2013 IL App (2d) 121031
No. 2-12-1031
Opinion filed September 30, 2013
______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
KRAFT FOODS, INC., ) Petition for Review of an Order of the
) Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board.
Petitioner, )
)
v. ) No. 07-03035.001-C-3
)
ILLINOIS PROPERTY TAX APPEAL )
BOARD, KANE COUNTY BOARD OF )
REVIEW, CITY OF AURORA, and WEST )
AURORA SCHOOL DISTRICT #129, )
)
Respondents. )
______________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Burke and Justice Zenoff concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 This is an action for direct review of a final administrative decision of the Illinois Property
Tax Appeal Board (PTAB or Board). In its decision, the PTAB concluded that, for purposes of tax
year 2007, the industrial property leased and occupied by taxpayer Kraft Foods, Inc. (Kraft), had a
total assessed value of $13,312,000, reflecting a fair market value of $40 million. Kraft, claiming
an assessed value of $10,791,000 and a fair market value of $30 million, has appealed from the
PTAB’s decision. We confirm the PTAB’s decision.
¶2 BACKGROUND
2013 IL App (2d) 121031
¶3 The property at issue is Kraft’s industrial warehouse distribution center located at 1700 North
Edgelawn Drive in Aurora Township, Kane County. The property consists of 2,160,822 square feet
of land that is improved with an 860,248-square-foot, one-story, partially air-conditioned building
constructed in 2003. The building contains 19,477 square feet of office space, with the 840,771-
square-foot balance used as a warehouse distribution center. There are 93 exterior truck docks on
the east and west elevations of the building. The land-to-building ratio is 2.51:1. The large amount
of land area allows for ample parking: there are 307 customer/employee parking spaces, and 234
truck trailer parking stalls.
¶4 The property was encumbered by a 10-year build-to-suit lease agreement that commenced
March 8, 2003. Kraft was the sole tenant and had options for two 10-year periods. The monthly rent
for the first five years of the lease was $4.35 per square foot of building area. The lease was a triple-
net lease, under which the tenant paid for utilities, taxes, insurance, and maintenance, and the
landlord paid for structural repairs only. For the second five years of the lease, the rent increased to
$4.49 per square foot. In January 2006, in a bulk-sale transaction, the subject property sold for
$62,858,000, or $73.07 per square foot.
¶5 On March 10, 2008, the Kane County Board of Review assessed the property for tax year
2007 at $13,679,281, which reflected a market value of $41,103,609. Kraft subsequently appealed
the Board of Review’s decision to the PTAB, arguing that the Board of Review’s assessed value was
excessive. The Board of Review did not respond to Kraft’s appeal. However, both the City of
Aurora and West Aurora School District #129 (collectively referred to as Aurora) were granted
permission to intervene.
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¶6 At the hearing before the PTAB, Kraft presented the testimony of appraiser Terrance
McCormick. He estimated that the value of the subject property was $30 million. Aurora presented
the testimony of appraiser James Gibbons. Gibbons estimated that the value of the subject property
was $43.3 million. Below, we set forth only those facts necessary to an understanding of the issues
in this appeal.
¶7 Kraft’s Appraisal
¶8 McCormick, a real estate appraiser with 32 years’ experience, testified that he applied the
three traditional approaches to value in order to arrive at an estimate of the market value of the
property. Under the cost approach, he arrived at an estimated value of $31 million. Under the
income approach, he arrived at an estimated value of $29.3 million. However, he placed the most
weight on the sales comparison approach. In conjunction with that approach, he considered five
comparable sales.
¶9 Comparable Sale 1 was in Aurora, Naperville Township, Du Page County. It was a one-
story, concrete-panel-constructed, multiple-tenant warehouse distribution industrial building
containing 315,799 square feet and situated on a 739,213-square-foot parcel of land. The building
was constructed in 2000 and had 1.8% office space, 32-foot clear ceiling heights, 37 exterior truck-
height docks, 3 drive-in truck doors, and a sprinkler system. The building was in average physical
condition for its age. The building was last sold in December 2007 for $12.8 million. The unit price
was $40.53 per square foot of building area, including land.
