IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA15-954
Filed: 7 June 2016
North Carolina Property Tax Commission, No. 13 PTC 822
IN THE MATTER OF: APPEAL OF: Corning Incorporated from the decisions of the
Cabarrus County Board of Equalization and Review Concerning the valuations of
certain real property for tax years 2012 and 2013.
Appeal by Cabarrus County from the Final Decision entered 20 March 2015 by
the North Carolina Property Tax Commission. Heard in the Court of Appeals 24
February 2016.
Richard M. Koch for Cabarrus County.
Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, LLP, by Charles H. Mercer, Jr. and Reed
J. Hollander, and Stavitsky & Associates, LLC, by Bruce J. Stavitsky, for
Corning Inc.
ELMORE, Judge.
Cabarrus County appeals from the Final Decision of the North Carolina
Property Tax Commission lowering the assessed property values for Tax Years 2012
and 2013 to the values urged by the taxpayer, Corning Inc. The County argues that
the Commission’s Final Decision is not supported by competent, material, and
substantial evidence, and is otherwise affected by errors of law. We affirm.
I. Background
Corning owns and operates a large fiber optic manufacturing facility in
Cabarrus County. It was constructed in 1997 when the technology for manufacturing
IN RE APPEAL OF CORNING, INC.
Opinion of the Court
optical fiber required specific design features, such as a four-story layout, interior
partitions, and numerous draw towers penetrating multiple floors of the building.
Due to market conditions in the fiber optic industry, the facility was shuttered in
2002. Corning resumed production on a limited basis in 2010 as the only major
optical fiber company to survive the telecom bust. Around that same time, however,
the technology for manufacturing optical fiber changed, eliminating the need for the
multi-story building design and substantially reducing the space required for
manufacturing.
The County initially assessed the property at a value of $172,218,270 for each
of the Tax Years 2012 and 2013. On appeal to the Cabarrus County Board of
Equalization and Review, the County Board lowered the assessed values to
$147,609,250 and $152,183,290 for Tax Years 2012 and 2013, respectively. Corning
then appealed to the North Carolina Property Tax Commission, arguing that (1) the
County used an arbitrary or illegal method of appraisal in reaching its assessed
values, (2) the County assigned values to the subject property that substantially
exceeded its true value in money, and (3) the County’s assessments were significantly
greater than those of other locally assessed property.
At the hearing, Corning offered an appraisal report prepared by Fitzhugh L.
Stout, who also testified as an expert in industrial real estate appraisal. Mr. Stout
explained that he valued the property for alternative industrial use because “there is
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no demand for either building or buying a fiber optic manufacturing facility.” Using
a blended cost-sales approach, he assigned values of $26,370,000 and $30,490,000 for
Tax Years 2012 and 2013, respectively. Corning also presented the expert testimony
of John T. Cashion, an industrial real estate broker. Based on the industrial
attributes of the property and the useful area to a likely buyer, Mr. Cashion testified
that he would have marketed the property for $15,000,000 or $16,000,000.
In support of its assessments, the County offered the expert testimony of its
tax administrator, J. Brent Weisner. Mr. Weisner opined that the property was
“special-purpose” property, and he valued it under the cost approach. In addition,
the County contracted with Michael P. Berkowitz and Thomas B. Harris, Jr. of T.B.
Harris, Jr. & Associates, Inc., to provide a retrospective valuation of the property as
of 1 January 2012. Their expert testimony and written appraisal report, which
included a $148,890,000 valuation for Tax Year 2012, was also received at the
hearing. They did not establish a value for Tax Year 2013.
In its Final Decision, the Commission determined that the County’s valuation
methods were arbitrary or illegal based, in part, on the following findings of fact:
10. When determining the market value for the subject
property, an appraiser should rely upon the appraisal
approach that will best determine the market value for the
subject property.
....
15. When relying on the cost approach, Cabarrus County
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classified the subject property as a special-purpose or
special-use property since Corning was using the property
for its intended purpose. As such, Cabarrus County
appraised the subject property based on Corning’s use of
the subject facility, which caused the County to implicitly
value the subject property at the subjective worth to
Corning and not at the objective value to a willing buyer.
16. When arriving at the assessments for the subject
property, the County’s application of the 2012 schedules of
values, standards, and rules to determine the values
assigned to the subject property was flawed when the
County’s schedules of values, standards, and rules
provided no category for the assessment or appraisal of the
subject facility as special-purpose property.
17. Cabarrus County used an arbitrary method to value the
subject property as [of] January 1, 2012 and January 1,
2013 when it categorized the subject facility as a special-
purpose property.
18. Cabarrus County failed to consider acceptable
appraisal methodology to determine the loss in value due
to economic and functional obsolescence related to the
subject property when its method of appraisal considered
all costs that added no value to the subject property given
that the building is not a modern facility, there is
obsolescence associated with the multiple-level floor
layouts, and there is building area that is still in shell
condition.
19. Cabarrus County’s arbitrary cost approaches, and the
results thereof, do not constitute the market values for the
subject property as of January 1, 2012, and January 1,
2013.
....
22. To arrive at the market value for the subject property
as of January 1, 2012 and a market value for the subject
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property as of January 1, 2013, Mr. Stout determined the
highest and best use of the subject property, as if vacant,
would be holding the property for future development for
an industrial use; and when considering that the subject
property is improved with an industrial facility, the
continuation of this use is concluded to be financially
feasible.
