TBC Westlake, Inc. v. Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Revision

1998 Ohio 445, 81 Ohio St. 3d 58
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1998
Docket1997-0646
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1998 Ohio 445 (TBC Westlake, Inc. v. Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Revision) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TBC Westlake, Inc. v. Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Revision, 1998 Ohio 445, 81 Ohio St. 3d 58 (Ohio 1998).

Opinion

[This opinion has been published in Ohio Official Reports at 81 Ohio St.3d 58.]

TBC WESTLAKE, INC., APPELLEE, v. HAMILTON COUNTY BOARD OF REVISION; RHODES, HAMILTON COUNTY AUDITOR, ET AL., APPELLANTS. [Cite as TBC Westlake, Inc. v. Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Revision, 1998-Ohio-445.] Taxation—Real property—Valuation of two adjacent office buildings by Board of Tax Appeals—Board of Tax Appeals’ attorney-examiner’s report is not a public record — Judicial mental process privilege—Weighing evidence and granting credibility to witnesses is BTA’s statutory job—BTA’s determination of basic factual matters affirmed by Supreme Court if supported by sufficient, probative evidence of record. (No. 97-646—Submitted September 30, 1997—Decided February 11, 1998.) APPEAL from the Board of Tax Appeals, Nos. 95-K-1358 and 96-K-167. __________________ {¶ 1} TBC Westlake, Inc., appellee, filed a complaint with the Hamilton County Board of Revision (“BOR”) seeking to reduce the true value of its real property, two adjacent office buildings known as Westlake Center and Lake Forest Place, for the tax year 1993. Appellant Sycamore Community School District Board of Education (“Sycamore”) filed a counter-complaint seeking to retain the value determined by appellant Dusty Rhodes, Hamilton County Auditor. After receiving testimony and evidence from both complainants, the BOR determined the true value to be $41,000,000, a decrease from the auditor’s valuation of $46,388,200. Nevertheless, Westlake appealed the BOR’s decision to the Board of Tax Appeals (“BTA”). {¶ 2} At the BTA, Westlake presented the testimony and report of Don T. Carrelli, a real estate appraisal expert. He described the property as 26.326 acres containing two glass and steel office buildings totaling 422,361 square feet. Westlake Center, the older building constructed in 1981 and updated in 1993, SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

contains 191,231 square feet on six floors. Carrelli described Westlake Center to be inferior in design and materials to Lake Forest Place and termed it a lower-than- average, class-A structure. {¶ 3} Carrelli described Lake Forest Place as a four- and seven-story structure containing a gross area of 231,126 square feet. It opened in 1985 and had been partially updated by 1993. It contains a four-story atrium and, according to Carrelli, is a good-construction, class-A office building. {¶ 4} The property also includes a separate bank building with drive- through bays. The bank was built in 1986 of concrete block with face-brick and glass-block exterior walls. {¶ 5} Carrelli employed the three standard approaches to value: the cost, sales-comparison, and income approaches, placing major emphasis on the income approach. The cost approach yielded a value of $35,100,000 and the sales- comparison approach, a value of $34,600,000. Carrelli dismissed these two approaches as weak and less supportable than the income approach. {¶ 6} In the income approach, Carrelli judged the property’s most current rents to be the property’s market rentals and multiplied the rents by the leasable square footage. Westlake Center’s rental rate was $13 per square foot, and Lake Forest Place’s rental rates were $14 per square foot. To the potential gross income of $5,379,746, he applied a fifteen percent vacancy rate. According to Carrelli, the actual vacancy rate for 1993 for Lake Forest Place was fifteen percent, and, according to a commercial real estate firm, the average class-A vacancy rate for the community in 1992 was fifteen to seventeen percent. This calculation produced an effective gross income of $4,572,784. Carrelli deducted what he considered to be market expenses of $915,341 to arrive at net income of $3,657,443. He obtained the capitalization rate of 10.5 percent from a study of suburban office properties prepared by another commercial real estate firm. Dividing the net income by the