¶ 10 Comparable Sale 2 was in Aurora, Aurora Township, Kane County. It was a one-story,
concrete-panel-constructed, multiple-tenant warehouse distribution industrial building containing
383,948 square feet and situated on a 780,595-square-foot parcel of land. The building was
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constructed in 2002 and had 1% office space, 30-foot clear ceiling heights, 41 exterior truck-height
docks, 2 drive-in truck doors, and a sprinkler system. The building was in average physical
condition for its age. The building was last sold in April 2007 for $18.1 million. The unit price was
$47.14 per square foot of building area, including land.
¶ 11 Comparable Sale 3 was in Romeoville, Will County. It was a one-story, concrete-panel-
constructed, multiple-tenant warehouse distribution industrial building containing 471,453 square
feet and situated on a 1,000,573-square-foot parcel of land. The building was constructed in 2004
and had 2% office space, 30-foot clear ceiling heights, 48 exterior truck-height docks, 3 drive-in
truck doors, and a sprinkler system. The building was in average physical condition for its age. The
building was last sold in June 2006 for $16,502,500. The unit price was $35 per square foot of
building area, including land.
¶ 12 Comparable Sale 4 was in Joliet, Will County. It was a one-story, steel-framed, concrete-
panel-constructed, multiple-tenant warehouse distribution industrial building containing 474,432
square feet and situated on a 1,446,323-square-foot parcel of land. The building was constructed in
2006 and had 2% office space, 30-foot clear ceiling heights, 140 exterior truck-height docks, 4 drive-
in truck doors, and a sprinkler system. The building was in average physical condition for its age.
The building was last sold in February 2007 for $18.25 million. The unit price was $38.47 per
square foot of building area, including land.
¶ 13 Comparable Sale 5 was in Romeoville. It was a one-story, steel-framed, concrete-panel-
constructed, multiple-tenant warehouse distribution industrial building containing 652,056 square
feet and situated on a 1,151,421-square-foot parcel of land. The building was constructed in 2007
and had 2% office space, 30-foot clear ceiling heights, 76 exterior truck-height docks, 3 drive-in
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truck doors, and a sprinkler system. The building was in average physical condition for its age. The
building was last sold in December 2007 for $12.8 million. The unit price was $40.53 per square
foot of building area, including land.
¶ 14 McCormick testified that under the sales comparison approach the subject property had a
value of $35 per square foot of building area, including land, or $30.1 million. In reconciling the
three approaches to valuation, he concluded that the subject property had a value of $30 million.
¶ 15 In giving his opinion, McCormick acknowledged that the comparable sale and rental
properties were significantly smaller than the subject property. He stated that, in general, the larger
the building, the lower the rent per square foot. He also stated that a large building with a single
tenant carries a higher degree of risk. He acknowledged, however, that there is very little risk
associated with a build-to-suit lease for a triple-A-rated tenant. He further testified that it was
appropriate to consider properties 30 miles away from the subject property because, if a purchaser
were seeking to “buy or lease a large building like the subject property, their market would be the
entire Chicago region.”
¶ 16 Aurora’s Appraisal
¶ 17 Gibbons, a real estate appraiser with approximately 30 years’ experience, testified that he
applied the three traditional approaches to value in order to arrive at an estimate of the market value
of the property. Under the cost approach, he arrived at an estimated value of $46,585,000. Under
the income approach, he arrived at an estimated value of $43.7 million. However, he placed the
most weight on the sales comparison approach. In conjunction with that approach, he considered
six comparable sales.
¶ 18 Comparable Sale 1 was the subject property.