....
26. Mr. Stout determined the market value for the subject
property to be $26,370,000 as of January 1, 2012, and the
market value for the subject property to be $30,490,000 as
of January 1, 2013. Mr. Stout arrived at his market values
for the subject property by considering the loss in value due
to economic and functional obsolescence including, but not
limited to, the subject facility’s size, multiple-level floor
layouts, and area in shell condition.
27. Mr. Stout did substantially dispute the County’s
assessment of $147,609,250 for the subject property as of
January 1, 2012, and the County’s assessment of
$152,183,290 for the subject property as of January 1,
2013.
28. The discrepancy between the values assigned to the
subject property by the County Board and Mr. Stout’s
market values is due to (a) the County’s arbitrary
classification of the subject property as a special-purpose
property when applying the cost approach to develop its
assessments; (b) the County’s failure to consider acceptable
appraisal methodology to determine the loss in value due
to economic and functional obsolescence associated with
the subject property that Mr. Stout did consider when
applying his analysis to determine the market values for
the subject property; and (c) the County’s focus on the
special use of the subject property by Corning, which
caused the County to implicitly value the property at the
subjective worth to Corning and not at the objective value
to a[ ] willing buyer.
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(Footnotes omitted). The Commission then entered the following conclusions of law:
1. Corning’s evidence from Mr. Stout, taken alone and by
itself, tends to show that the County’s methods are
arbitrary or illegal due to (a) the County’s classification of
the subject property as a special-purpose property; (b) the
County’s failure to consider acceptable appraisal
methodology to show loss in value due to economic and
functional obsolescence associated with the subject
property; and (c) the County’s focus on the specific use of
the subject property, which caused the County to implicitly
value the subject property at the subjective worth to
Corning and not at the objective value to a willing buyer.
2. Corning thus rebutted the presumption of correctness of
the two assessments at issue, and the burden shifted to
Cabarrus County to demonstrate that its methods
produced the true values for the subject property as of
January 1, 2012 and January 1, 2013.
3. Cabarrus County did not carry its burden when it failed
to demonstrate that its appraisal methodology produced
true values in view of both sides’ evidence and the weight
and sufficiency of the evidence, the credibility of the
witnesses, and inferences as well as conflicting and
circumstantial evidence; and thus its methods are
arbitrary or illegal.
The Commission implicitly adopted Mr. Stout’s valuation and lowered the assessed
values for each of the two tax years to the values urged by Corning. The County
appeals.
II. Discussion
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Our review is governed by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-345.2, which provides in
pertinent part as follows:
(b) So far as necessary to the decision and where presented,
the court shall decide all relevant questions of law,
interpret constitutional and statutory provisions, and
determine the meaning and applicability of the terms of
any Commission action. The Court may affirm or reverse
the decision of the Commission, declare the same null and
void, or remand the case for further proceedings; or it may
reverse or modify the decision if the substantial rights of
the appellants have been prejudiced because the
Commission’s findings, inferences, conclusions or decisions
are:
(1) In violation of constitutional provisions; or
(2) In excess of statutory authority or jurisdiction of the
Commission; or
(3) Made upon unlawful proceedings; or
(4) Affected by other errors of law; or
(5) Unsupported by competent, material and substantial
evidence in view of the entire record as submitted; or
(6) Arbitrary or capricious.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-345.2(b) (2015).
The proper standard of review “depends upon the particular issues presented
on appeal.” Amanini v. N.C. Dep’t of Human Res., 114 N.C. App. 668, 674, 443 S.E.2d
114, 118 (1994) (citation omitted). Where a petitioner argues that the Commission’s
decision was affected by an error of law, we apply a de novo review. In re Appeal of
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Greens of Pine Glen Ltd. P’ship, 356 N.C. 642, 647, 576 S.E.2d 316, 319 (2003).
“ ‘Under a de novo review, the court considers the matter anew and freely substitutes
its own judgment’ for that of the lower tribunal.” State v. Williams, 362 N.C. 628,
632–33, 669 S.E.2d 290, 294 (2008) (quoting Greens of Pine Glen, 356 N.C. at 647, 576
S.E.2d at 319). We apply the “whole record” test to determine whether the
Commission’s decision is supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence.
Greens of Pine Glen, 356 N.C. at 647, 576 S.E.2d at 319. “The ‘whole record’ test is
not a tool of judicial intrusion; instead, it merely gives a reviewing court the capability
to determine whether an administrative decision has a rational basis in the evidence.”
In re Rogers, 297 N.C. 48, 65, 253 S.E.2d 912, 922 (1979) (citations omitted).
The “whole record” test does not allow the reviewing court
to replace the [Commission’s] judgment as between two
reasonably conflicting views, even though the court could
justifiably have reached a different result had the matter
been before it de novo. On the other hand, [it] requires the
court, in determining the substantiality of evidence
supporting the [Commission’s] decision, to take into
account whatever in the record fairly detracts from the
weight of the [Commission’s] evidence. . . . [T]he court may
not consider the evidence which in and of itself justifies the
[Commission’s] result, without taking into account
contradictory evidence or evidence from which conflicting
inferences could be drawn.
Thompson v. Wake Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 292 N.C. 406, 410, 233 S.E.2d 538, 541 (1977)
(citations omitted).
