ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
Appellate Court
Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223 v. Illinois
Property Tax Appeal Board, 2011 IL App (2d) 100068
Appellate Court THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF MERIDIAN COMMUNITY UNIT
Caption SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 223 and THE OGLE COUNTY BOARD OF
REVIEW, Petitioners, v. THE ILLINOIS PROPERTY TAX APPEAL
BOARD and ONYX ORCHARD HILLS LANDFILL, INC.,
Respondents.
District & No. Second District
Docket No. 2-10-0068
Filed June 28, 2011
Modified upon
denial of rehearing October 24, 2011
Held In an action arising from a dispute over the Property Tax Appeal Board’s
(Note: This syllabus decision reducing the tax assessment for a parcel of land owned by
constitutes no part of respondent and used as a sanitary landfill, the appellate court affirmed the
the opinion of the court Board’s decision that the fair market value of the property was $10
but has been prepared million, based on the conclusion that the cost approach used by
by the Reporter of respondent’s first appraiser in finding a valuation of $10,660,000
Decisions for the supported the income approach used by its second appraiser in reaching
convenience of the a valuation of $9,600,000, notwithstanding the fact that each appraiser
reader.)
used a single approach, since the comparable-sales approach would not
have been reliable where the sales were part of a Department of Justice
divestiture order that included the property at issue, and under the
circumstances, the methodology employed by the appraisers was
appropriate.
Decision Under Petition for review of order of the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board,
Review No. 03-00470.001-I-3.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on John B. Roe, State’s Attorney, of Oregon, and Stuart L. Whitt, Joshua S.
Appeal Whitt, and Catherine M. Hess, all of Whitt Law LLC, of Aurora, for
petitioners.
Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (Michael A. Scodro,
Solicitor General, and John P. Schmidt, Assistant Attorney General, of
counsel), for respondent Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board.
Robert M. Sarnoff, Michael F. Baccash, and Jeffrey G. Hertz, all of
Sarnoff & Baccash, of Chicago, for respondent Onyx Orchard Hills
Landfill, Inc.
Panel JUSTICE ZENOFF delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Schostok and Birkett concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Petitioners, the Board of Education of Meridian Community Unit School District No. 223
(school district) and the Ogle County Board of Review (BOR), appeal from the decision of
respondent the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board (PTAB) reducing the 2003 tax assessment
for a parcel of land owned by respondent Onyx Orchard Landfill, Inc. (Onyx). We affirm.
¶2 The property at issue (instant landfill) is a sanitary landfill consisting of 333.78 acres
located in Davis Junction, Illinois. The landfill is three rectangular parcels, identified by
separate parcel identification numbers; however, only one parcel, consisting of 159.54 acres,
is involved in this proceeding. As of January 1, 2003, the date of valuation, the Ogle County
assessment on the parcel at issue was $2,501,240. The BOR increased the assessment to
$8,633,000, and Onyx appealed to the PTAB, which, after an extensive evidentiary hearing,
reduced the assessment to $3,321,000.
¶3 The record shows that the instant landfill was among a number of assets located
throughout the United States that were subject to a federal divestiture order, the purpose of
which was to establish viable competition in the waste disposal business. On March 31,
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2000, the instant landfill was transferred from BFI Waste Systems of North America, Inc.,
to Onyx’s parent company. Onyx owns and operates the instant landfill.
¶4 At the hearing before the PTAB, Onyx presented the testimony of two appraisers, both
of whom opined as to the fair market value of the entire landfill, even though only one parcel
was at issue. One appraiser calculated the market value at $10,660,000 and the other at
$9,600,000. The school district, which had been allowed to intervene, presented evidence
that the entire landfill had an estimated market value of $25,900,000. Below, we set forth
only those facts necessary to an understanding of the issues in this appeal.
¶5 Onyx’s Appraisals
¶6 Michael J. Kelly, a real estate appraiser with 32 years’ experience appraising commercial
and industrial properties, including landfills, testified that the purpose of the Onyx appraisal
was to determine the unencumbered fee-simple value of the instant landfill as of January 1,
2003. Kelly testified that, given that his assignment was to value the real estate only and that
the landfill was a going concern, the cost approach was the best method to calculate the
market value. According to Kelly, the use of the income-capitalization approach to determine
reliable market data, even assuming one could obtain valid arm’s-length royalty agreements
(leases between landfill owners and operators), would entail too many adjustments to the
income stream to provide a reliable value for the real estate only. Kelly also rejected the
sales-comparison approach because the sale of an operating landfill is of the going concern
and thus the approach necessitates significant adjustments, such as excluding elements of
business value that contribute to the sale price. Kelly questioned the reliability of any figure
reached using the sales-comparison method. As a result, Kelly decided to use only the cost
approach.
