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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 2727 SAN PEDRO LLC,
3 Petitioner-Appellant,
4 v. A-1-CA-35898
5 BERNALILLO COUNTY ASSESSOR,
6 Respondent-Appellee.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
8 Clay Campbell, District Judge
9 John R. Polk,
10 Albuquerque, NM
11 Vance, Chavez & Associates, LLC
12 Claud Eugene Vance
13 Albuquerque, NM
14 for Appellant
15 Robles, Rael & Anaya, P.C.
16 Charles Rennick
17 Marcus J. Rael, Jr.
18 Albuquerque, NM
19 for Appellee
1 MEMORANDUM OPINION
2 VARGAS, Judge.
3 {1} 2727 San Pedro LLC (Taxpayer) appeals the district court’s affirmation of
4 the Bernalillo County Valuation Protests Board’s (the Board) decision to uphold
5 the Bernalillo County Assessor’s (the Assessor) valuation of Taxpayer’s property
6 for tax year 2015. Taxpayer claims that the district court erroneously concluded
7 that it had not overcome the presumption that the Assessor’s valuation was correct.
8 As a result of this error, Taxpayer argues that the district court failed to properly
9 shift the burden to the Assessor to prove that her method of valuation utilized a
10 generally accepted appraisal technique. Finally, Taxpayer contends that the
11 Assessor failed to use a generally accepted appraisal technique in valuing its
12 property, and, as such, the Assessor’s valuation was not supported by substantial
13 evidence. We agree with Taxpayer that it overcame the presumption of correctness
14 and that the burden shifted to the Assessor. We also agree with Taxpayer that the
15 Assessor’s valuation was not supported by substantial evidence because the
16 Assessor failed to put on evidence that the expense rate it utilized was appropriate
17 for Taxpayer’s property type. We reverse the district court with instructions to
18 remand the matter back to the Board for further proceedings.
19 BACKGROUND
2
1 {2} This is the second of two appeals Taxpayer filed objecting to the Assessor’s
2 valuation of Taxpayer’s commercial building at 2727 San Pedro NE in
3 Albuquerque, New Mexico (Property). In its initial appeal, Taxpayer filed a
4 petition protesting the Assessor’s 2014 valuation of the Property. 2727 San Pedro
5 LLC v. Bernalillo Cty. Assessor (San Pedro I), 2017-NMCA-008, ¶ 1, 389 P.3d
6 287. The Board and the district court affirmed the Assessor’s valuation. Id. We
7 granted Taxpayer’s petition for a writ of certiorari and, following briefing and oral
8 argument, issued an opinion on September 13, 2016, vacating the district court’s
9 decision and remanding the matter to the Board for additional proceedings because
10 the Assessor failed to satisfy her burden “to prove that [her] method of valuation
11 utilized a generally accepted appraisal technique.” Id. ¶¶ 2, 25, 29 (internal
12 quotation marks and citation omitted). Specifically, we concluded that the Assessor
13 failed to show that the market data on which she relied to calculate Taxpayer’s
14 value was applicable “in this market, for this property type, and during this time
15 period,” preventing a reasonable person from concluding that the methodology
16 used was based on a generally accepted appraisal technique. Id. ¶ 25 (emphasis
17 omitted).
18 {3} While its 2014 protest was pending in the district court, Taxpayer received
19 its 2015 notice of value from the Assessor for the Property, valuing the Property at
20 the same amount of the 2014 valuation. Taxpayer protested this valuation, again
3
1 repeating its argument that the income method of appraisal was most appropriate
2 and the actual income produced from the Property was insufficient to justify the
3 Assessor’s valuation. A hearing before the Board on Taxpayer’s 2015 protest took
4 place in December 2015.
5 {4} Upon conclusion of the hearing, the Board determined the Assessor’s
6 valuation was the most reliable, and Taxpayer did not overcome the presumption
7 of correctness in favor of that valuation. Taxpayer appealed the Board’s decision to
8 the district court pursuant to Rule 1-074 NMRA. The district court agreed with the
9 Board and concluded Taxpayer did not present evidence tending to disprove the
10 factual correctness of the Assessor’s valuation. Taxpayer appealed the district
11 court’s decision by filing a petition for a writ of certiorari in this Court pursuant to
12 Rule 12-505 NMRA, which we granted.
13 DISCUSSION
14 {5} Taxpayer raises five issues on appeal that we group into two general
15 categories. First, Taxpayer claims that the district court erroneously concluded that
16 it had not overcome the presumption that the Assessor’s valuation was correct and
17 therefore failed to shift the burden to the Assessor to prove that her method of
18 valuation utilized a generally accepted appraisal technique. Second, Taxpayer
19 contends that the Assessor failed to use a generally accepted appraisal technique in
20 valuing the Property when it used unreliable hearsay to support its valuation. The
4
1 Assessor’s valuation, Taxpayer claims, was therefore not supported by substantial
2 evidence.
3 Standard of Review
4 {6} District courts sit in an appellate capacity when reviewing an administrative
5 decision. See Rule 1-074(T). “Upon a grant of a petition for writ of certiorari under
6 Rule 12-505, this Court conducts the same review of an administrative order as the
7 district court sitting in its appellate capacity, while at the same time determining
8 whether the district court erred in the first appeal.” Town & Country Food Stores,
9 Inc. v. N.M. Reg. & Licensing Dep’t, 2012-NMCA-046, ¶ 8, 277 P.3d 490
10 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). We employ a whole
11 record review when reviewing administrative decisions. See In re Otero Cty. Elec.