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In North Carolina, ad valorem tax assessments are conducted under a uniform
standard. A county must appraise all real and personal property “at its true value in
money,” which is its “market value.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-283 (2015). “Market
value” is defined by statute as the estimated price
at which the property would change hands between a
willing and financially able buyer and a willing seller,
neither being under any compulsion to buy or to sell and
both having reasonable knowledge of all the uses to which
the property is adapted and for which it is capable of being
used.
Id.; see also In re Appeal of S. Ry. Co., 313 N.C. 177, 188, 328 S.E.2d 235, 243 (1985)
(holding that appraisals “from the perspective of the present owner to the exclusion
of the willing buyer were in clear violation of the statutory ‘market value’ standard”);
In re Ad Valorem Valuation of Prop. in Forsyth Cnty., 282 N.C. 71, 80, 191 S.E.2d
692, 698 (1972) (“To conform to the statutory policy of equality in valuation of all
types of properties, the statute requires the assessors to value all properties, real and
personal, at the amount for which they, respectively, can be sold in the customary
manner in which they are sold.”).
“An important factor in determining the property’s market value is its highest
and best use.” In re Appeal of Belk-Broome Co., 119 N.C. App. 470, 473–74, 458
S.E.2d 921, 923 (1995) (citing Rainbow Springs P’ship v. Cnty. of Macon, 79 N.C. App.
335, 339 S.E.2d 681 (1986)), aff’d per curiam, 342 N.C. 890, 467 S.E.2d 242 (1996).
“Highest and best use” has been defined as “the reasonably probable and legal use of
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vacant land or an improved property, which is physically possible, appropriately
supported, financially feasible, and that results in the highest value.” Appraisal Inst.,
The Appraisal of Real Estate 297 (11th ed. 1996). It “is not determined through
subjective analysis by the property owner, the developer, or the appraiser; rather,
highest and best use is shaped by the competitive forces within the market where the
property is located.” Id. at 298.
A. Corning’s Burden
We first address the County’s argument that Corning failed to produce
competent, material, and substantial evidence tending to show that the County used
an arbitrary or illegal method of valuation.
A county’s ad valorem tax assessment is presumptively correct. In re Appeal
of Amp, Inc., 287 N.C. 547, 562, 215 S.E.2d 752, 761 (1975). To rebut this
presumption, the taxpayer must produce “competent, material and substantial
evidence” which tends to show that the county used either (1) an arbitrary or (2) illegal
method of valuation, and (3) “the assessment substantially exceeded the true value
in money of the property.” Id. at 563, 215 S.E.2d at 762; see also In re Appeal of IBM
Credit Corp. (IBM Credit I), 186 N.C. App. 223, 226, 650 S.E.2d 828, 830 (2007)
(citations omitted) (clarifying that the taxpayer’s burden “is one of production and not
persuasion”), aff’d per curiam, 362 N.C. 228, 657 S.E.2d 355 (2008). If the taxpayer
successfully rebuts the initial presumption, the burden shifts back to the county to
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“demonstrate that its methods produce true values.” In re Appeal of Parkdale Mills,
225 N.C. App. 713, 717, 741 S.E.2d 416, 420 (2013) (citing In re Appeal of IBM Credit
Corp. (IBM Credit II), 201 N.C. App. 343, 345, 689 S.E.2d 487, 489 (2009); see also S.
Ry., 313 N.C. at 182, 328 S.E.2d at 239 (explaining that the taxing authority has the
final “burden of going forward with evidence and of persuasion”).
A method of valuation is illegal if it does not result in “true value,” as defined
under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-283. S. Ry., 313 N.C. at 181, 328 S.E.2d at 239 (citations
omitted). Our decisions have further held that an illegal appraisal methodology is
also arbitrary. In re Appeal of Blue Ridge Mall LLC, 214 N.C. App. 263, 269, 713
S.E.2d 779, 784 (2011); In re Appeal of Lane Co., 153 N.C. App. 119, 124, 571 S.E.2d
224, 227 (2002).
In this case, the Commission concluded that “Corning’s evidence from Mr.
Stout, taken alone and by itself, tends to show that the County’s methods are
arbitrary or illegal . . . .” Mr. Stout’s research revealed that “Corning is the only major
company that still produces optical fiber in the United States and North America.”
The cost of labor has driven the majority of fiber optic manufacturers overseas, and
even if Corning’s facility was put on the market, those manufacturers “would not
come here because [the cost] of labor is just too high.” Based in part on the lack of
market demand for fiber optics manufacturing facilities, Mr. Stout concluded that the
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highest and best use of the property, as vacant, would be future industrial use, and
as improved, would be continued industrial use. He explained that
[a]s improved, we realize that, you know, the highest and
best use would be continued use as the fiber optic
manufacturing plant, but under the market value premise,
what we found was there is no demand for either building
or buying a fiber optic manufacturing facility. We found no
evidence in market in North America that there was a
competitor who would be willing to come up and buy this
plant for continued fiber optic manufacturing. . . . And
there are other fiber optic producers, but no one of this
magnitude.
While Mr. Stout appreciated the unique features of the improvements, he did not
consider the property to be special-purpose property:
[A]lthough there—this is a unique property, that the
County considers this special purpose, it’s really not. This
is what we call a limited market property. There are
adaptive reuse. They wouldn’t level this if they left it.