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¶ 19 Comparable Sale 2 was in Aurora. It was a one-story, precast-concrete-constructed, multiple-
tenant warehouse distribution industrial building containing 607,752 square feet and situated on a
1,306,800-square-foot (30 acre) parcel of land. The building was constructed in 2005 and had 1.3%
office space, 32-foot clear ceiling heights, 80 exterior truck-height docks, 4 drive-in truck doors, 380
parking spaces, and a sprinkler system. The building was last sold in April 2006 for $29.6 million.
The unit price was $48.70 per square foot of building area.
¶ 20 Comparable Sale 3 was the same as McCormick’s Comparable Sale 2.
¶ 21 Comparable Sale 4 was the same as McCormick’s Comparable Sale 1.
¶ 22 Comparable Sale 5 was in Aurora. It was a one-story, concrete-panel-constructed, single-
tenant industrial warehouse containing approximately 694,367 square feet and situated on a
1,485,880-square-foot parcel of land. The building was constructed in 1999 and had 3% office
space, 30- to 40-foot clear ceiling heights, 74 exterior truck-height docks, 2 drive-in truck doors, 167
car parking spaces, trailer spaces, and a sprinkler system. The building was last sold in January 2005
for $32.25 million. The unit price was $46.45 per square foot of building area.
¶ 23 Comparable Sale 6 was in Aurora. It was a one-story, precast-concrete-constructed, single-
tenant industrial warehouse building containing approximately 530,937 square feet and situated on
a 1,659,349-square-foot parcel of land. The building was constructed in 1997 and had 3.1% office
space, 30-foot clear ceiling heights, 88 exterior truck-height docks, and 2 drive-in truck doors. The
building had 52,000 square feet of air-conditioned warehouse space. The building was last sold in
March 2007 for $28,064,000. The unit price was $52.85 per square foot of building area.
Comparable Sale 6 was a property leased by Kraft that was previously sold in the same bulk-sale
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transaction as Comparable Sale 1. As to that transaction, Gibbons did not allocate a value to each
parcel, and he did not know how that could be done.
¶ 24 Based upon the sales comparison approach, Gibbons estimated the value of the subject
property at $43.3 million. In reconciling the three approaches to valuation, he concluded that the
subject property had a value of $43.3 million.
¶ 25 Kraft’s Rebuttal
¶ 26 Anthony Uzemack testified that he had been retained for the purpose of conducting a desk
review of Gibbons’ appraisal. He did not review McCormick’s appraisal. Uzemack stated that it
was very difficult to determine market value for property such as the subject property. Such
properties are not fee-simple “transactions” but investment schemes and should be treated as leased-
fee sales. He noted that the subject property’s contract rent was high, even characterizing it as “on
the moon.” He testified that there were few large warehouses in existence, which made the market
narrow and limited.
¶ 27 Uzemack considered Gibbons’ sales comparison approach to be weak. He stated that
Comparable Sales 1 and 6 were leased-fee bulk-sale transactions involving the subject property and
another property. He asserted that Comparable Sales 2, 3, and 5 had been put together as leased-fee
transactions by Liberty Property LLC, one of the largest real estate investment trust (REIT) firms in
the country for corporate warehouse distribution facilities. He believed that those sales should be
eliminated. That left Comparable Sale 4, a property smaller than the subject property, the size of
which put it in a different market.
¶ 28 On cross-examination, Uzemack acknowledged that he did not know which other properties
in the market were similar to Kraft’s in terms of size, nor did he know which ones were single-tenant
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properties. He did not know whether Kraft’s lease was a publicly available record. He did not know
the terms of the subject property’s sale.
¶ 29 Uzemack testified that the sizes of the properties compared in Gibbons’ appraisal were a
“large component” of his conclusion that the properties were not really comparable to the subject
property. He acknowledged that the subject property was “big,” but he did not believe that it was
“unique.” He also acknowledged that Gibbons’ descriptions of the compared properties were
accurate; Gibbons’ appraisal contained no mathematical errors; and Gibbons had extracted
capitalization rates from actual sales as well as from surveys.