¶7 Using this method, he determined that the value of the instant landfill was $10,660,000.
He arrived at this number by first determining the value of the land as though it were vacant.
By looking at recent sales of agricultural properties in Ogle County, Kelly concluded that the
land’s value was $4,000 per acre. He then calculated the replacement cost for the
improvements on the property, which totaled $2,618,000. He then determined that the cost
of cell liners for the developed portion of the landfill was $19,150,000, to which he applied
a depreciation factor because the landfill had reached 63% of its permitted capacity as of
January 1, 2003. Factoring in depreciation reduced the value of the cell liners to $7,472,290.
Kelly then depreciated the value of improvements other than the cell liners and came to a
total of $2,036,500. When he added the value of the land, the improvements, and the cell
liners, he came to a total of $10,658,790, which he rounded to $10,660,000.
¶8 Douglas Main was Onyx’s second appraiser. He specialized in waste and the waste
industry, having directed for five years PriceWaterhouseCoopers’ Waste Group, a national
practice providing advisory consulting services to the waste management industry. Prior to
working for PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Main owned his own company called Landfill
Valuation of America. Main testified that his assignment in the present case was to value the
real estate only and to exclude from his valuation the going-concern or whole-business value,
which combines all the assets. Main searched for any sale of the instant landfill within three
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years of the valuation date in order to determine its market value, defined by an arm’s-length
transaction between unrelated parties without force or a specific reason to buy or sell. Onyx’s
purchase of the landfill did not meet the criteria for an arm’s-length transaction, because it
occurred under duress when the Department of Justice ordered the divestiture of the instant
landfill as part of a portfolio of assets. Moreover, according to Main, price allocations for
some of the assets in the portfolio sale had no relevance to market value because they were
made for accounting purposes and were not reflective of the real estate only.
¶9 Main rejected the cost approach because it was not the best indicator of value, due to the
difficulty in estimating the land value of such a large parcel and in defining accrued
depreciation and because the landfill was a wasting or depleting asset. Main also rejected the
sales-comparison approach because most sales of landfills involve going-concern sales data,
which include personal property and intangibles, and because many landfill sales are part of
a portfolio acquisition. According to Main, because of the numerous adjustments required,
the sales-comparison approach would not reflect market-participant behavior that focuses on
the income-generating capability of the instant landfill. Therefore, Main applied the income
approach in his appraisal.
¶ 10 In applying the income approach, Main relied on the market/royalty method in order to
reflect the value of the real estate only. The market/royalty method essentially translates
capitalization of future income attributable to the real estate into an estimate of the net
present worth of the real estate. Main first calculated Onyx’s tipping fee, which is the fee that
Onyx would charge for dropping off waste at a landfill. Main estimated a net tipping fee of
$18.50 per ton and then deducted $5 per ton for surcharges and host fees, which are collected
and passed on to appropriate agencies. Thus, Main calculated Onyx’s tipping fee at $13.50
per ton. He next calculated annual waste intake and multiplied it by the annual tipping fees
to arrive at Onyx’s annual income from tipping fees. Then Main examined leasing and
royalty agreements for other operating landfills, and, after making appropriate adjustments,
he determined that Onyx’s market rent/royalty rate was 12%. By multiplying the market
rent/royalty rate by the amount of annual tipping-fee income, adding miscellaneous income
and subtracting miscellaneous administrative expenses, then applying an annual discount rate
over the remaining life of the landfill, Main determined that the value of the instant landfill
was $9,600,000.
