Underwood v. N.M. Comm'r of Public Lands

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 2012
Docket30,751
StatusUnpublished

This text of Underwood v. N.M. Comm'r of Public Lands (Underwood v. N.M. Comm'r of Public Lands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underwood v. N.M. Comm'r of Public Lands, (N.M. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions. Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of Appeals and does not include the filing date.

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 CARL UNDERWOOD, Personal Representative 3 of the Estate of Earl Lee Anders,

4 Appellant-Petitioner,

5 v. NO. 30,751

6 NEW MEXICO COMMISSIONER OF 7 PUBLIC LANDS, PATRICK LYONS,

8 Appellee-Respondent.

9 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY 10 Sarah M. Singleton, District Judge

11 Domenici Law Firm 12 Pete V. Domenici, Jr. 13 Lorraine Hollingsworth 14 Albuquerque, NM

15 for Appellant

16 New Mexico State Land Office 17 John L. Sullivan, Associate Counsel 18 Santa Fe, NM

19 for Appellee 1 MEMORANDUM OPINION

2 BUSTAMANTE, Judge.

3 This case calls us to explore the outer boundaries of the Land Commissioner’s

4 discretion when reviewing a hearing officer’s ruling as to the value of improvements

5 on public lands. Appellant, on behalf of the owner of the improvements, contends that

6 the Land Commissioner is constrained to accept the hearing officer’s findings of fact

7 to the extent they are supported by substantial evidence. The Land Commissioner

8 asserts that he is free to reject the hearing officer’s decision and reach his own

9 conclusion as to value based on any evidence adduced at the hearing. We conclude

10 that the Land Commissioner is not bound by the hearing officer’s findings of fact. We

11 also conclude that the Land Commissioner’s decision here is supported by substantial

12 evidence. We thus affirm.

13 FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

14 Mrs. Earl Lee Anders leased property from the State Land Office for a number

15 of years under Business Lease No. BL-882.1 The property consists of three separate

16 parcels of land referred to by the parties as the “north side,” the “community center,”

17 and the “south side” parcels.

1 18 Appellant Carl Underwood is the personal representative of the Estate of Mrs. 19 Anders and acted on her behalf throughout the proceedings. Unless context requires 20 otherwise, we refer to them throughout as “Lessee.” 1 In September 2005 the Lessee informed the Land Commissioner that he would

2 be terminating the lease effective December 31, 2005, and that pursuant to paragraph

3 six of the lease, he expected “compensation for the improvements on the property,

4 pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 19-7-14 [(1963)].” Paragraph six of the lease

5 provides in pertinent part:

6 Lessee shall, pursuant to [Section] 19-7-14, be compensated for 7 improvements upon termination of this [l]ease, with such improvements 8 valued at market value which is defined as: the most probable price in 9 cash that the improvements would bring if exposed for sale in the open 10 market, with reasonable time allowed in which to find a purchaser, 11 buying with knowledge of all the uses and purposes to which the 12 improvements as well as the property on which they are located are 13 adapted and for which they are capable of being used.

14 Lessee submitted an appraisal prepared by Gareth Burman and Dana Trump

15 (Burman/Trump appraisal), which placed a value on the improvements, based on an

16 income approach, of $630,000 as of August 13, 2005. The Land Commissioner

17 requested John Howden to prepare an appraisal of the property for him. Howden’s

18 appraisal resulted in a “residual value, as of June 6, 2006, of $10,000.” Burman,

19 Trump, and Howden were each certified appraisers.

20 The record before us reveals two formal responses to what we surmise were

21 demands by Lessee that the Land Commissioner accept the $630,000 valuation as

22 accurate. In April 2006, counsel for the Land Commissioner acknowledged receipt

23 of Mr. Burman’s appraisal, posed a number of questions concerning its approach and

2 1 assumptions, and requested a response from Mr. Burman. The record does not contain

2 anything purporting to be a response to this request. On July 20, 2006, the Land

3 Commissioner—again through counsel—provided his decision as to the value of the

4 improvements. Asserting that the Burman/Trump appraisal made a number of

5 mistakes and incorrect assumptions, the Land Commissioner “determined that the

6 improvements on the north side and community center [parcels] have no contributory

7 value to the property and that the improvements on the larger south side [parcel] have

8 a value of $10,000, as indicated in Mr. Howden’s appraisal.”

9 Lessee filed a petition for contest with the State Land Office on August 17,

10 2006, requesting relief for the market value of the improvements in accordance with

11 the Burman/Trump appraisal. On August 25, 2006, former district judge and Court

12 of Appeals Judge Thomas A. Donnelly was appointed by the Land Commissioner to

13 serve as the Hearing Officer for the contest. The State Land Office (SLO) filed its

14 position statement in response to the petition for contest and requested that the

15 Hearing Officer “find that the improvements on the large south side [parcel] are worth

16 $10,000 and the ‘improvements’ on the small south side [community parcel] and north

17 side [parcel] are worthless because they are functionally obsolete.” During the

18 hearing on the merits, the Lessee chose to “voluntarily dismiss with prejudice any and

19 all legal claims he had or may have for compensation for the improvements on the

3 1 [n]orth side and [c]ommunity [c]enter [parcels],” leaving at issue only the south side

2 parcel.

3 At the hearing, Lessee presented the testimony of Mr. Burman and Mr. Donnell,

4 certified real estate appraisers. The SLO offered the testimony of John Howden and

5 Bryan Godfrey, also certified appraisers. Mr. Howden initially testified in accordance

6 with his written appraisal, but during cross-examination changed his mind and arrived

7 at a value of $285,000. The SLO also presented the testimony of two lay

8 witnesses—John Daugherty and Ted Garcia—concerning the value of the

9 improvements. John Daugherty owns several mobile home parks—including a park

10 abutting the subject property—and was at one time interested in purchasing the

11 property. After describing the obsolescent condition of the improvements, he testified

12 that he believed the improvements had no value. Ted Garcia held a development lease

13 from the SLO on the subject property at the time of the hearing and also testified that

14 the improvements were not worth $10,000 to him. The SLO also presented the

15 testimony of a City of Albuquerque electrical inspector and electrical contractor to

16 describe the condition of the electrical system on the property and the potential cost

17 of repair. The gist of the testimony was that the electrical system had been red-tagged

18 and repairs would likely cost over $100,000. In addition, it is undisputed that the

4 1 natural gas service to the south side parcel had failed before Lessee surrendered the

2 property. Mr. Burman’s estimate for repair of the gas system was right at $100,000.

3 The Hearing Officer made a finding of fact that:

4 Mr. Burman, Mr. Donnell, and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Underwood v. N.M. Comm'r of Public Lands, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underwood-v-nm-commr-of-public-lands-nmctapp-2012.