¶ 30 Uzemack additionally testified that it was proper to use as a comparable sale a property that
was leased at the time of its sale as long as its rent was at market level. He also noted that the
property did not have to be vacant at the time it was sold in order to be considered as a comparable
sale property.
¶ 31 The PTAB’s Decision
¶ 32 The PTAB concluded that a reduction in the assessment of the property as established by the
Board of Review was warranted. It found the property’s estimated fair market value, as of January
1, 2007, to be $40 million.
¶ 33 In arriving at its conclusion, the PTAB noted various points of agreement between the two
appraisers. Both McCormick and Gibbons agreed about the description of the improvements to the
property, both had applied the three traditional approaches to value, and both had ranked those in
the same order, attributing the greatest weight to the sales comparison approach, with the income
approach ranking second. Both appraisers valued the land at $2 per square foot, and both were in
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near-agreement on the cost of replacing the improvements. The PTAB agreed with both appraisers
that the $62 million sale price of the property did not reflect its fair market value.
¶ 34 In considering the replacement cost approach, the PTAB determined that the subject property
had a value of $45,257,813. In considering the income approach, the PTAB determined that the
subject property had a value of $40.9 million.
¶ 35 In considering the sales comparison method, the PTAB noted that Gibbons’ Comparable Sale
3 was the same as McCormick’s Comparable Sale 2. (The record also reveals that Gibbons’
Comparable Sale 4 was the same as McCormick’s Comparable Sale 1.) The PTAB considered all
of the five sales McCormick had offered, which were located in Aurora, Romeoville, and Joliet.
They were improved with multitenant warehouse buildings ranging from 315,799 to 652,056 square
feet, and sold between June 2006 and December 2007 for prices ranging from $35 to $47.14 per
square foot including land. The PTAB assigned less weight to the sales farthest away from the
subject property, which sold for the lowest unit prices.
¶ 36 The PTAB considered the six sales that Gibbons had used. It gave no weight to Comparable
Sales 1 and 6, because those sales were of the subject property and another property in a bulk-sale
transaction. The four remaining properties were improved with one-story industrial warehouse
buildings that ranged in size from 320,047 to 694,367 square feet and were built between 1999 and
2005. Three were multitenant buildings and one was a single-tenant property.
¶ 37 The PTAB found that the most probative sales were, like the subject property, located in
Aurora and had unit prices ranging from $39 to $48.70 per square foot of building area, including
land. Taking into consideration the size and multitenant configuration of some of the properties, the
PTAB found that downward adjustments of price would be justified for comparison’s sake. Further,
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the Board found that Gibbons’ Comparable Sale 5 was the most comparable to the subject property.
It was a single-tenant building with 694,367 square feet of building area that was leased for $3.75
per square foot at the time it sold and had a unit value of $46.45 per square foot of building area,
including land. The subject property’s assessment reflected a unit value of $47.48 per square foot
of building area, including land. Based on comparable sales, the Board found that Kraft’s property
had a unit value of $46 per square foot of building area, including land, which was the equivalent
of $39.6 million rounded.
¶ 38 After considering the testimony, and the different approaches to value, giving most emphasis
to the evidence of the sales in the record, the PTAB found that the property had a market value of
$40 million on January 1, 2007.
¶ 39 Kraft filed a timely notice of appeal.
¶ 40 ANALYSIS
¶ 41 Standard of Review
¶ 42 The findings of an administrative agency are prima facie correct in a case such as this, and
the court should not intervene in a case where property has been assessed higher or lower than it
should have been through a mere error of judgment by the administrative agency. Chrysler Corp.
v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board, 69 Ill. App. 3d 207, 210 (1979). However, where the court
is faced with potential use of an improper method of valuation, rather than with a mere difference
of opinion as to the market value of a particular parcel, courts have intervened. Chrysler, 69 Ill.
App. 3d at 210-11.