¶ 11 The School District’s Appraisal
¶ 12 The school district hired Michael McCann, who had approximately 23 years’ experience
appraising all types of waste disposal facilities, including sanitary landfills, to appraise the
instant landfill. McCann’s assignment was to appraise the fair market value of the instant
landfill as of January 1, 2003, exclusive of any business or enterprise value. McCann also
appraised not the individual parcel at issue, but the entire landfill as one whole economic
unit. McCann considered all three approaches to determine the property’s value, but he did
not utilize the cost approach because, in his opinion, it was irrelevant because landfills are
not bought or sold on a cost-approach basis. Rather, McCann utilized the sales-comparison
and income approaches. In utilizing the sales-comparison approach, McCann reviewed
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numerous sales of landfill properties, including properties in northern Lake County,
California, and Michigan. Under the sales-comparison approach, McCann appraised the
instant landfill at $25,500,000. Utilizing the income approach, McCann appraised the instant
landfill at $25,900,000. This figure was arrived at by multiplying waste intake volume by a
tipping fee of $33 per ton with an increase of 2.3% per year for the life of the landfill.
McCann selected the tipping fee from data contained in a 2002 report regarding tipping fees
charged at 10 northern Illinois landfills.
¶ 13 The school district asked Mark Pomykacz, a real estate and business appraiser with over
20 years’ experience to review the submitted appraisals for their reliability and credibility.
Pomykacz found the Kelly and Main appraisals to be materially inconsistent, and he did not
believe that they could be reconciled to determine a fair market value for the instant landfill.
Pomykacz testified that the income that Main calculated in his appraisal was insufficient to
support the cost that Kelly ascribed to the instant landfill. According to Pomykacz, if Onyx
relied on the income as described in Main’s appraisal, it would not construct the
improvements described in Kelly’s appraisal.
¶ 14 Onyx’s Rebuttal
¶ 15 In rebuttal, Onyx presented the testimony of Jerry Jones, a real estate appraiser with 34
years’ experience, including the appraisal of landfills. Jones reviewed the McCann appraisal.
Jones testified that McCann’s sales-comparison approach was flawed because all of the sales
of landfills that McCann referenced were duress sales, not arm’s-length transactions, and
thus they did not reflect fair market value. According to Jones, the tipping fee that McCann
used in his income approach was a “gate fee,” the highest rate charged at a landfill for a one-
time user, which did not take into account discounts that may be given. Also, according to
Jones, there was no relation between McCann’s gate fee and the market rate, because the fee
that McCann used was for uncompacted waste.
¶ 16 On August 29, 2007, the hearing concluded, and the PTAB took the case under
advisement.
¶ 17 The School District’s Posttrial Motion
¶ 18 On September 8, 2008, while the matter was under advisement, the school district filed
a posttrial motion “to consider additional legal authority.” In its motion, the school district
cited Cook County Board of Review v. Property Tax Appeal Board (Omni), 384 Ill. App. 3d
472 (2008), and argued that, under Omni, Onyx failed to meet its burden of going forward
with evidence sufficient to challenge the assessment, because both Kelly and Main omitted
the sales-comparison approach in estimating the market value of the instant landfill. Onyx
objected to the posttrial motion, on the ground that the school district forfeited the issue by
not raising it either in a pretrial motion, during the hearing, or in its final argument.
Alternatively, Onyx argued that Omni was inapplicable to the present case. The school
district replied that, under the rules of practice and procedure applicable to the PTAB,
whether Onyx met its burden of going forward with sufficient evidence was not a matter
capable of being forfeited.
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¶ 19 The PTAB’s Decision
¶ 20 On December 23, 2009, the PTAB filed its final administrative decision. The PTAB
found that Onyx met its burden of going forward with evidence sufficient to challenge the
assessment. The PTAB ruled that a party cannot forfeit the issue of whether the burden of
going forward has been met, and it granted the school district’s motion to consider the Omni
decision.
¶ 21 The PTAB summarized Omni as holding that “an appraisal excluding the sales
comparison approach [has] to be justified with more than unsupported conclusions that
adjustments would be too subjective, and that the sales comparison approach could not be
employed because there were no sales of properties similar to the subject.” The PTAB then
said, “There is no doubt on this record that landfills are sold from time to time, however, the
question becomes whether the data reflects comparable sales.” The PTAB noted that, while
McCann examined the sale of the instant landfill as well as three other sales that were part
of the same divestiture order, McCann opined that it was more appropriate to rely on the
income approach to value the instant landfill. Thus, the PTAB concluded that McCann used
the sales-comparison approach as, at most, a check on his income approach, but that the
sales-comparison approach in the McCann appraisal was “not otherwise utilized in arriving
at a final opinion of value.”