They would—someone would come in and use what we feel
is the functional useable area of that, so we feel like the
highest and best use as improved would be for continued
industrial use.
Although the improvements would have to be retrofitted for a different use, Mr. Stout
opined that the property would have value to an alternative industrial user:
A: There would be a market for it at a certain price, which
I believe the price that I put on it could be sold to an
alternative user. And through my career, I’ve done a lot of
adaptive reuse, and certainly this isn’t a building that
would be scrapped. It would be cost prohibitive. So the
most likely alternative user, they’ll find some industrial
user at a price, and my sales reflected a much lower price
than this. But there is a market for adaptive reuse, but
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they wouldn’t use those other floors.
Q: Would it be fair to say that these alternative users that
you envision for the property would need to adapt it for
their own use?
A: Yes.
Q: And would that mean they’d have to spend some money
on it to make it useful to them?
A: Most conversion of manufacturing plants, that’s what
we call limited market properties because all of them have
to do that, all manufacturing in the first generation in
specialized properties. The second generation will have to
do certain gutting and retrofitting to meet their
manufacturing processes.
Q: Then, of course, after they do that, it really wouldn’t be
necessarily useful to another alternative user.
A: Well, the next alternative user would do the same thing.
They’ll come and gut those things that don’t work for them
and convert it, and we have plenty of evidence of that
market.
Q: But once they do that, once they do that adaptation and
spend that money, it would have value to them to be able
to use it for the purpose for which they intended.
A: Correct.
Q: So do I understand you to be saying basically that this
particular property just needs to be valued as a generic
manufacturing or warehouse facility for tax purposes; is
that correct?
A: Well, under my understanding, the definition, the way I
interpret it, it has to sell between a willing buyer and a
willing—there has to have been a change. It’s not to this
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specific user. It’s not a use value or value of use. Under
those premises, that’s the way we valued it.
Under the assumption that the highest and best use would be for continued
industrial use, Mr. Stout proceeded with his property analysis. He estimated that
536,285 square feet of the 1,208,996 gross square feet of the improvements was
“functional rentable or usable area for adaptive reuse or alternative use,” which
included the lower level of the processing area and half of the second floor. A large
portion of the facility was “vacant shell space”: As of 1 January 2012, 38 percent of
the gross square footage, and 34 percent of the total functional rentable area, was in
shell condition. As of 1 January 2013, those estimates had been reduced to 26 percent
and 31 percent, respectively, due to some additional up-fit.
Mr. Stout assigned no value to the third and fourth floors of the facility because
“industrial users typically don’t recognize multistory buildings . . . . And although
there are some users that use second-level space, it’s rare that you see any that are
three and four stories . . . .” The property also had a “number of ancillary buildings
that are used specifically for Corning’s process which . . . would not have any value
to any other user.” Three different brokers agreed with Mr. Stout’s opinion regarding
the value of the multi-story design and ancillary buildings. The first broker “was not
familiar with any recent multi-floor industrial sales.” He would give “some value” to
the second floor, “no value” to the third and fourth floors, and “little to no value” to
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the ancillary buildings in the rear of the site. The second broker opined that the
“upper floors in [the] production warehouse would get no value on [the] resale
market,” and that the ancillary buildings “have little value.” The third broker simply
stated, “Multi-story industrial buildings are functionally obsolete.” Mr. Stout viewed
the brokers’ comments as “reflective of what’s going on in the market for industrial
properties.”
Mr. Stout initially valued the property under all three methods of valuation,
but ultimately used a blended cost-sales approach, assigning 75 percent of the
weighted average to the cost and 25 percent to the sales comparison. He explained
his consideration of these two approaches in his report:
The cost approach is most reliable for newer properties that
have no significant amount of accrued depreciation. The
subject is not new construction, and there is a relatively
active market for land sales in the area. The subject was
specifically built for Corning, Inc. and has a number of
building components that are not suitable for alternative
industrial users. As a result, the property suffers from a
significant amount of functional/external obsolescence.
Although significant adjustments for functional/external
obsolescence reduce the reliability and credibility of the
approach, this approach would be given consideration due
to the quality of the improvements.
The sales comparison approach is most reliable in an active
market when an adequate quantity and quality of
comparable sales data are available. In addition, it is
typically the most relevant method for owner-user
properties, because it directly considers the prices of
alternative properties with similar utility for which
potential buyers would be competing. There is a
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reasonably active market for industrial properties, and this
approach most closely reflects buyer behavior.
Accordingly, the sales comparison approach is given weight
in the value conclusion.
He did not give weight to the income approach, however, because “[a]n owner-user is
the most likely purchaser of the appraised property, and the income capitalization
approach does not represent the primary analysis undertaken by the typical owner-
user.”
Using his cost approach, Mr. Stout began with an estimated replacement cost
of $75,702,482. He then subtracted $20,766,391 for age-life depreciation and
$28,917,261 for functional and external obsolescence. After adding $3,850,000 for the
land value, Mr. Stout valued the property at $29,870,000 as of 1 January 2012. He
used the same formula to value the property at $35,300,000 as of 1 January 2013,
which was slightly higher due to interim up-fit. Under his sales comparison
approach, Mr. Stout identified four transactions involving similar industrial
properties in the region during the relevant time period. The sales indicated an
average adjusted value of $33.00 per square foot. Recognizing once again the
obsolescence associated with the multi-story structure and ancillary buildings, Mr.