¶ 43 Illinois law requires that all real property be valued at its fair cash value, estimated at the
price it would bring at a fair voluntary sale where the owner is ready, willing, and able to sell but is
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not compelled to do so, and the buyer is likewise ready, willing, and able to buy but is not forced to
do so. Chrysler, 69 Ill. App. 3d at 211. “Fair cash value” is synonymous with fair market value, and
an arm’s-length sales transaction is the best evidence thereof. Walsh v. Property Tax Appeal Board,
181 Ill. 2d 228, 230 (1998). There are three basic methods of evaluating real property: (1) the sales
comparison approach; (2) the income approach; and (3) the reproduction cost approach. Chrysler,
69 Ill. App. 3d at 211. In the absence of market value established by a contemporaneous arm’s-
length sale, the sales comparison approach is the preferred method and should be used when market
data are available. Cook County Board of Review v. Property Tax Appeal Board, 384 Ill. App. 3d
472, 480-81 (2008) (Omni). The sales comparison approach relies on sales of comparable properties
in the open market to reach a determination of the subject property’s fair cash value. Omni, 384 Ill.
App. 3d at 481. The existence of market data to determine fair cash value is central to the sales
comparison (also called market) approach. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 481. The income method is
based on the property’s income-producing potential and divides the property’s net income by a
capitalization rate, which is a return on and of capital, as determined by market data. Department
of Transportation v. Drury Displays, Inc., 327 Ill. App. 3d 881, 885 (2002). Generally, the
reproduction cost approach should be emphasized only in the context of some special-purpose
property, which is defined as property of such a nature and applied to such a special use that it cannot
have a market value. Chrysler, 69 Ill. App. 3d at 212.
¶ 44 Kraft’s first argument on appeal is that the PTAB erred as a matter of law in relying on
leased-fee bulk-sale transactions, not listed on the open market, to find the market value for the
subject property. Kraft frames this issue as whether the PTAB considered appraisals that applied the
proper methodology for the valuation of the subject property. This is a legal question that we would
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review de novo. Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 v. Illinois
Property Tax Appeal Board, 2011 IL App (2d) 100068, ¶ 35 (Onyx). In response, the PTAB asserts
that there is really no issue as to whether the proper valuation method was employed. The PTAB
points out that Kraft does not dispute that it was appropriate for the appraisers and the PTAB to
consider all three methods to value the property, nor was it improper for everyone, including the
PTAB, to give the sales comparison approach the most weight. The PTAB argues that Kraft’s real
contention is that the PTAB erred in placing greater weight on Gibbons’ testimony than it did on
McCormick’s and Uzemack’s. As such, the appropriate standard of review of the PTAB’s decision
should be whether that decision is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 45 In its reply brief, Kraft insists that the PTAB is mischaracterizing its argument. Kraft argues
that the problem with the PTAB’s approach to determining the value of the property was twofold.
First, Kraft contends that the PTAB erred in considering comparables “that did not reflect the fair
market value of the fee simple absolute.” Second, Kraft argues that the PTAB erred in “mixing and
matching the comparable properties from two appraisals” and in essence creating its own appraisal.
Kraft maintains that the PTAB “is to weigh the evidence and then decide which party has presented
the more compelling evidence; it does not permit the PTAB to create its own evidence and substitute
it for those offered by trained experts.” Kraft therefore concludes that the PTAB’s purported errors
should be reviewed de novo.
¶ 46 We find Kraft’s argument to be without merit. First, in arguing that the PTAB erred in
relying on improper comparable-sale appraisals, Kraft’s contention is premised on the notion that
the PTAB should not have relied on five of Gibbons’ comparable-sale appraisals, because Uzemack
testified that those appraisals had not been done in a way to reflect actual market value. However,
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Gibbons specifically testified that his comparable-sale appraisals did reflect actual market value.