¶ 22 The PTAB stated:
“As outlined by the court in the Omni decision, the [PTAB] finds that this record justifies
the exclusion of the sales comparison approach in that the appraisers found that reliable
data could not be derived from the sale of the subject or from the sales of reasonably
comparable property. *** In summary, two appraisal experts concluded that the [sales-
comparison] approach was not useful with regard to the subject landfill primarily because
of the numerous adjustments necessary to sales data. While McCann did a sales
comparison approach, all three sales considered were as a result of the same divestiture
order that lead [sic] to the sale of the subject.”
With regard to the sales-comparison approach, the PTAB further stated:
“[A]s established on the record[ ] there are circumstances where a property is so unique
and/or where the sales data that are available involve highly complex transactions of
multiple properties, business value and/or intangible assets that it is nearly impossible
to decipher the purchase price of a single property with any level of certainty. ***
The [PTAB] finds on this record that a showing has been made which justifies a
single approach appraisal excluding the sales comparison approach can [sic] be relied
upon as the ‘best evidence of market value’ in accordance with the opinion [in Omni].
Thus, the [PTAB] finds that [Onyx’s] submission of appraisals relying upon the cost and
income approaches to value, respectively, sufficiently challenged the correctness of the
assessment of the subject property.”
¶ 23 With respect to the above finding, the PTAB also found that, due to the compulsion
created by the Department of Justice order, the sales of landfills did not meet the definition
of arm’s-length transactions and thus the PTAB could not rely on those sales to ascertain fair
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market value. Additionally, the PTAB found that the sales-comparison approach used by
McCann lacked reliability because the adjustments he used “were vague at best.” “As a
result,” the PTAB found that “the entire sales comparison analysis performed by McCann
is questionable and unreliable.” Further, the PTAB found that the data considered by
McCann “lacks credibility or reliability and therefore the [PTAB] finds McCann’s sales
comparison approach does not support the subject property’s 2003 assessed value.”
¶ 24 The PTAB then found that the income approach utilizing a market rent/royalty analysis
“reflects the property’s chief source of value,” because the net income from receiving waste
reflected the instant landfill’s chief source of value. “[T]he value of the land appears to lie
in its ability to receive waste over the remaining life of the landfill.” The PTAB derived this
last statement from the undisputed fact that the highest and best use of the subject property
was as a landfill.
¶ 25 Next, the PTAB considered which of the two appraisals that used the income approach,
McCann’s or Main’s, was better supported and more credible. The PTAB found that Main’s
data was more reliable McCann’s.
¶ 26 McCann, the PTAB explained, used data published in a regional report that presented
regional data. While the regional report included tipping-fee data, there was nothing
presented to reflect the accuracy of the information, whether the fees reported were gross or
net, or what the amounts truly represented. “Based on the entirety of the evidence and
testimony presented, the [PTAB] finds that Main’s selection of an appropriate tip fee was
better researched, supported and explained on the record than that of McCann.”
¶ 27 The PTAB commented that Main and McCann agreed on the starting point in
determining annual waste volume, but differed on the instant landfill’s remaining economic
life. McCann assumed a life of 17 years, while Main assumed a life of 13 years. The PTAB
found that Main’s data presented the best evidence because it was derived from engineering
reports pertaining to the instant landfill, whereas McCann’s data came from published
conversion rates that had not been changed since the 1990s. “In weighing the data presented
by the two appraisers, the [PTAB] finds the data presented by Main to be more credible and
reliable.”
¶ 28 Next, the PTAB considered which appraisal more accurately reflected the administrative
expenses in managing the instant landfill lease. The PTAB noted that McCann’s appraisal
assumed that 1% of income would reflect the cost for periodic monthly auditing, legal work,
management, and miscellaneous expenses, but that McCann chose to apply a higher income
rate of 5% without substantiating the use of the higher amount. As Main’s selection of a 2%
income rate was more credible and conformed to McCann’s initial conclusion of 1%, the
PTAB adopted Main’s calculation.
¶ 29 Both McCann and Main chose applicable discount rates (future income discounted to
present-day value). McCann’s discount rate was 22.5%; Main’s discount rate was 17%. The
PTAB concluded, “While the rates are not dramatically different, the [PTAB] finds that Main
has better discussed and supported the chosen rate than did McCann in his report and
testimony.”