Stout applied the average rate to only the functional rentable area of 536,285 square
feet. He made further adjustments for capital expenditures and arrived at the value
of $15,870,000 and $16,040,000 for Tax Years 2012 and 2013, respectively. Finally,
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after assigning the appropriate weight to each approach, Mr. Stout valued the
property at $26,370,000 for Tax Year 2012 and $30,490,000 for Tax Year 2013.
On more than one occasion at the hearing, Mr. Stout testified that he used the
“true value” appraisal standard and that his valuation was “consistent with the
concept of value-in-exchange.” The following testimony shows that while he
considered Corning’s current use of the property in his analysis, he valued the
property from the standpoint of a likely buyer:
Q: Now, in your appraisal, you didn’t really consider the
use that it’s presently being used for, did you?
A: Well, of course, I did. That was in my replacement cost I
did.
Q: And presently it’s being used by Corning—
A: That’s correct.
Q: —is that correct? And it’s being used for the same
purpose for which it was constructed—
A: That’s correct.
Q: —is that correct? And that is, in fact, the use that would
be considered among all the other uses, is it not?
A: Well, considering they’re the only major employer or
manufacturer of optical fiber, there are no other likely
buyers out here for that type of use.
....
Q: Well, wouldn’t it be fair to say that the highest and best
use of this property as of 2012 or 2013, either one, was the
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very use that was being made of it at that time? Wouldn’t
that be the highest and best use?
A: Well, the purpose of true value is you’re looking at that
value in exchange, so I’m not looking at a value and use to
Corning or a use value, who is that alternative user, were
they willing to pay, so it has to be between a willing—and
there are no potential buyers in North America we are
aware of that are of this magnitude. There are other
manufacturers, but none of this size.
Q: Well, then, would it be fair to say that overall, your
appraisal is for an alternative industrial user, not for
Corning?
A: That’s correct.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that Corning met its initial burden to
produce competent, material, and substantial evidence tending to show that the
County used an arbitrary or illegal method of valuation and the assessments
substantially exceeded the true value of the property. Specifically, Mr. Stout’s report
and testimony tended to show that the property was not special-purpose property,
but rather a “limited-market” property which had value to an alternative industrial
user. At the same time, he acknowledged the obsolescence associated with the multi-
story design, the improvements in shell condition, and the ancillary buildings. Most
importantly, he priced the property based on its value in-exchange, recognizing that
Corning’s use of the facility was not a dispositive factor because there was no market
demand for fiber optic manufacturing facilities.
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B. The County’s Burden
Next, we must determine whether the County met its subsequent “burden of
going forward with the evidence and of persuasion.” S. Ry., 313 N.C. at 182, 328
S.E.2d at 239. In this final stage of the burden-shifting framework, the critical
inquiry is whether the County’s valuation approach “is the proper means or
methodology” to produce “true value” based on the characteristics of the subject
property. IBM Credit II, 201 N.C. App. at 349, 689 S.E.2d at 491 (internal quotation
marks omitted). The Commission has a duty “ ‘to hear the evidence of both sides, to
determine its weight and sufficiency and the credibility of witnesses, to draw
inferences, and to appraise conflicting and circumstantial evidence, all in order to
determine whether the [County] met its burden.’ ” Id. (quoting S. Ry., 313 N.C. at
182, 328 S.E.2d at 239). In this part of our discussion, we also address the County’s
challenges to Findings of Fact Nos. 15, 17–19 and 28 as being contrary to the
evidence.
The Commission concluded that the County “did not carry its burden when it
failed to demonstrate that its appraisal methodology produced true values.” At the
hearing, Mr. Weisner explained that when the facility closed in 2002, the County
reduced the assessed value from $172 million to $51 million “because at that point in
time it was a special purpose building that was no longer being used for its special
purpose, so . . . [the] only thing you could do with it is adapt it to some other use.”
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The County “looked at the possibility of having to sell it to a secondary user as
opposed to looking at . . . the replacement cost to produce the fiber that it was designed
to produce.” When the facility resumed production, the County “took off all of the
obsolescence that [it] applied earlier when [Corning] was out of business and there
was no market for the fiber . . . and that allowed the value to float back up to a higher
value.” As Mr. Weisner confirmed, “the reason the value increased by almost three
times was because Corning started using the facility again to manufacture product.”
Relying solely on the cost approach, Mr. Weisner testified that the County did
not assign any functional or economic obsolescence to the property in Tax Year 2012
or 2013. When asked how he would know what a willing buyer would pay for the
subject property without factoring in obsolescence, Mr. Weisner testified that
we’re calling it a special purpose property, so we’re looking
at any obsolescence that may occur due to . . . its ability to
produce the product that it was designed to produce. This
is the most modern plant in the world that produces this
particular type of fiber, and when you walk through this
plant and you look at this plant, it is fully in operation,
there’s—equipment is covering all the floors, it’s being used
exactly as it was designed to be used, so there was no, in our
opinion, no functional obsolescence to the building.
(Emphasis added.) Mr. Weisner also agreed with Commissioner Morgan, however,
that obsolescence would be inherent to specialty property. When Commissioner
Morgan asked how that obsolescence is measured in the County’s system, Mr.
