Westvaco v. TN Assessment Appeals Comm

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 30, 1999
DocketM1999-01226-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Westvaco v. TN Assessment Appeals Comm (Westvaco v. TN Assessment Appeals Comm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westvaco v. TN Assessment Appeals Comm, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

FILED November 30, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk WESTVACO CORPORATION, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellee, ) ) Appeal No. v. ) M1999-01226-COA-R3-CV ) TENNESSEE ASSESSMENT APPEALS ) Davidson Chancery COMMISSION; BENTON COUNTY ) No. 97-1234-III ASSESSOR OF PROPERTY; ) BENTON COUNTY TRUSTEE, ) ) ) Defendants/Appellants. )

COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT FOR DAVIDSON COUNTY

AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE ELLEN HOBBS LYLE, CHANCELLOR

PHILLIP G. HOLLIS Peeler & Hollis 39 North Court Square P. O. Box 218 Camden, Tennessee 38302

JERRY C. SHELTON Lyell, Seaman & Shelton The Tower, Suite 2704 611 Commerce Street Nashville, Tennessee 37203 ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE

Page 1 PAUL. G. SUMMERS Attorney General and Reporter

SEAN D. CLANCY Assistant Attorney General Cordell Hull Building, Second Floor 425 Fifth Avenue North Nashville, Tennessee 37243 ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS

REVERSED AND REMANDED

WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE

OPINION

I. NATURE OF THE CASE Tennessee Assessment Appeals Commission and the Benton County Assessor and County Trustee, (referred to collectively hereinafter as the State and Benton County, respectively) appeal from an adverse decision below regarding the ad valorem taxation of certain real property owned by the taxpayer, Westvaco Corporation (Westvaco), and located in Benton County, Tennessee. At the time of assessment, Westvaco owned approximately 59 parcels of woodland totaling over 24,000 acres. 1 Regarding the valuation and assessment in question, the following facts as related by the trial court are not in dispute: Westvaco is a forest resource management company who harvests timber on its land for a papermill. Westvaco owns approximately 25,000 acres in Benton County in blocks of large tracts of 1000 to 2000 acres. In 1993 the State required counties in Tennessee to conduct mass reappraisals. As required, Benton County undertook such a reappraisal which included Westvaco’s land. The controversy in this case is generated by Benton County valuing Westvaco’s land by a method not used for any other Benton County taxpayer. The Benton County Assessor arrived at his assessment of Westvaco’s land by using the values assigned to the land under the County’s 1983 appraisal and adding $50.00 per acre. The justification for this method was testified to by Bob Farmer, the county assessor. He stated that

Page 2 Westvaco had paid the taxes assessed according to the 1983 appraisal. The $50.00 per acre was added because of the system of roads Westvaco had constructed throughout its property. The assessor determined that the road system improved the property and added value which had to be accounted for on assessment. Mr. Farmer contacted the State Department of Transportation for road valuation information and contacted Westvaco for the number of miles of road (55) on Westvaco’s property to come up with the amount of $50.00 per acre to account for road improvements by Westvaco. He then added that $50.00 per acre to the values assigned to the land under the county’s 1983 appraisal to arrive at his assessment of Westvaco’ s land. To “check” the assessment, he also consulted four sales of alleged comparable clear cut-over land.

Westvaco paid the assessment and pursued its appellate remedies. Westvaco appealed the assessment in a hearing before an administrative law judge. It then appealed the ALJ’s ruling to the Assessment Appeals Commission, and appealed the Assessment Appeals Commission’s decision to Davidson County Chancery Court. At each stage of the administrative appeal process prior to chancery court, Westvaco was unsuccessful, and the values set by the assessor and the Benton County Board of Equalization were affirmed. The Chancellor, however, reversed the Appeals Commission and remanded the case for findings of fact not inconsistent therewith. Specifically, the order of the chancery court states the following: There is nothing in the record before this Court which demonstrates that the respondents’ appraisal method of using the 1983 appraisal values for Westvaco’s property and adding in $50.00 per acre to account for roads complies with the requirements of Tennessee Code Annotated sections 67-5-601(a) and 67-5-216. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the 1983 appraisal still reflects the measure of a willing buyer and a willing seller without consideration of speculative value. Moreover, that the State required counties in 1993 to conduct mass reappraisals is some indication that the 1983 appraisal is no longer accurate. The $50.00 per acre to account for road improvement, while perhaps some indicator of intrinsic value, is just tacked on. In sum, there simply is nothing in the record demonstrating that the method used by the respondents takes into account the factors required by sections 67-5-601(a) and 67-5-216.

Page 3 * * * As to the issues of fact pertaining to valuation which were presented to this Court through proof supplementary to the record (as permitted by Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-5-511) and from the record, the Court determines that the case should be remanded for the expertise of the administrative agency to develop the facts and further findings as to the valuation of Westvaco’s property using the method outlined in Richardson, and not using the cut-over land method or the 1983 appraisal plus $50.00 per acre.

II. ISSUES ON APPEAL From the order of the Chancery Court, Benton County seeks review, raising the following issues on appeal: 1. Whether the trial court properly considered Westvaco’s complaints pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-5-1407(a)(1)(A) and (B)?

2. Whether the Trial court was correct in its holding that the residual method of valuation, the method used by the chancery court in Richardson v. Assessment Appeals Comm’n, 828 S.W.2d 403 (Tenn. Ct. App.1991), was the only appropriate method to evaluate Westvaco’s property for tax purposes?

3. Whether the trial court was correct in holding that the consideration of cut-over land sales to arrive at bare land values for timberland properties did not comply with Tennessee Code Annotated sections 67-5-601(a) and 67-5-216?

4. Whether the court erred in finding that nothing in the record before it demonstrated that the method used by Benton County and the State to value Westvaco’s land in Benton County took into account the factors required by Tennessee Code Annotated sections 67-5-601(a) and 67-5-216?

The State joins in the appeal arguing simply the impropriety of the chancellors requirement that the Assessment Appeals Commission apply the residual valuation method.

For its part, Westvaco urges on appeal the allegedly unconstitutional nature

Page 4 of Benton County’s assessment method as well as the impropriety of a remand in light of the attendant facts. Specifically, Westvaco’s brief lists the following issues: 1. Whether the appraisal methodology used by the Benton County Assessor and the Assessment Appeals Commission, but not used for any other woodland appraisals in Benton County, denies Westvaco equal protection under the United Stated and Tennessee Constitutions?

2. Whether the record clearly establishes the ad valorem property tax value of Westvaco’s woodland, exclusive of the value of growing timber, so that this Court may fully resolve all issues in this case without necessity of the remand to the Assessment Appeals Commission as ordered by the trial court?

Considering the above issues in conjunction, we find that the answers to the following three questions are integral to the resolution of the controversy on appeal. 1.

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Related

Wayne County v. Tennessee Solid Waste Disposal Control Board
756 S.W.2d 274 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1988)
Richardson v. Tennessee Assessment Appeals Commission
828 S.W.2d 403 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1991)

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Westvaco v. TN Assessment Appeals Comm, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westvaco-v-tn-assessment-appeals-comm-tennctapp-1999.