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Jones Laughlin v. Warren

Michigan Court of Appeals
Jan 10, 1992
193 Mich. App. 348 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992)

Summary

In Jones, we held that "the tribunal correctly noted that the sale price of a particular piece of property does not control its determination of the value of that property," but that "the tribunal's opinion that the evidence 'has little or no bearing' on the property's earlier value suggests that the evidence was rejected out of hand.

Summary of this case from JD Norman Indus. v. City of Leslie

Opinion

Docket No. 119309.

Decided January 10, 1992; approved for publication March 25, 1992, at 9:15 A.M.

Bodman, Longley Dahling (by John C. Cashen), for Jones Laughlin Steel Corporation.

W. Thomas Marrocco, Jr., for City of Warren.

Clark, Hardy, Lewis, Pollard Page, P.C. (by Neil H. Goodman), for Fitzgerald Public Schools.

Before: MARILYN KELLY, P.J., and WAHLS and FITZGERALD, JJ.


Petitioner Jones Laughlin Steel Corporation appeals as of right from a judgment of the Michigan Tax Tribunal that dismissed petitioner's appeal concerning the true cash value and lawful assessed value for tax year 1983 of personal property located at its facility in the City of Warren. We reverse and remand this case to the Tax Tribunal for further findings of fact and an independent assessment of true cash value.

The relevant tax date was December 31, 1982. Petitioner's personal property was originally assigned an assessed value on the roll for tax year 1983 of $4,933,100. Petitioner unsuccessfully protested the assessment to the local board of review and then sought review by the Tax Tribunal. After the tribunal ordered a continuance following bankruptcy proceedings involving petitioner, a hearing was held in April 1988. The parties stipulated to the value of the real property at the Warren facility and submitted proofs with respect to the value of the personal property. The main point of disagreement concerned the facility's blooming mill and billet mill, which together represented a substantial portion, if not most, of the total value of the personal property.

Although petitioner makes occasional references on appeal to the valuation of other equipment, that equipment is not identified and petitioner's argument seems solely concerned with the blooming mill and the billet mill. Our discussion will therefore be likewise limited.

Petitioner's proofs showed that the use of blooming and billet mills in steel production was no longer the most cost-advantageous method and that there is increasing use of the more efficient continuous-casting method of fabricating steel. Furthermore, 1982 was a difficult year for the steel industry, and in the last quarter of 1982 petitioner was operating at forty-six percent of capacity and sustaining a monthly loss of approximately $1 million. In November 1982, petitioner purchased an idle continuous-casting facility in Pennsylvania and made plans to sell or close the Warren facility. Efforts to sell the Warren facility began and operations there ceased in May 1983. The facility was purchased in September 1983 by Youngstown Industrial, a machinery dealer and real estate developer, which hoped to find a buyer who would use the facility for steel production, or, failing that, planned to demolish the facility and redevelop the land. Youngstown Industrial paid petitioner $1,001,000 for the facility's equipment, including the mills. According to a Youngstown employee, prospective buyers did not desire the entire facility because it was obsolete. Although Youngstown was able to sell a portion of the blooming mill for $30,000, the remainder of the blooming mill and the billet mill were eventually sold as scrap. Gross proceeds from all equipment and scrap sales totaled $420,000. Petitioner's proofs also included an appraisal, prepared in anticipation of the sale of the facility, that valued the blooming and billet mills together at $500,000. According to the appraiser, his research found only two comparable sales of blooming mills. These mills had sold for approximately twice their scrap value. Petitioner argued that true cash value was shown by the sale price of its equipment to Youngstown, plus original cost-less-depreciation estimates of other property not included in the Youngstown sale but owned or leased by petitioner on the tax date. Petitioner's estimate of true cash value was $2,331,866.

The respondent city's proofs were based on an application of the original cost multipliers found in the Tax Assessor's Manual to petitioner's equipment. According to the city's application of the assessor's manual, the true cash value of petitioner's personal property, including the mills, on December 31, 1982, was $9,466,000. This figure was based on the use of the long-life, in-use table of multipliers. Petitioner argued that the correct long-life multiplier to use for the mills was that applicable to surplus equipment, which, according to petitioner's calculations, would have resulted in a total true cash value of $3,118,800. Another estimate of true cash value submitted by the respondent school district, which was greater than the city's estimate, was rejected by the Tax Tribunal on the ground that it did not adequately account for the depreciation and obsolescence of the blooming mill.

