior remodeling and updates that were completed prior to Petitioner’s sale date.”

In rebuttal, petitioner argued that the comparable properties she chose were closer matches to the property than those provided by respondent. Petitioner could not find anything requiring a permit to remove the shed. Regarding respondent’s reliance on her questionnaire, petitioner argued that she received the questionnaire the day after closing without explanation of its purpose and had filled it out before the shed’s removal. Petitioner stated that she relied on the property’s online listing for the 1,500-square-foot basement, but the listing overestimated the actual finished square footage of the basement. Petitioner provided proof of the generator’s initial installation in her old home in 2016.

The administrative law judge (ALJ) held a hearing in September 2021 and prepared the proposed opinion and judgment (POJ) that proposed valuing the TCV of the property at $515,000, and correspondingly the property’s SEV and TV at $257,500. Concerning petitioner’s argument that the property was not uniformly assessed, the ALJ noted numerous unknown factors which could impact the property’s value that prevented the ALJ from concluding that the property was not uniformly assessed. The ALJ also noted the uniformity requirement of the constitution only applied to the original assessment, which was “very much in line with the values identified in Petitioner’s summary[,]” not the later assessments by the BOR or the MTT.

-2- The ALJ agreed that respondent was precluded from relying on sale price alone when assessing the property because such reliance would result in nonuniform assessments. The ALJ, however, explained that “this holds true only for the assessment as originally established by the assessing officer. It does not apply to the [BOR], or the [MTT], which is a quasi-judicial agency charged with finding a property’s true cash value when the legality of the assessment is contested.” The ALJ stated that the MTT was not bound by the same restrictions imposed on assessors but had the obligation “to make an independent determination of value.” The ALJ considered that this Court has “repeatedly held that while not presumptive, actual selling price is relevant in determining ‘usual selling price’ and must be considered by the [MTT] in the absence of an auction or forced sale[,]” citing Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp v Warren, 193 Mich App 348, 354; 483 NW2d 416 (1992), and Samonek v Norvell Twp, 208 Mich App 80; 527 NW2d 24 (1994).

Regarding the BOR’s reliance on the mortgage appraisal, the ALJ observed that neither respondent nor the MTT were precluded from relying on the appraisal “simply because it was prepared for mortgage purposes.” The ALJ agreed with petitioner that the appraisal was not necessarily a reliable indicator of the property’s actual TCV, nor conclusive evidence of the property’s value. The ALJ concluded that the appraisal had not been provided for the MTT’s review, and therefore, the ALJ could not determine its reliability. The ALJ found the BOR’s value unsupported by the record, and noted that, while respondent’s representative testified that the BOR relied on other comparable sales in addition to the appraisal when assessing the property, respondent’s letter to petitioner explaining its reasoning did not support that position, and even if other alleged sales were considered, they were also not provided to the MTT for review.

Based on the evidence provided to the MTT, the ALJ determined that the cost approach was not the best evidence of the property’s TCV or usual selling price. The ALJ found the sales comparison or market approach the proper valuation method. The adjusted sales of the comparables provided by petitioner supported the finding that the property was assessed at less than 50% of its TCV by the assessor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Susan a Gressa v. Independence Township, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-a-gressa-v-independence-township-michctapp-2022.