Thus, as Kraft is essentially arguing that the PTAB should have placed greater weight on Uzemack’s
testimony than on Gibbons’, we will not disturb the PTAB’s decision unless it is against the manifest
weight of the evidence. See Kankakee County Board of Review v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal
Board, 337 Ill. App. 3d 1070, 1074 (2003) (United Coatings).
¶ 47 Second, we reject Kraft’s contention that the PTAB erred in choosing to accept some
evidence and rejecting or discounting other evidence. Despite Kraft’s protests to the contrary, it was
not inherently improper for the PTAB to credit some of the evidence that both parties presented.
Kraft cites no authority for the proposition that the PTAB must accept evidence from only one of the
parties in a valuation dispute. Indeed, such an argument is contrary to existing precedent. See, e.g.,
Kankakee County Board of Review v. Property Tax Appeal Board, 2012 IL App (3d) 110045, ¶¶ 6,
8, 10 (Armstrong) (taxpayer’s appraiser testified that subject property was worth between $2.9
million and $3.15 million; county’s appraiser testified that property was worth between $8.6 million
and $10.4 million; PTAB determined that property was worth $3.96 million); Onyx, 2011 IL App
(2d) 100068, ¶¶ 4, 31 (taxpayer’s appraisers testified that subject property was worth either $10.66
million or $9.6 million; appraiser for school district testified that property was worth $25.9 million;
PTAB determined that property was worth $10 million); Kendall County Board of Review v.
Property Tax Appeal Board, 337 Ill. App. 3d 735, 739 (2003) (AT & T) (PTAB found that each of
the appraisals submitted was more valid than the other one as to certain points; PTAB determined
that subject property was worth different amount than either of the appraisers had concluded).
¶ 48 We note that none of the aforementioned cases explain why the PTAB may consider
conflicting appraisals and conclude that the property is worth a different amount than what any of
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the experts testified to. We believe that the reasoning of those cases is implicitly based on the
weight-of-the-evidence concept, which requires the trier of fact to find whether the greater amount
of credible evidence presented sustains the issue that is to be established. Black’s Law Dictionary
1594 (6th ed. 1990). In making such a determination, the trier of fact may find that both parties
presented credible evidence as to a certain issue. That the trier of fact ultimately determines that one
party presented more credible evidence than the other does not require it to discount all the evidence
that the other party presented. Thus, the PTAB’s conclusion that the property was worth a different
amount than any of the appraisers determined does not require us to employ a de novo standard of
review. See AT & T, 337 Ill. App. 3d at 739. Accordingly, as stated above, we will not disturb the
PTAB’s decision unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence. United Coatings, 337 Ill.
App. 3d at 1074.
¶ 49 Whether the PTAB’s Findings Are Against the Manifest Weight of the Evidence
¶ 50 Kraft next argues that, even if the de novo standard of review is not applied, the PTAB’s
decision is against the manifest weight of the evidence. Specifically, Kraft argues that the PTAB
erred in (1) placing any weight on Gibbons’ Comparable Sales 2, 3, and 5, because those
comparables were based on leased-fee bulk-sale transactions; and (2) excluding from consideration
McCormick’s Comparable Sales 3, 4, and 5, just because those comparables were based on
properties outside of Aurora.
¶ 51 As stated above, the PTAB’s finding regarding the property’s fair market value will not be
reversed unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence, which occurs only where “all
reasonable and unbiased persons would agree that the decision is erroneous and that an opposite
conclusion is clearly evident.” United Coatings, 337 Ill. App. 3d at 1074. Moreover, weighing
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evidence and determining the credibility of witnesses are jobs of the PTAB and are uniquely in its
province. AT & T, 337 Ill. App. 3d at 737. Thus, on administrative review, this court does not
reweigh the evidence, reassess the credibility of the witnesses, substitute its judgment for that of the
PTAB, or make an independent determination of the facts. AT & T, 337 Ill. App. 3d at 737. This
court will not disturb the PTAB’s findings where there exists simply a difference of opinion
regarding the actual value of the property. County of Du Page v. Property Tax Appeal Board, 303
Ill. App. 3d 538, 541 (1999).