Weisner explained he would adjust for functional obsolescence “if the plant stopped
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Opinion of the Court
producing—if there was no longer any valid use for that building to produce its
product that it was designed to produce, then that’s the time that we would look at
all the secondary uses that it could be put to, and we would—we certainly would
increase its functional obsolescence.”
In his appraisal report, Mr. Berkowitz referenced the uniform appraisal
standard set forth in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-283 and offered the statutory definition of
“true value.” The subsequent paragraph in the appraisal, however, seems to add to
that definition the following caveat:
The most significant factor with respect to the subject is
that a substantial portion of the improvements are specific
to the operations of the property as a fiber optic
manufacturing plant. We consider it unlikely that many of
the physical characteristics of the primary building would
be constructed for any other use. The “reasonable
knowledge” as mentioned in the definition of true value is
applicable to the current and historic use of the facility as
a fiber optic manufacturing plant.
At the hearing, Mr. Berkowitz offered an explanation of the foregoing paragraph:
A: That there are some small variances with respect to the
definitions, and the one most pertinent with respect to the
valuation is the latter half of that definition in saying that
both the buyer and seller have a reasonable knowledge of
all the uses to which the property is adapted and for which
it’s capable of being used.
Q: And what does that mean to you?
A: To me, I think it identifies specifically special use
properties in that if they are specifically designed for
intended use and are being used as such, then it should be
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Opinion of the Court
valued as such.
(Emphasis added.)
Mr. Berkowitz and Mr. Harris determined that the highest and best use of the
property would be “its continued use as a fiber optic manufacturing facility, with the
limited possibility of expansion as market conditions improved.” Their highest and
best use analysis suggests that they reached this determination based on Corning’s
use of the property:
The market for large manufacturing facilities is limited.
However, the information provided by Corning with
respect to new fiber optic cable manufacturing facilities
indicates that the design of the improvements is somewhat
outdated. Regardless, the property owner continues to use
the manufacturing portion of the property for its intended
use. Therefore, the highest and best use of the property as
improved is for continued use as a fiber optic
manufacturing facility with the possibilities of expansion
depending on market conditions.
(Emphasis added.) At the hearing, Mr. Berkowitz confirmed the focus of the County’s
highest and best use analysis: “[I]n consideration of how it was used for the special
purpose for which it was designed, the highest and best use would be for continued
use as a fiber optic manufacturing facility.” If not simultaneously, Mr. Berkowitz
subsequently concluded that the property was special-purpose property because “it
has unique design characteristics that are specific to the intended use that it is being
used for.”
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Opinion of the Court
Nevertheless, the County takes exception to the Commission’s finding that
“when relying on the cost approach, Cabarrus County classified the subject property
as a special-purpose property,” insisting that it “considered” the property to be
“special-purpose” but did not “classify” the property as such for special treatment
under its schedule of values. As Corning correctly notes, however, this argument is
semantic rather than substantive. In context, the Commission’s finding explains how
the County came to rely on the cost approach. Ultimately, the record amply
demonstrates that the County determined the property was special-purpose property,
which helped form the foundation for its methodology. Mr. Weisner stated, “[W]e feel
like it’s a special purpose property and the best approach is the cost approach.” Mr.
Berkowitz testified, “Special purpose properties by definition have unique
characteristics for which they’re designed for their intended use. The most applicable
methodology with respect to valuing those properties is the cost approach.” Mr.
Harris’s appraisal report similarly concludes, “The subject is considered a ‘special
purpose’ property. As such, the cost approach is considered the most reliable
indicator of value. For this appraisal, we include a cost approach only.”
We also acknowledge that to some extent it may be true, as the County
contends, that it used the cost approach due to the lack of comparable sales data. By
insisting that the highest and best use was for manufacturing optical fiber, however,
the County pigeon-holed the property into a market with no user-owner demand, and
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Opinion of the Court
thus, no comparable sales. Mr. Weisner testified that “there’s not really good
comparables to tell you the true value of this property as it’s being used as a fiber
optics plant. So then that drives us to the cost approach to look at—because it is
special purpose.” Mr. Berkowitz’s testimony also demonstrates how his highest and
best use analysis effectively precluded consideration of alternative use:
A: We did consider the sales comparison approach, but we
felt that the sales that were in the market, none of them
included fiber optic manufacturing facilities, and that any
adjustments would be misleading as far as the conclusions
from a sales comparison approach.
Q: You just looked at fiber optics?
A: That’s correct.
Q: And the reason for that is?
A: Because in using sales that were not this design would
be misleading.
Q: Do you consider there to be alternate users for this
property?
A: Not under its highest and best use.
Q: Do you consider there to be any way that this property
could be positioned in the market to be used by others than
a fiber optic manufacturer?
A: It could be.
Q: What would be some of those things that could be done
to make it usable for others?
A: Well, usable for others?
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Opinion of the Court
Q: For other manufacturers.
A: That would be inconsistent with its highest and best use.
Q: The highest and best use is as fiber optic
manufacturing?
A: Yes.
Q: What analysis did you do to determine that this was the
most profitable return on this use of this property,
maximally productive, the standard, in other words?
A: Yes. It would be the highest and best use because it
would return—make the highest return to the investor. If
you’re using it and adapting it for another use, inherently
there would be more economic and functional obsolescence
of the building.
Q: Are you valuing this property, sir, to Corning,
Incorporated?
A: I’m valuing it under its highest and best use.