¶ 30 In summary, the PTAB found that “Main presented the more competent, professional and
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logical testimony in support of his appraisal methodology, data used, and final value
conclusion over the presentation of McCann.” Because Main’s appraisal was “more credible
and a better indicator of the subject’s fair market value using the income approach,” the
PTAB gave McCann’s final value conclusion “little weight” in its analysis.
¶ 31 Finally, the PTAB concluded that Kelly’s cost approach lent support and credence to
Main’s income-approach valuation of $9,600,000. Taking Kelly’s valuation of $10,660,000
and Main’s of $9,600,000, the PTAB found the instant landfill to have an estimated fair
market value as of January 1, 2003, of $10 million.
¶ 32 The school district and the BOR timely appealed to this court.
¶ 33 ANALYSIS
¶ 34 The school district and the BOR raise three arguments: (1) the PTAB erred in finding that
Onyx, as a matter of law, met its burden of going forward with evidence sufficient to
challenge the assessment; (2) the PTAB erred as a matter of law in finding that the single-
approach appraisals excluding the sales-comparison approach were the best evidence of
market value; and (3) the PTAB’s finding that Kelly’s cost approach lent support and
credence to Main’s income approach valuation was against the manifest weight of the
evidence.
¶ 35 The first and second arguments are interrelated and present us with the question of
whether the PTAB considered appraisals that utilized the proper methodology for the
valuation of the instant landfill. This is a legal question that we review de novo. Omni, 384
Ill. App. 3d at 479. 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.
¶ 36 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 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 is available. Omni, 384 Ill.
App. 3d at 480-81. 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
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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 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.
¶ 37 Here, neither of Onyx’s appraisers utilized the sales-comparison approach, and the school
district and the BOR contend that the single-approach appraisals were, as a matter of law,
insufficient to satisfy Onyx’s burden of going forward. The school district and the BOR rely
on Omni, which held:
“When a party appeals an assessment in the PTAB, that party has the burden of going
forward with ‘substantive, documentary evidence or legal argument sufficient to
challenge the correctness of the assessment.’ [Citation.] The PTAB must look to the
challenging party’s submission of substantive, documentary evidence to determine
whether that party has carried its burden of challenging the correctness of the assessment.
Where the correctness of the assessment turns on market value and there is evidence of
a market for the subject property, a taxpayer’s submission that excludes the sales
comparison approach in assessing market value is insufficient as a matter of law.”
(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 484.
¶ 38 We begin by reviewing the PTAB’s factual findings in our case, which the school district
and the BOR do not challenge. Then we will look in depth at the Omni decision, which, in
our view, the school district and the BOR misread.
¶ 39 The following are the PTAB’s findings of fact that are pertinent to this issue. Landfills
are sold from time to time. McCann examined the sale of the instant landfill and three
additional sales that were part of the same Department of Justice divestiture order. Those
sales reflected complex transactions in most instances, and McCann’s expert opinion was to
rely on the income approach rather than the sales-comparison approach. Pomykacz noted that
sales involving litigation need further investigation, and Jones opined that, because there is
a great deal of business-enterprise value and intangible-asset value in landfill operations, it
is very difficult, if not impossible, to isolate and value them individually. Kelly and Main
agreed that sales of landfills include going-concern value, which requires questionable
adjustments.
¶ 40 The compulsion to sell created by the Department of Justice order meant that those sales
do not meet the definition of an arm’s-length transaction. Given the lack of substantiated data
regarding the sales price allocated for the instant landfill, the PTAB could not rely upon that
price to ascertain the fair market value of the instant landfill. McCann’s sales-comparison
calculations lacked reliability because his adjustments were vague, at best. His entire sales-
comparison analysis was questionable and unreliable. Although McCann did not ultimately
rely upon his sales comparison analysis, the data he considered lacked credibility and
reliability, and, therefore, they did not support the instant landfill’s 2003 assessed value.
Given the foregoing, the PTAB should look to other methods of valuation.