¶ 52 Here, the PTAB placed the most weight on the comparable sales method, which was
appropriate. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 480-81. In doing so, it also placed the most weight on the
comparable sales that were in Aurora (four of Gibbons’ and two of McCormick’s). The PTAB found
that those sales had varying degrees of similarity to Kraft’s property, with the primary differences
being in size and multitenant configuration. The PTAB found that, in particular, Gibbons’
Comparable Sale 5 was the most similar to the subject property because it was a large distribution
warehouse nearly equal to Kraft’s in size and was leased to a single tenant at market rent. It placed
less weight on McCormick’s three comparables that were not in Aurora, not only because they were
25 to 30 miles away from the subject property, but because they were smaller than the subject
property. As all of the PTAB’s findings are supported by the record, we cannot say that its decision
is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 53 In so ruling, we reject Kraft’s contention that the PTAB erred in considering Gibbons’
Comparable Sale 3. We observe that Gibbons’ Comparable Sale 3 was the same as McCormick’s
Comparable Sale 2, something that Kraft specifically asked the PTAB to consider. Kraft, thus,
cannot now complain that the PTAB erred in considering McCormick’s Comparable Sale 2. See
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Byer Clinic & Chiropractic, Ltd. v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 2013 IL App (1st) 113038, ¶
20 (party is judicially estopped from assuming a position in a legal proceeding contrary to a position
it held in a prior legal proceeding).
¶ 54 We also reject Kraft’s contention that the PTAB erred in placing any weight on Gibbons’
Comparable Sales 2 and 5 (as well as Comparable Sale 3) because those were leased-fee bulk-sale
transactions. Such transactions occur when a property is sold to real estate investors in order to
collect rental income. The transactions do not necessarily reflect market value. Kraft’s argument
as to this point is essentially that the PTAB should have placed more weight on Uzemack’s
testimony than on Gibbons’ and McCormick’s. Uzemack testified that the leases as to Gibbons’
Comparable Sales 2, 3, and 5 were not at market rate when they sold. Gibbons testified that they
were. McCormick’s testimony also indicated that Gibbons’ Comparable Sale 3 was at market rate.
As it was within the PTAB’s discretion to place more weight on Gibbons’ and McCormick’s
testimony than on Uzemack’s, we will not disturb the PTAB’s ruling as to this point. See AT & T,
337 Ill. App. 3d at 737.
¶ 55 We further reject Kraft’s argument that the PTAB’s decision was internally inconsistent.
Kraft argues that Gibbons’ Comparable Sales 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 were all leased-fee bulk-sale
transactions. As the PTAB specifically refused to give any weight to Comparable Sales 1 and 6,
Kraft argues that the PTAB’s decision was inconsistent when it nonetheless considered Comparable
Sales 2, 3, and 5. We do not find the PTAB’s decision to be internally inconsistent. The PTAB
refused to give any weight to Comparable Sales 1 and 6 because those sales involved the subject
property and a property that was involved with it in the same sales transaction. The PTAB’s refusal
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to consider those properties was unrelated to its consideration of any of the other properties that
Gibbons and McCormick submitted as comparables.
¶ 56 We next consider Kraft’s argument that the PTAB erred in “excluding” three of
McCormick’s comparables only because they were outside of Aurora. Kraft insists that because
McCormick testified that an entity wanting to use a large warehouse would consider the entire
Chicago area as the market for such a warehouse, and because that testimony was unrebutted, the
PTAB was obligated to place significant weight on those comparables.