While the County maintains that the highest and best use of the property was
for manufacturing optical fiber, each of the County’s experts recognized that there
was no market for the same. Mr. Harris testified that he researched national markets
for fiber optics manufacturing facilities in preparing the appraisal report, and when
asked if there was a national market for those facilities, he responded, “No.” Mr.
Berkowitz reached the same conclusion, though he posited that the property would
still be attractive to “an investor.” When asked if he conducted any research to
determine whether there had been investor acquisitions of similar “large industrial
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Opinion of the Court
facilities,” Mr. Berkowitz admitted, “I didn’t.” In a similar effort to defend the
County’s position, Mr. Weisner’s testimony also fell short:
Q: As you sit here today before the Commission, is it the
position of the County that the value that a willing buyer
would pay for this property as of 1/1/2012 is $147 million
and change?
A: Yes. To use it as a fiber optics manufacturing plant, yes.
Q: And is it the position of the County that a willing buyer
would pay approximately $152 million for the property as
of January 1, 2013?
A: Yes.
Q: Okay. And can you identify for us who that buyer is,
hypothetical or real, that would pay that amount of money
for this facility?
A: Somebody that wanted to use the facility for the purpose
in which it was intended to be used.
Q: And have you identified anybody actually active in the
economy that would want to buy this facility for that
specific use you just identified?
A: I have not.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the Commission’s findings are
supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence, and the Commission’s
decision has a rational basis in the evidence. The evidence shows that the County’s
highest and best use analysis was based on Corning’s use of the property, rather than
its value to a willing buyer. The same subjectivity was evident in the County’s
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Opinion of the Court
classification of the property as special-purpose property. Consequently, the County
used the cost approach but failed to account for obsolescence which, in the
Commission’s discretion, should have been deducted in light of Mr. Stout’s testimony.
Moreover, while the County determined the highest and best use of the property was
for manufacturing optical fiber, the testimony from its own experts reveals its failure
to use a valuation method that reflects what willing buyers in the market for fiber
optics manufacturing facilities would pay for the property. See Belk-Broome, 119 N.C.
App. at 474, 458 S.E.2d at 923–24 (concluding that where property’s highest and best
use was “its present use as an anchor department store,” the County was “required
to use a valuation methodology that reflects what willing buyers in the market for
anchor department stores will pay for the subject property”).
C. Affected by Other Errors of Law
The County also argues that the Commission’s Final Decision was affected by
errors of law. Throughout its brief, the County maintains that Corning’s valuation,
as adopted by the Commission, is contrary to the existing law because it did not
appraise the property “based on what is there and how it is being used.” Instead, it
is “based on a hypothetical, potential generic industrial buyer purchasing a closed
and vacant property.”
The County insists on valuing the property by its value in-use despite our
uniform appraisal standard for valuation at fair market value. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-
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Opinion of the Court
283. Value in-use is relevant to fair market value in that an owner’s current use of
the property may be indicative of its economic utility, and therefore, its value to a
potential buyer. Our statutes actually direct appraisers to consider the adaptability
of real property and improvements for commercial, industrial, or other uses. N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 105-317(a)(1) & (2) (2015). Inevitably, this also “requires consideration
of its declining attractiveness for such use.” Prop. in Forsyth Cnty., 282 N.C. at 78,
191 S.E.2d at 697. As the evidence overwhelmingly shows that the property could
not have been sold as a fiber optics manufacturing facility, Corning’s current use of
the property has no bearing on its value to a potential buyer. See Parkdale Mills, 225
N.C. App. at 720, 741 S.E.2d at 421–22 (explaining that the Commission’s emphasis
on the taxpayer’s current use of the facility implicitly allowed the County to value the
property at its subjective worth to the taxpayer, which “is obviously not the same as
adequately determining the objective value of these properties to another willing
buyer.”)
Next, the County argues that case law requires special-purpose facilities to be
valued at cost, and therefore, the Commission erred as a matter of law in adopting
Mr. Stout’s blended cost-sales approach to arrive at its final value.
In support of its argument, the County cites to the Commission’s findings in In
re Appeal of Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, 92 PTC 152 (1994), a prior decision
which was not appealed to this Court. In that case, the Commission found that
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Opinion of the Court
“[b]ased upon the specific features of this facility, the highest and best use of the
subject property is as a special purpose building,” and “[s]pecial purpose buildings
are most accurately appraised at a cost of reproduction or replacement.” Even
assuming that decision has precedential value here, which it does not, the County’s
attempt to analogize the facts of that case to those sub judice is misplaced. Here, the
Commission recognized that one of the flaws in the County’s cost approach method
was its initial designation of the property as special-purpose property. In arguing
that the Commission failed to follow case law requiring special-purpose property to
be valued at cost, therefore, the County relies on a faulty premise, i.e., that this was
specialty property.
No other case offered by the County requires special-purpose property be
valued exclusively at cost. The County cites to In re Appeal of Phillip Morris, 130
N.C. App. 529, 503 S.E.2d 679 (1998), where the taxpayer argued unsuccessfully that
the appraiser’s cost approach method was not designed to determine market value of
the specialty property based on a hypothetical arms-length transaction. Id. at 537,
503 S.E.2d at 684. This Court noted that experts from both parties agreed, “where,
as here, evidence of comparable sales is not readily available, the cost approach is the
most accepted method of determining true value.” Id. Contrary to the County’s
assertion, that statement was not a holding of our Court; it was simply a fact agreed
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Opinion of the Court
upon by the expert witnesses. Nowhere in Phillip Morris does this Court hold that
specialty property must be valued exclusively at cost.