2 January Term, 1998

capitalization rate, he determined the value of the property, via the income approach, to be $34,800,000. {¶ 7} In his correlation, Carrelli presented the income approach as the better-supported approach and concluded that the true value of the subject property was $34,800,000 as of January 1, 1993. {¶ 8} Rhodes and Sycamore did not present any valuation testimony to the BTA. Rhodes had presented the testimony and the “Summary Appraisal Report” of Thomas O. Willingham and Bradley W. Plummer, real estate appraisers, to the BOR. The BTA reviewed this report but rejected it. According to the BTA, Willingham and Plummer did not record the information they relied on to appraise the property. Moreover, neither individual testified before the BTA; thus, the BTA could not question them about their report. Finally, the BTA expressed concern about a $3,000,000 modification the two appraisers incorporated into the value estimate after they wrote the report. {¶ 9} In deciding this case, the BTA reviewed Carrelli’s presentation, rejected appellants’ criticism of his report, and found that it satisfied Westlake’s burden of proof. The BTA, based on a preponderance of the evidence, found the true value of the property to be $34,800,000, as concluded by Carrelli. {¶ 10} In the course of the proceedings, the BTA refused auditor Rhodes’s request that it distribute to the parties the attorney-examiner’s report prepared for the BTA. According to the BTA, its practice is to receive for approval a proposed opinion drafted by the attorney-examiner assigned to hear and recommend a resolution of the case. The BTA ruled that R.C. 5717.01 does not require it to release these draft opinions to the parties. It, further, found that it is not an “agency” expressly governed by R.C. Chapter 119, the Administrative Procedure Act, which requires an administrative agency to serve examiner recommendations on the parties to an adjudication. R.C. 119.09.

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

{¶ 11} This cause is now before this court upon an appeal as a matter of right. __________________ Wayne E. Petkovic, for appellee. Joseph T. Deters, Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, and Thomas J. Scheve, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellant Hamilton County Auditor. Klaine, Wiley, Hoffman & Minutolo and Franklin A. Klaine, Jr., for appellant Sycamore Community School District Board of Education. __________________ Per Curiam. {¶ 12} We reverse the portion of the BTA’s decision that did not value the separate bank building and remand the case for it to value such building. We affirm the remainder of the BTA’s decision. {¶ 13} In proposition of law No. 1, appellants contend that the BTA should have distributed the attorney-examiner’s report to the parties. They essentially claim that Ohio’s open meeting and public records laws require this. {¶ 14} R.C. 5717.01 authorizes the BTA to hear appeals of valuation complaints, “[to] cause its examiners to conduct such hearing and to report to it their findings for affirmation or rejection.” {¶ 15} Appellants do not claim that R.C. 119.09 requires the BTA to serve its examiners’ reports on the appellants. Indeed, R.C. 119.01, in defining “agency,” does not identify the BTA as one of the agencies specifically subject to this chapter. Appellants, however, contend that R.C. 121.22, the Sunshine Law, and R.C. 149.43, the Public Records Law, apply. We conclude, to the contrary, that the Sunshine Law does not apply to adjudication proceedings at the BTA and that the attorney-examiner report is exempt from the Public Records Law under the “judicial mental process” privilege.

4 January Term, 1998

{¶ 16} “Ohio's ‘Sunshine Law,’ R.C. 121.22, requires that public officials, when meeting to consider official business, conduct those meetings in public.” State ex rel. Cincinnati Post v. Cincinnati (1996), 76 Ohio St.3d 540, 542, 668 N.E.2d 903, 905. R.C. 121.22(C) provides: “All meetings of any public body are declared to be public meetings open to the public at all times.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State ex rel. McGrail v. Lordstown Village Council
2025 Ohio 4630 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)
Barga v. St. Paris Village Council
2024 Ohio 5293 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2024)
Beachland Ents., Inc. v. Cleveland Bd. of Rev.
2013 Ohio 5585 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2013)
State Ex Rel. Ross v. Crawford County Board of Elections
2010 Ohio 2167 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2010)
Osi Sealants v. Wausau, Unpublished Decision (5-23-2005)
2005 Ohio 2528 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2005)
State ex rel. Leslie v. Ohio Housing Finance Agency
105 Ohio St. 3d 261 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2005)
State ex rel. Nix v. Cleveland
1998 Ohio 290 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1998 Ohio 445, 81 Ohio St. 3d 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tbc-westlake-inc-v-hamilton-cty-bd-of-revision-ohio-1998.