Washtenaw County v. State Tax Commission

373 N.W.2d 697, 422 Mich. 346
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1985
DocketDocket Nos. 72445-72447, 72862, 72863. (Calendar Nos. 4, 5)
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 373 N.W.2d 697 (Washtenaw County v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washtenaw County v. State Tax Commission, 373 N.W.2d 697, 422 Mich. 346 (Mich. 1985).

Opinion

Brickley, J.

These consolidated suits involving the State Tax Commission and five Michigan counties concern principally the method of arriving at the state equalized value of real property in two respects: the effect of land contracts and other "creatively financed” transactions on "true cash value,” and the need to employ a "trending” factor to the data base of sales-ratio studies in order to more accurately pinpoint the "true cash value” of property on "the tax day.”

We hold that, when the seller of real property has contributed in a significant respect to the buyer’s ability to obtain financing at an interest rate artificially below the prevailing cost of borrowing, a method of valuation that separates the cost of such artificially low financing from the sales price to achieve the "true cash value of such property” is required by the applicable statutes, when they are read, as they must be, to comport with the constitution. We also find that the State Tax Commission has not committed an error of law or applied a wrong principle in refusing to adopt the plaintiffs’ proposed method of trending for the sales-ratio studies.

*351 I

Background and Statement of Facts

Five counties are appealing the final state equalized valuations adopted by the State Tax Commission for each of those counties to be used for their 1982 property tax levy. The Washtenaw, Oakland, and Lapeer County cases came to this Court from the Court of Appeals where they were consolidated. Washtenaw County v State Tax Comm, 126 Mich App 535; 337 NW2d 565 (1983), lv gtd 419 Mich 864 (1984). The Livingston and Ingham County cases were originally joined with the Washtenaw case in the Court of Appeals, but were subsequently separated and not heard by that Court, although they were allowed to file a joint brief as amici curiae. When we granted leave in Washtenaw, Livingston and Ingham Counties sought and were granted their application to appeal the decision of the commission, bypassing the Court of Appeals, Livingston County v Michigan and Ingham County v Michigan, lv gtd 419 Mich 864 (1984), and were consolidated with Washte-naw.

In each case, the state equalized value (sev) determined by the commission for residential and certain other classes of property in each of these counties resulted in higher values than those calculated by the county boards of commissioners in the course of establishing their respective county equalized values (cev). 1

The petitioning counties made or requested the commission to make two types of adjustments to *352 the results of their equalization studies. Those adjustments account for the differences between the cev and sev in these cases, and the propriety of those adjustments is at issue here. The commission, in its equalization studies, disallowed the adjustments made or requested by the counties, finding them to be contrary to the State Tax Commission Assessor’s Manual and applicable statutory and constitutional provisions. The commission also found individual studies in those counties to be lacking in other respects.

The first adjustment to the equalization studies in question was an effort by the counties to account for the effect of "creative financing.”

"Creative financing” occurs where the seller permits the buyer to assume the seller’s existing low mortgage ("assumption”), or the seller pays a lending institution to loan to the buyer at the low market interest rate ("buy down”), or the seller *353 pays "points” to an institution to further an fha-guaranteed, below-market interest rate mortgage loan to the buyer ("fha mortgage”), or the seller sells to the buyer on a land contract ("land contract”), or the buyer both assumes the seller’s old mortgage and borrows more from the mortgagee ("blend”). [Washtenaw County, 126 Mich App 542-543 (opinion of Allen, J.).]

Substantial percentages of the sales used in the equalization studies in question involved creative financing. In determining their cev, the county commissioners applied or advocated the application of a discount in order to account for the price enhancement effect believed to be the by-product of seller-extended credit. Several counties used studies to support their contention that sales involving creative financing resulted in prices that were six to ten percent higher than those of cash or conventional term sales. The counties attributed this price enchancement effect to the high rates for institutional mortgages. (In 1982, they varied from 15.75 percent to 18.5 percent.) Typically, it is contended that, when a buyer takes advantage of a legally limited interest rate, assumes seller’s existing low interest rate mortgage, or is offered a buy-down by the seller, the seller accounts for the difference between the low rate and the prevailing interest rate by increasing the selling price of the property. A land contract is an example of a legally limited rate; by law the seller may charge no more than eleven percent interest, MCL 438.31c(6); MSA 19.15(lc)(6).

The commission disagreed with the counties’ factual conclusion that creative financing affects sales price, as well as with the legal premise that such an adjustment is allowable under the law, even if the effect were to be shown.

In the second type of disputed adjustment, the *354 counties weighted more heavily the sales which occurred closest in time to "tax day,” December 31, 1981. In a period of declining property values, the counties claim that the sales occurring closest to tax day will be the most reliable for purposes of conducting a sales-ratio survey. The counties advocate an adjustment to the sales in their sales-ratio studies, so as to reflect the declining market as of December 31; this adjustment is referred to as "trending.” Unless such an adjustment is made, the counties maintain that the assessment levels would possibly exceed fifty percent. The commission disagrees, arguing that trending will not accomplish its intended purpose. Moreover, because the method is dependent upon a sufficient number of sales in a short period of time, the defendant further argues that it would be applicable in only a few of the more populous counties.

Because the facts in each county differ, the particulars are set forth by county.

Washtenaw County

The County Board of Commissioners for Washte-naw County adopted a 1982 cev of $1,768,505,675 for the residential class of property. The sev for the same class was determined by the commission to be $1,937,707,132, a figure derived from the county equalization study before reduction for creative financing. Washtenaw County conducted several studies, the final conclusions of which were that, of the 1981 residential sales in the county, eighty-nine percent involved creative financing, and that the prices of those sales were consequently enhanced by 8.2 percent.

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Bluebook (online)
373 N.W.2d 697, 422 Mich. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washtenaw-county-v-state-tax-commission-mich-1985.