The Tax Tribunal held that petitioner did not present sufficient evidence to allow it to make an independent determination of true cash value and that petitioner therefore had failed to meet its burden of proof. The tribunal also held that, because there was no evidence that the blooming mill was not in use on the tax date, the city's use of the in-use multiplier, rather than the surplus multiplier, in its assessment was proper. The tribunal then accepted the city's true cash value estimate of $9,466,000 and assessment of $4,773,000, apparently for the reason that petitioner had not met its burden of proof. This appeal followed.

This Court's review of a decision of the Tax Tribunal is limited. When fraud is not alleged, we ask whether the Tax Tribunal committed an error of law or adopted a wrong principle. Const 1963, art 6, § 28; William Mueller Sons, Inc v Dep't of Treasury, 189 Mich. App. 570, 572; 473 N.W.2d 783 (1991). We will accept the tribunal's factual findings as final, provided they are supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence. Antisdale v City of Galesburg, 420 Mich. 265, 277; 362 N.W.2d 632 (1984); Dow Chemical Co v Dep't of Treasury, 185 Mich. App. 458, 462-463; 462 N.W.2d 765 (1990). Substantial evidence must be more than a scintilla of evidence, although it may be substantially less than a preponderance of the evidence. Id. at 463; Russo v Dep't of Licensing Regulation, 119 Mich. App. 624, 631; 326 N.W.2d 583 (1982).

The Tax Tribunal is under a duty to apply its expertise to the facts of a case to determine the appropriate method of arriving at the true cash value of property, utilizing an approach that provides the most accurate valuation under the circumstances. Antisdale, supra at 277; Teledyne Continental Motors v Muskegon Twp, 163 Mich. App. 188, 193; 413 N.W.2d 700 (1987). True cash value is synonymous with fair market value. MCL 211.27; MSA 7.27. Regardless of the approach selected, the value determined must represent the usual price for which the subject property would sell. Meadowlanes Ltd Dividend Housing Ass'n v City of Holland, 437 Mich. 473, 485; 473 N.W.2d 636 (1991). The three most common approaches to valuation are the capitalization-of-income approach, the sales-comparison or market approach, and the cost-less-depreciation approach. Id. at 484-485. Only the latter two methods were applied in the present case. The burden of proof was on petitioner to establish the true cash value of the property. MCL 205.737(3); MSA 7.650(37)(3).

The market approach is the only valuation method that directly reflects the balance of supply and demand for property in marketplace trading. Antisdale, supra at 277-278, n 1; Teledyne Continental Motors, supra at 193. Petitioner's proofs regarding the $1,001,000 sale of its equipment to Youngstown Industrial was intended to show the relatively small value the marketplace put on aging steelmaking equipment, including the mills. The Tax Tribunal, however, erred as a matter of law in its treatment of petitioner's evidence regarding the sale. The tribunal held: "A sale that occurs after the tax date has little or no bearing on the assessment made prior to the sale." (Emphasis in original.)

We disagree. Unlike some situations involving assessments of industrial property for which no ready market exists and a hypothetical buyer must be posited, in this case the equipment was actually sold in a commercial transaction, albeit after the tax date. We believe that evidence of the price at which an item of property actually sold is most certainly relevant evidence of its value at an earlier time within the meaning of the term "relevant evidence." MRE 401. Although the sale to Youngstown Industrial occurred approximately nine months after the tax date, the lapse in time is important only with respect to the weight that should be given the evidence, not to the relevance of the evidence. While the tribunal correctly noted that the sale price of a particular piece of property does not control its determination of the value of that property, Antisdale, supra at 278, the tribunal's opinion that the evidence "has little or no bearing" on the property's earlier value suggests that the evidence was rejected out of hand. Such cursory rejection would be erroneous.

See, e.g., Teledyne Continental Motors v Muskegon Twp, 163 Mich. App. 188, 192-193; 413 N.W.2d 700 (1987), and Clark Equipment Co v Leoni Twp, 113 Mich. App. 778, 785; 318 N.W.2d 586 (1982).

The tribunal further erred in failing to make an independent determination of the true cash value of the property. The tribunal apparently believed that no such determination was necessary after it concluded that petitioner had failed to meet its burden of proof and dismissed petitioner's appeal. The tribunal correctly noted that the burden of proof was on petitioner, MCL 205.737(3); MSA 7.650(37)(3). This burden encompasses two separate concepts: (1) the burden of persuasion, which does not shift during the course of the hearing; and (2) the burden of going forward with the evidence, which may shift to the opposing party. Kar v Hogan, 399 Mich. 529, 539-540; 251 N.W.2d 77 (1976); Holy Spirit Ass'n For the Unification of World Christianity v Dep't of Treasury, 131 Mich. App. 743, 752; 347 N.W.2d 707 (1984). The tribunal's decision, however, seems analogous to the entry of a directed verdict upon the failure of a plaintiff's proofs. To the extent this analogy may be accurate in this case, the entry of judgment against petitioner for its failure to provide sufficient evidence was erroneous because, while petitioner may not have met its burden of persuasion, it did meet its burden of going forward with evidence.