The County’s reliance on Belk-Broome fares no better. While Belk-Broome
noted instances where the cost approach may be appropriate, e.g., “for specialty
property or newly developed property,” we further explained that
when applied to other property, the cost approach receives
more criticism than praise. For example, the cost
approach’s primary use is to establish a ceiling on
valuation, rather than actual market value. It seems to be
used most often when no other method will yield a realistic
value. The modern appraisal practice is to use cost
approach as a secondary approach “because cost may not
effectively reflect market conditions.”
Belk-Broome, 119 N.C. App. at 474, 458 S.E.2d at 924 (citations omitted). Again,
nowhere in Belk-Broome does this Court hold that specialty property must be valued
exclusively at cost. Our statutes require that property be assessed at its true value,
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-283, and while experts may opine that the cost approach is an
appropriate method for assessing true value of a specialty property, our case law does
not necessarily demand the same. See Greens of Pine Glen, 356 N.C. at 648, 576
S.E.2d at 320 (“In light of the innumerable possible situations that may arise,
authorities that have the obligation of assigning a value to land sensibly are given
discretion to apply the method that most accurately captures the ‘true value’ of the
property in question.”).
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Opinion of the Court
In addition, the County challenges the Commission’s finding that the County’s
application of its schedule of values, standards, and rules was flawed because it
“provided no category for the assessment or appraisal of the subject facility as special-
purpose property.” According to the County, there is no factual basis for this
assertion and no support for it in the law.
Corning challenged the assessments based, inter alia, on the County’s failure
to follow the uniform appraisal methods and its schedule of values. N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 105-317 states that “it shall be the duty of the assessor to see that . . . [u]niform
schedules of values, standards, and rules to be used in appraising real property at its
true value . . . are prepared and are sufficiently detailed to enable those making
appraisals to adhere to them in appraising real property.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-
317(b)(1) (2015). The County’s schedule of values, standards, and rules, however,
provides no guidance for the appraisal or assessment of special-purpose property.
While the subheading in Chapter 9—“valuation of special properties”—seems
promising, it describes only how the County values mobile home parks and
cemeteries. At the hearing, when asked if there was “anything in the County’s
schedule of values that’s specific to what the County has termed special purpose
properties,” Mr. Weisner replied, “I don’t believe there is.” He also testified that due
to the superadequacy and obsolescence associated with technology changes, the
County “appraise[d] it as a heavy manufacturing building. So instead of trying to
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Opinion of the Court
develop a schedule of values on this fiber optics building at $420 a square foot, we
chose to price them at our base price for an excellent quality heavy manufacturing
facility.” Accordingly, we reject the County’s argument.
Turning now to the County’s final argument, the County challenges Mr. Stout’s
opinion regarding the highest and best use of the property, which was implicitly
adopted by the Commission. According to the County, the Commission’s finding as
to the highest and best use of the property is “fatally flawed” for three reasons.
First, the County avers that the Commission’s finding does not follow the law
as enunciated in Belk-Broome, where the parties agreed that the highest and best use
of the subject property was “its present use as an anchor department store.” Belk-
Broome, 119 N.C. App. at 474, 458 S.E.2d at 923. It is not clear what “enunciated
law” the County is referencing. But to the extent the County contends that this
factual stipulation should be treated as a rule of law, we disagree. We see no basis
in Belk-Broome or elsewhere to hold that current use necessarily equates to highest
and best use, especially under the facts of this case.
Second, the County argues that if the highest and best use of the facility is a
vacant industrial facility, then the up-fit would have no additional value to an
alternate industrial user. According to the County, therefore, the discrepancy
between Mr. Stout’s assigned values for Tax Years 2012 and 2013 is further evidence
that the highest and best use of the property is its current use as a fiber optics
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Opinion of the Court
manufacturing facility. This argument is not based on legal error. Instead, the
County is asking this Court to reweigh the evidence of the highest and best use. It is
the Commission’s duty, however, to resolve conflicts in the evidence and weigh the
credibility of the witnesses. Rainbow Springs, 79 N.C. App. at 343, 339 S.E.2d at
686. Because “[t]he Commission’s judgment ‘as between two reasonably conflicting
views’ is supported by substantial evidence’, we will not overturn its decision on this
ground. Id. (quoting Thompson, 292 N.C. at 410, 223 S.E.2d at 541).
Third and finally, the County claims that if the highest and best use of the
property is to manufacture optical fiber, then Corning would not sell the property for
any other use unless it was under duress. As such, it would not be a “willing seller”
as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-283. The County ignores the fact that the highest
and best use, as found by the Commission, is future industrial use. It disregards the
evidence which amply demonstrates there is no market for a fiber optic
manufacturing facility in North America, much less in North Carolina. And it
speculates that Corning would be a “willing seller” if and only if it sold the property
in a market with no willing buyer. There is no support for this argument in the law
or the facts of this case.
III. Conclusion
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Opinion of the Court
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the Commission’s Final Decision is
supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence in view of the whole
record, and was not affected by errors of law. The Final Decision is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Judges HUNTER, JR. and DAVIS concur.
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