IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 17-0866
Filed November 21, 2018
RAUEN & RAUEN DEVELOPMENT, LLC, DENNIS J. RAUEN, VIRGINIA A.
RAUEN, ERTL LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, and MOLO PETROLEUM, LLC,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
vs.
CITY OF FARLEY, IOWA,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dubuque County, Monica L. Ackley,
Judge.
A city appeals the district court’s reduction of special assessment values.
AFFIRMED.
William J. Miller and Kirk W. Schuler of Dorsey & Whitney LLP, Des Moines,
for appellant.
Todd J. Locher of Locher & Davis PLC, Farley, for appellees.
Heard by Danilson, C.J., McDonald, J., and Blane, S.J.*
*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2018).
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McDONALD, Judge.
The City of Farley specially assessed certain property owners for the costs
of road and storm sewer improvements made in the city’s industrial-business
district. The project included widening a roadway, adding a paved shoulder and
curb to the roadway, and improving the storm sewer along the roadway. The city
specially assessed the property owners abutting the roadway at a rate of fifty-five
dollars per linear foot of property running along the improved roadway. Some
property owners, including Ertl Limited Partnership, Rauen & Rauen Development
LLC, Molo Petroleum, and Dennis and Virginia Rauen challenged the special
assessment in district court. The district court found the property owners had been
assessed in excess of the special benefits received from the project and reduced
the assessments. The City timely filed this appeal.
The Code governs special assessments. Iowa Code section 384.61 (2015)
requires “[t]he total cost of a public improvement . . . be assessed against all lots
within the assessment district in accordance with the special benefits conferred
upon the property, and not in excess of such benefits.” An assessment is capped
at twenty-five percent of the value of the land improved. See Horak Prairie Farm,
L.P. v. City of Cedar Rapids, 748 N.W.2d 504, 507 (Iowa 2008).
Challenges to special assessments are reviewed de novo. See id. at 506.
“We will give weight to, but we are not bound by, the district court’s findings.” Gray
v. City of Indianola, 797 N.W.2d 112, 117 (Iowa 2011). We presume “assessments
are correct and do not exceed the special benefit[s] received” by the assessed
parties. See id. The property owners bear the burden of showing the special
assessment is excessive. See id. However, “[a] property owner cannot generally
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argue that he has not received any benefit from a public improvement; rather, a
property owner must show that the benefit received was not as great as that
determined by the city.” Horak Prairie Farm, 748 N.W.2d at 507. Because
mathematical certainty is not possible, “we must rely on approximations to
determine the correct amount of the assessment.” Gray, 797 N.W.2d at 117.
Ultimately, the court must consider “whether the assessment ‘represents a fair
proportional part of the total cost.’” Horak Prairie Farm, 748 N.W.2d at 507 (quoting
Rood v. City of Ames, 60 N.W.2d 227, 238 (Iowa 1953)).
From the outset, according to the evidence, the project was ill-conceived.
The industrial-business district is isolated on the outskirts of the city. The city did
not initiate the project in response to any professional study, such as a water-
drainage study or traffic study. Instead, the city initiated the project because of
some concern the roadway was deteriorating. The city widened the road and
added curb and gutter to match a small segment of the roadway in front of one of
the businesses in the industrial-business area. Specifically, a construction
company abutting the roadway had added a curb and gutter to the roadway
immediately in front of its business.
Given the genesis of the project, it is unsurprising the project generated very
little, if any, benefit for assessed property owners. The property owners testified
the project failed to provide them with meaningful improvements. None of the
owners had any prior issue with tire rutting on their properties from vehicles turning
in, therefore, the shoulder apron provided no benefit. None benefitted from the
increased turning radius provided by the widened street. Those who had some
water drainage issues received no relief upon the project’s completion. The
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testimony shows the water drainage issues actually increased after the completion
of the improvement.
The property owners’ testimony was bolstered by their expert witness,
Harold Smith, a former city engineer of the City of Des Moines, who testifies
regularly in these types of proceedings. See, e.g., Gray, 797 N.W.2d at 114. Smith
testified the owners received only a de minimis benefit from the project. The
project did not reduce noise. The project did not reduce roadway dust. The project
did not improve police or fire access to the industrial-business district. The project
did not improve the ability to remove snow or ice. The project did not improve
water drainage. The project did not reduce ditch maintenance. The project did not
improve street parking. The project widened the roadway, however, the widening
was excessive and not useful because the city did not widen the road enough to
add additional traffic lanes. Smith did testify the property owners received a
minimal special benefit in the form of increased market value of the properties due
to the aesthetic improvement from the added curb and gutter.