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¶ 41 In light of the above findings of fact, which are not challenged by the school district and
the BOR, we examine Omni. Omni Chicago was the owner of a Chicago parcel improved
with a building consisting of three distinct areas: an office space, a hotel space, and a retail
space. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 473. The Cook County assessor assessed the property at a
market value of $48,296,794 for the year 1998, and Omni appealed to the PTAB both the
market value determination and the assessment level. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 473-74.
Before the PTAB, Omni presented an appraisal of $43,250,000, which was based on the
income approach. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 474. The appraiser considered all three methods
of valuation, but he found that neither the sales-comparison approach nor the cost approach
was appropriate, because of the unique character of the building and because there had been
no sales of similar properties within the Chicago area. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 474. At the
conclusion of the appraiser’s testimony, the Cook County Board of Review moved for a
directed finding, arguing that the limited scope of Omni’s appraisal and its reliance on the
income approach were insufficient to establish market value. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 476.
The motion was denied. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 476. The board then presented its
appraisal, which utilized all three traditional approaches and analyzed comparable sales.
Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 476-77. The PTAB found that the subject property was unique in
the Cook County market and applied the income approach in accepting Omni’s estimate of
market value. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 478.
¶ 42 In reversing the PTAB, the appellate court noted that the record contained a list of 34
sales offered as sales of properties comparable to the three distinct areas and evidence of
rental information from nine buildings. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 483-84. Thus, the appellate
court concluded that market data of comparable properties existed to sufficiently calculate
market value under the sales-comparison approach. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 484. Citing
Chrysler, the court said that, where there is evidence of comparable sales, the PTAB’s
valuation based on the exclusion of that evidence is incorrect as a matter of law. Omni, 384
Ill. App. 3d at 484. However, the court pointed out that “[i]t was not demonstrated that
employing the sales comparison approach would have resulted in unreliable estimates of the
fair market value of the Omni property.” (Emphasis in original.) Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at
485 n.3. The court further stated: “The exclusion of the sales comparison or market approach
in light of the existence of market data regarding comparable properties rendered Omni’s
appraisal insufficient as a matter of law to challenge the correctness of the property tax
assessment.” Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 487.
¶ 43 The Omni court delivered a supplemental opinion on denial of rehearing. The court noted
that Omni’s rebuttal expert witness testified that an appraisal not employing the sales-
comparison approach would present a critical problem, and only Omni’s principal appraiser
relied exclusively on the income approach. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 488. “The appraiser did
so without any showing that either of the other two approaches would provide results that
were not ‘meaningful.’ ” Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 488.
¶ 44 The school district and the BOR contend that the Main and Kelly appraisals were
insufficient as a matter of law under Omni because they excluded the sales-comparison
approach. The school district and the BOR argue that there was evidence that the instant
landfill was saleable, because Onyx purchased it. The school district and the BOR assert that
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we should limit our discussion to the Main and Kelly appraisals, rather than look to the entire
record, because the insufficiency of Onyx’s evidence meant that it did not meet its burden
of going forward.
¶ 45 We do not read Omni as requiring application of the sales comparison approach where
it would result in unreliable estimates of fair market value. The property at issue in Omni was
used as a hotel, retail space, and office space in an upscale urban area for which comparable
sales data was available. The instant property is a sanitary landfill, which has a defined
economic life. The record reflects that Onyx purchased the landfill in March 2000 after the
seller was ordered to divest some of its assets by the Department of Justice. We agree with
the PTAB that such a sale does not meet the criteria for an arm’s-length transaction and is
not indicative of fair market value. Moreover, according to the Kelly appraisal, Onyx
purchased the landfill in one transaction that included a portfolio of northern Illinois
landfills, and the consideration allocated for the instant landfill was based on the property tax
assessment at the time of the transfer. Consequently, Kelly properly placed no weight on the
allocated consideration in determining fair market value.