Even if the tribunal had correctly concluded that petitioner's proofs had failed, the tribunal still would be required to make an independent determination of the true cash value of the property. The tribunal may not automatically accept a respondent's assessment, but must make its own findings of fact and arrive at a legally supportable true cash value. Pinelake Housing Cooperative v Ann Arbor, 159 Mich. App. 208, 220; 406 N.W.2d 832 (1987); Consolidated Aluminum Corp v Richmond Twp, 88 Mich. App. 229, 232-233; 276 N.W.2d 566 (1979). In this case, the tribunal did consider whether the in-use multiplier or the surplus multiplier should have been used in respondent's costless-depreciation assessment, but then simply accepted respondent's assessment without discussing why the assessment reflected the true cash value of the property. On remand, the tribunal shall make an independent determination of true cash value. We note that the tribunal is not bound to accept either of the parties' theories of valuation. It may accept one theory and reject the other, it may reject both theories, or it may utilize a combination of both in arriving at its determination. Meadowlanes Ltd Dividend Housing Ass'n, supra at 485-486; Wolverine Tower Associates v Ann Arbor, 96 Mich. App. 780; 293 N.W.2d 669 (1980).

We agree with the Tax Tribunal that the city's use of the in-use multiplier was correct. Although petitioner may have been in the process of abandoning the Warren facility on the tax date, we do not believe that petitioner has shown the concurrent requirement that the property had been declared as surplus as the word "surplus" is commonly understood.

We also hold that the Tax Tribunal's factual finding that the mills were only partially obsolete was supported by the evidence. Although petitioner continually implied on appeal that the tribunal found that the mills were totally obsolete, a review of the tribunal's decision shows that it found the mills to be only partially obsolete. However, the tribunal made no findings with regard to the extent of the obsolescence of the mills, a major point of contention below. On remand, the tribunal is instructed to find the extent to which the mills have suffered both functional and economic obsolescence. See Fisher-New Center Co v Tax Comm, 380 Mich. 340, 362; 157 N.W.2d 271 (1968); Teledyne Continental Motors v Muskegon Twp, 145 Mich. App. 749, 754-755; 378 N.W.2d 590 (1985). The tribunal is also instructed to find the extent to which the assessor's manual adequately accounts for any obsolescence that may be found. We note that the record shows that the multiplier table for long-lived, in-use equipment, upon which the city's assessment was based, does not account for depreciation or obsolescence beyond a life of fifteen years. Put another way, the assessor's manual apparently would allow equal amounts of depreciation and obsolescence for an assessment of a thirty-two-year-old blooming mill and a nineteenth-century traction engine that remained in use. Finally, the tribunal is instructed to consider separately the true cash values of the blooming mill and the billet mill. If the tribunal believes it to be necessary, it may reopen proofs in order to resolve these issues.

Reversed and remanded to the Tax Tribunal. We do not retain jurisdiction.


Summaries of

Jones Laughlin v. Warren

Michigan Court of Appeals
Jan 10, 1992
193 Mich. App. 348 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992)

In Jones, we held that "the tribunal correctly noted that the sale price of a particular piece of property does not control its determination of the value of that property," but that "the tribunal's opinion that the evidence 'has little or no bearing' on the property's earlier value suggests that the evidence was rejected out of hand.

Summary of this case from JD Norman Indus. v. City of Leslie

discussing the different concepts of "burden of persuasion" and "burden of going forward with the evidence"

Summary of this case from Chapelle v. City of Bridgman

In Jones Laughlin Steel Corp v City of Warren, 193 Mich. App. 348, 356; 483 N.W.2d 416 (1992), this Court specifically noted that the in-use multipliers accounted for depreciation and obsolescence up to a certain point in time on the basis of life tables.

Summary of this case from Lionel Trains, Inc. v. Chesterfield Township
Case details for

Jones Laughlin v. Warren

Case Details

Full title:JONES LAUGHLIN STEEL CORPORATION v CITY OF WARREN

Court:Michigan Court of Appeals

Date published: Jan 10, 1992

Citations

193 Mich. App. 348 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992)
483 N.W.2d 416

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