Given the lack of benefits from the project, Smith opined the project was
best classified as a curb and gutter installation. Smith testified the Flint formula is
commonly used to determine the special benefits associated with a project of this
type. See id. at 114 n.4. (discussing the Flint formula). Smith testified, without
objection, the appropriate formula in this case as follows: “One-and-a-half feet of
curb and gutter times the lineal feet of a frontage for the property . . . which gives
you square feet, divided by nine, gives you square yards, times $44.50 a square
yard.” He again testified to the formula, without objection, describing it as “[th]e
area, the frontage times one-and-a-half foot of curb and gutter times the $44.50 a
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yard.” While Smith testified about the formula, he did not provide any testimony
regarding the specific dollar amounts derived from applying the formula to the
various properties in this case. The data regarding the amount of linear feet of
frontage for each assessed property was admitted into evidence without objection.
The city contends the court should not have considered Smith’s formula
because it was not disclosed prior to trial. However, the city did not object to
Smith’s testimony regarding the formula. Error is not preserved. See Van Iperen
v. Van Bramer, 392 N.W.2d 480, 486 (Iowa 1986) (concluding challenge to expert
testimony was not preserved when counsel failed to object to question or move to
strike an answer).
In contrast to Smith’s formula used to calculate the special benefit and
appropriate assessment, the city’s assessment appears to bear no relationship to
the special benefit conferred by the project. We need not go into the details, but
the record reflects the city council held numerous meetings regarding this project
and the special assessment. It is a fair summary of the evidence to state the city
backed into an assessment determination not based on special benefit to the
property owners but instead based on how much of the cost the city wanted to
pass along to the property owners. In other words, the primary driver of the
assessment was the city’s budget and not the property owners’ benefit.
Given the two valuation models presented to the district court, on de novo
review, we cannot conclude the district court erred in crediting Smith’s testimony
and assessment formula. The district court applied the formula to the evidence
and determined the special benefit conferred by the project. The district court then
determined the city’s special assessment exceeded each of the property owners’
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respective special benefit received. The district court reduced the special
assessment appropriately.
The district court’s calculation of the special benefit is not without
controversy. The property owners attached to their post-trial brief what they called
an exhibit. The exhibit was a table showing the application of Smith’s formula to
the facts of this case and the resulting values. The district court’s assessment
findings corresponded to the values set forth in the property owners’ post-trial
exhibit. The city contends the district court’s consideration of the post-trial exhibit
constitutes reversible error because the record was closed. Under the facts and
circumstances of this case, we disagree. Here, Smith testified regarding his
formula to calculate the special benefit and assessment. The city did not object to
the testimony. Here, the data regarding the linear feet of frontage for each
assessed property was in evidence without objection. The property owners’ exhibit
was nothing more than a table that summarized the evidence and performed the
arithmetic for the district court. It would have been no different if the property
owners had inserted the table into the brief and not labeled the table an exhibit. In
addition, the district court could have performed the same task based on the
evidence.
In conclusion, the property owners successfully demonstrated the special
assessments exceeded the resulting special benefits, requiring a reduction of the
special assessments. We have considered each of the city’s arguments, whether
or not set forth explicitly herein, and none entitle the city to relief.
AFFIRMED.
Danilson, C.J., concurs; Blane, S.J., concurs specially.
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BLANE, Senior Judge (concurring specially)
I concur with the majority opinion, but write to explain my reasoning. The
City relies on several arguments to justify their assessment to the abutting property
owners. Under scrutiny, these arguments do not stand up. First, the City contends
that its assessment based on $55 per lineal frontage foot constitutes the special
benefit received by the owners from the project. The City had proposed the $55
per lineal foot as the assessment when the project was in its planning stage. The
City decided on this same amount when the project was completed and continually
referred to it as a “lineal foot” assessment based on each owner’s frontage foot to
the road. As noted by the majority, a purely “lineal foot” assessment does not
comport with the law. The City never established a relationship between the
special benefit and the $55 per lineal foot assessed to the various properties.
Second, the City argues that it expanded the project and increased the
overall cost at the request of the property owners, who then complained and
challenged the assessment. The problem with the City’s argument is that the
property owners made their proposals regarding expanding the project during
preliminary negotiations with the City, which would have ended in an agreement
where the property owners and City would each pay for the project 50/50. The
City rejected the owners’ proposal, abandoned the negotiations and proceeded
with the statutory assessment process. The City was under no obligation to
expand the project and its argument that the expanded project somehow
automatically constituted a special benefit because it was suggested by the owners
is unacceptable. The City was still obligated to establish the project as completed
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conferred special benefit to the owner’s property to justify the assessments. This
the City failed to do.
Finally, the City complains that in determining the assessment, the trial court
relied upon the formula testified to by the owners’ expert, Harold Smith. It contends
that Smith’s formula is nothing more than a “per lineal foot” calculation. It
continues, if the City’s “per lineal foot” assessment does not equate to “special
benefit”, then the court erred in using Smith’s formula in calculating the
assessment and rendering its judgment. I do not agree with the City’s predicate.
Smith connected his formula to the special benefit conferred on the owners’
properties. In addition, Smith’s formula was based upon the Flint Method, which
our supreme court has approved. See Gray v. City of Indianola, 797 N.W.2d 112
(Iowa 2011).