¶ 46 The appellate court in Omni considered the entire record in concluding that Omni had not
met its burden of going forward. Therefore, the suggestion that we are limited to reviewing
Onyx’s evidence in its case-in-chief is without foundation or precedent. However, even if we
were to so limit our inquiry, the record supports the exclusion of the sales-comparison
approach. As we explained above, the sale of the instant landfill to Onyx is not a reliable
indicator of fair market value. Kelly rejected the sales-comparison approach for two reasons:
(1) a sale of a landfill is of a going concern, and thus extensive adjustments are necessary to
derive a sale price for the real estate only; and (2) sales of landfills might not yield
comparable data, because analyzing each sale on a common unit of comparison, such as price
per remaining cubic yard of capacity, would be a function of the profitability of the specific
landfill; the profitability of a given landfill is affected by local and state landfill regulations,
and each locale has different requirements. In Kelly’s expert view, “[t]hese substantial
adjustments would substantially weaken the reliability of the [s]ales [c]omparison
[a]pproach.” Main, in the narrative of his appraisal, also explained why he excluded the
sales-comparison approach. First, most sales of landfills involve multiple assets and/or
business components, not just the real estate. Second, because of the wasting nature of a
landfill, unique and property-specific permit restrictions, location, and other factors,
adjusting sales data would be problematic and not indicative of market participant behavior.
Main did not consider the sales-comparison approach to be a reliable indicator of fair market
value. Kelly’s and Main’s reasons for excluding the sales-comparison approach are in
contrast to Omni’s assertion, which the PTAB adopted, that the sales-comparison approach
was “ ‘problematical.’ ” Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 485. The appellate court in Omni
construed “ ‘problematical’ ” to mean “difficult to do” and rejected the argument that the
sales-comparison approach may be omitted on that basis. Omni, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 485.
Here, Main and Kelly concluded, not that the sales comparison-approach would be difficult
to do, but that it would lead to an unreliable estimate of fair market value.
¶ 47 The school district and the BOR deny the unique character of landfills. However, the
record supports the conclusion that they are unique. They are a wasting, or a depleting, asset.
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They are subject to numerous regulations that affect their profitability. The school district
and the BOR do not dispute that the highest and best use of the instant property is to continue
its use as a landfill. Moreover, when we examine the record as a whole, as we may do under
Omni, we consider the PTAB’s factual findings that (1) McCann used the sales-comparison
approach as, at most, a check on his income approach, and (2) McCann’s sales-comparison
analysis was “questionable and unreliable.” The school district and the BOR dispute neither
factual finding.
¶ 48 The Omni court tucked its most significant statement into footnote 3, where it found that
Omni failed to demonstrate that employing the sales-comparison approach would have
resulted in an unreliable estimate of the fair market value of the subject property. The
significance for our case is that Omni does not dictate use of the sales-comparison approach
where it would result in an unreliable estimate of fair market value. The PTAB in the instant
case, therefore, followed Omni when it found that exclusion of the sales-comparison
approach was proper because reliable data could not be derived from the sale of the instant
landfill or from sales of reasonably comparable properties. This was so because the sales that
McCann considered, which resulted from the compulsion created by the Department of
Justice divestiture order, did not meet the definition of an arm’s-length transaction. At oral
argument, the school district and the BOR argued that Onyx’s purchase of the instant landfill
was an arm’s-length transaction, even though the seller was under compulsion to sell,
because Onyx was a willing buyer. This is contrary to this court’s holding in Chrysler, where
we said that there has to be both an owner that is ready, willing, and able to sell but not
compelled to do so, and a buyer that is likewise ready, willing, and able to buy, but is not
forced to do so. Chrysler, 69 Ill. App. 3d at 211. Nor can we accept the school district’s and
the BOR’s alternative position, articulated at oral argument, that the sale was not part of the
divestiture order. The PTAB made a factual finding that it was part of the divestiture order,
and the school district and the BOR have not challenged the finding as being against the
manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 49 The PTAB found McCann’s appraisal unreliable in other respects as well. Rather than
use tipping-fee historical evidence pertinent to the instant landfill, McCann used published
data from 2002. The PTAB found that there was nothing in the data McCann used that
reflected its accuracy or what the amounts “truly represented.” Rather than use available
engineering data pertinent to the instant landfill in determining its remaining life, McCann
used data published in the IEPA’s 2002 annual report, which contained regional data focused
primarily on capacity issues and secondarily on fees mandated by law. Accordingly, for all
these reasons, we hold that the PTAB did not err in finding that Onyx met its burden of going
forward.
¶ 50 The school district and the BOR contend that the PTAB erred as a matter of law in
finding that the single-approach appraisals that excluded the sales-comparison approach were
the best evidence of fair market value. They rely on three cases. In Chrysler, this court
reversed the PTAB’s decision assessing the Chrysler plant in Belvidere, Illinois, based upon
a valuation using the cost approach, because the record showed that the plant could be sold
for use as something other than an automobile manufacturing plant. Chrysler, 69 Ill. App.