¶ 57 We first observe that Kraft mischaracterizes the PTAB’s findings. The PTAB did not
indicate that it was excluding those three comparables. Rather, it just indicated that it was placing
less weight on those properties because they were not close to the subject property. The PTAB also
found that those properties had lower values than the properties in Aurora that both McCormick and
Gibbons had considered as comparables. We also note that the record indicates that the subject
property was close to an interstate highway, something that Gibbons indicated increased the value
of the property. Although McCormick testified that his Comparable Sale 3 in Romeoville was close
to I-55, he indicated that his Comparable Sale 4 in Joliet was in an inferior location to the subject
property. McCormick did not indicate how close the property in Comparable Sale 5 was to an
interstate. As we cannot say that all reasonable people would take a different position than the
PTAB did in placing less weight on the properties outside of Aurora, the PTAB’s decision on this
point is not against the manifest weight of the evidence. See United Coatings, 337 Ill. App. 3d at
1074.
¶ 58 As to Kraft’s argument that the PTAB was obligated to place greater weight on the three
properties outside of Aurora because no one rebutted McCormick’s testimony that the entire Chicago
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area was the market for someone looking for a large warehouse (and therefore the properties outside
of Aurora were indeed comparable), we note that Kraft cites no authority for the proposition that a
trier of fact must accept certain testimony just because it is unrebutted. Indeed, if Kraft’s argument
were valid, it would remove some of the discretion from the trier of fact as to how much weight
should be afforded various evidence. That we decline to do. Cf. People v. McCoy, 140 Ill. App. 3d
868, 873 (1986) (jury was free to reject any or all of defendant’s testimony even though it was not
directly contradicted by other eyewitnesses).
¶ 59 Finally, we find Kraft’s reliance on Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d) 110045, to be misplaced.
In that case, the reviewing court noted that the subject property was old, as one of the appraisers had
described it as having a “40-year weighted age.” Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d) 110045, ¶¶ 3, 6.
Further, it had been owned and occupied by Armstrong since construction, and it was “unique,”
having been built to manufacture floor tiles in a “fairly uncommon vertical manufacturing” process.
Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d) 110045, ¶ 3. That process required a “very tall facility, which would
not be useful for many potential industrial users.” Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d) 110045, ¶ 3. The
subject property’s unique characteristics of age, size, multiple stories, and vertical “rack warehouse
system” complicated the task of finding suitable comparable sales. Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d)
110045, ¶¶ 6, 7. Based on the unique nature of the subject property, the taxpayer submitted
comparable sales that were farther away from the subject property. Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d)
110045, ¶ 7. The board of review submitted comparables that were closer but had multitenant
configurations. The PTAB ruled in favor of the taxpayer, finding that the multitenant properties that
the board of review had submitted were not comparable to Armstrong’s owner-occupied single-user
vertical-manufacturing facility. The PTAB also specifically explained that the board of review’s
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expert had provided no information regarding the lease terms, their lengths, or any other details for
those multitenant comparable sales. Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d) 110045, ¶ 9. The reviewing court
confirmed the PTAB’s decision, noting that “ ‘[i]f there is any evidence which fairly supports the
agency’s findings, the decision must be sustained on review.’ ” Armstrong, 2012 IL App (3d)
110045, ¶ 17 (quoting Illini Country Club v. Property Tax Appeal Board, 263 Ill. App. 3d 410, 417
(1994)).
¶ 60 Here, Kraft argues that the PTAB should have considered comparable sales that were farther
away from the subject property, just as it did in Armstrong. However, in this case, unlike in
Armstrong, one of the taxpayer’s own experts testified that the subject property was not unique.
Indeed, both McCormick and Gibbons submitted several comparable properties that were located
in Aurora. Further, unlike in Armstrong, the expert here opposing the taxpayer (Gibbons) provided
sufficient information regarding the lease terms of the comparable properties. Finally, we note that
in Armstrong, based on the substantial deference to which the PTAB’s decisions are entitled, the
reviewing court confirmed the PTAB’s decision. Applying that same standard of review to the case
herein, and for the reasons set forth above, we also find that the PTAB’s decision should be
confirmed.
¶ 61 CONCLUSION
¶ 62 For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the PTAB is confirmed.
¶ 63 Confirmed.
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