3d at 214. In United Airlines, Inc. v. Pappas, 348 Ill. App. 3d 563 (2004), the appellate court
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held that United’s leasehold interest in space at O’Hare International Airport should be
valued using the sales-comparison approach because comparable sales data (other airlines’
leases at O’Hare, for instance) was available. United Airlines, 348 Ill. App. 3d at 573.
Finally, in Kendall County Board of Review v. Property Tax Appeal Board, 337 Ill. App. 3d
735 (2003), this court held that property owned by AT&T, zoned agricultural and used for
telecommunications, had no actual market and thus it was not error to use a method other
than the sales-comparison approach to estimate its fair market value. Kendall County, 337
Ill. App. 3d at 741.
¶ 51 None of those cases involved landfills. The PTAB cites five cases from other
jurisdictions that did involve valuation of landfills. Most persuasive of the cases the PTAB
cites is Waste Management of Wisconsin, Inc. v. Kenosha County Board of Review, 516
N.W.2d 695 (Wis. 1994). In Waste Management, the subject property consisted of three
parcels totaling 388 acres upon which Waste Management operated the Pheasant Run
sanitary landfill. Waste Management, 516 N.W.2d at 697. In valuing the property, the
assessor utilized the income approach exclusively. Waste Management, 516 N.W.2d at 698.
Waste Management contended that this was improper, and the trial court remanded the
matter to the board of review for reconsideration and redetermination. Waste Management,
516 N.W.2d at 699. The assessor updated his prior written appraisal and submitted additional
analyses utilizing both a market approach and a cost approach. Waste Management, 516
N.W.2d at 699. Reconciling the estimates yielded by these various approaches with that
originally reached under the income approach, the assessor concluded that the property was
worth less than his original estimate. Waste Management, 516 N.W.2d at 699. The board of
review again affirmed the assessor’s estimate, and Waste Management appealed. Waste
Management, 516 N.W.2d at 700-01. The Wisconsin Supreme Court held that, where the
board of review “had reason to doubt the reliability of the market approach,” it could
reasonably look to other elements, including the income generated by the site, in valuing the
property. Waste Management, 516 N.W.2d at 702-03. The court concluded that the assessor
and the board of review did not err in using the income approach where there was an absence
of a recent sale of the property or an absence of recent sales of comparable properties. Waste
Management, 516 N.W.2d at 702.
¶ 52 Petitioners in our case argue that Waste Management actually held that the income
approach may never be the sole method utilized. We disagree. In remarking that “[i]ncome
may never be the sole basis for the assessment of property” (Waste Management, 516
N.W.2d at 702), the Wisconsin Supreme Court was merely saying that the income approach
could not be the starting and stopping point. In Waste Management, the assessor updated his
appraisal after remand, so the record contained both a cost and a market analysis. Obviously,
in Waste Management, the assessor was able to do a market analysis. In our case, both Kelly
and Main explained why the market approach would not be reliable and why they rejected
the cost approach. Thus, as in Waste Management, Kelly and Main considered other
methodologies. We believe that Waste Management is persuasive authority for the
proposition that, in the absence of reliable market data, the income approach may be utilized.
¶ 53 In our case, none of the comparable sales yielded reliable data, because they were part
of the Department of Justice’s divestiture order and thus not arm’s-length transactions.
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Further, while McCann discussed the sales-comparison approach in his appraisal, he did not
utilize it in arriving at an estimate of fair market value. Thus, the facts in our case are similar
to those in Waste Management. Accordingly, the PTAB did not err in assessing the instant
landfill based on the single-approach appraisals.
¶ 54 The school district and the BOR next contend that the PTAB’s finding that Kelly’s cost
approach lent support and credence to the income approach was against the manifest weight
of the evidence. The school district and the BOR do not challenge the PTAB’s decision that,
under the income approach, the fair market value of the instant landfill was $10 million. We
have already determined that the PTAB did not err in accepting the income approach.
Consequently, even if we were to agree that Kelly’s cost approach did not lend support and
credence to the income approach, it would not support reversal.
¶ 55 For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the PTAB is affirmed.
¶ 56 Affirmed.
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