12 Coop., Inc., 1989-NMSC-033, ¶ 6, 108 N.M. 462, 774 P.2d 1050. “This standard
13 requires that we independently review the entire record of the administrative
14 hearing to determine whether the decision was arbitrary and capricious, not
15 supported by substantial evidence, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” San
16 Pedro I, 2017-NMCA-008, ¶ 15 (omission, alteration, internal quotation marks,
17 and citation omitted). “To the extent [Taxpayer] contends that there are errors of
18 law in the [district] court’s conclusions or in those findings that function as
19 conclusions, we apply a de novo standard of review.” Jones v. Schoellkopf, 2005-
20 NMCA-124, ¶ 8, 138 N.M. 477, 122 P.3d 844. “When the facts are not in dispute,
5
1 but the parties disagree on the legal conclusion to be drawn from those facts, we
2 review the issues de novo.” Id. However, “we give a heightened degree of
3 deference to legal questions that implicate special agency expertise or the
4 determination of fundamental policies within the scope of the agency’s statutory
5 function.” Jicarilla Apache Nation v. Rodarte, 2004-NMSC-035, ¶ 25, 136 N.M.
6 630, 103 P.3d 554 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
7 Statutory Scheme for Valuation of Property for Taxation
8 {7} Our Property Tax Code (the Code), NMSA 1978 §§ 7-35-1 to -38-93(1973,
9 as amended through 2018), sets out the method for valuation of real property in
10 New Mexico and authorizes the Taxation and Revenue Department (Department)
11 or the county assessor to determine those values. Section 7-36-15(A). Unless
12 otherwise authorized by the Code, “the value of property for property taxation
13 purposes shall be its market value as determined by the application of the sales of
14 comparable property, income or cost methods of valuation or any combination of
15 these methods.” Section 7-36-15(B). The Department or the county assessor “shall
16 apply generally accepted appraisal techniques” in determining property values.
17 Section 7-36-15(B)(1).
18 {8} As she had done in 2014, the Assessor used the income method of valuation
19 to determine the value of Taxpayer’s Property. “The income method of valuation is
20 a method used to value property by capitalizing its income when the market value
6
1 method cannot be used due to lack of data on sales of comparable properties . . .
2 [and] is determined by dividing the annual income by the applicable capitalization
3 rate.” 3.6.5.22(A)(1) NMAC (2001) “ ‘[I]ncome’ . . . is net income or the
4 difference between annual revenue or receipts, actual or imputed, from rental of
5 the property and the annual expenses relating to the property[,]” 3.6.5.22(A)(5)
6 NMAC, and “is based upon the fair rent which can be imputed to the
7 property . . .based upon rent actually received . . . by the owner and upon typical
8 rentals received in the area for similar property in similar use[.]” 3.6.5.22(A)(3)
9 NMAC. Expenses relating to the property that are deducted to arrive at a
10 property’s income are defined as “the outlay or average annual allocation of money
11 or money’s worth that can fairly be charged against the revenue or receipts from
12 the property. . . . [and] are limited to those which are ordinary and necessary in the
13 production of the revenue and receipts from the property and do not include debt
14 retirement, interest on funds invested in the property or income taxes.”
15 3.6.5.22(A)(6) NMAC.
16 {9} “The value of property determined by the county assessor is presumed to be
17 correct.” First Nat’l Bank v. Bernalillo Cty. Valuation Protest Bd., 1977-NMCA-
18 005, ¶ 24, 90 N.M. 110, 560 P.2d 174. A taxpayer, however, can overcome the
19 presumption of correctness by “showing that the assessor did not follow the
20 statutory provisions of the [Code] or by presenting evidence tending to dispute the
7
1 factual correctness of the valuation” based on generally accepted appraisal
2 techniques. Id. “When a taxpayer overcomes the presumption of correctness of the
3 assessor’s method of valuation, the burden shifts to the assessor to prove that his or
4 [her] method of valuation utilized a ‘generally accepted appraisal technique.’ ” Id.
5 ¶ 25. Both the Board and the district court concluded that Taxpayer did not
6 overcome the presumption of correctness of the Assessor’s valuation.
7 Taxpayer Overcame The Assessor’s Presumption of Correctness
8 {10} At the hearing before the Board, the Assessor advised that she valued the
9 Property by using the actual average rent collected from the Property and
10 market-based values derived from other similar properties for the vacancy and
11 expense rates. Using those numbers, she arrived at a value of $923,800. Taxpayer,
12 by contrast, presented evidence of its actual 2014 expenses through an Annual
13 Property Operating Data (APOD) report, from which he derived a Property value
14 of $721,200.
15 {11} Weighing all the evidence presented at the hearing, the Board concluded the
16 “Assessor’s valuation is the most reliable and . . . [Taxpayer] has not overcome the
17 presumption of correctness in favor of that valuation.” Similarly, the district court
18 held Taxpayer failed to overcome the presumption of correctness because
19 Taxpayer “failed to show the Assessor did not use a generally accepted appraisal
20 technique.” In arriving at its conclusion, the district court stated, “To the extent
8
1 [Taxpayer] claims the valuation is incorrect merely because it uses market rates
2 rather than the [P]roperty’s actual vacancy and expense rates, the [district c]ourt
3 rejects the argument.”
4 {12} Taxpayer contends it overcame the presumption of correctness when it
5 applied the income method of appraisal to the Property, utilizing the actual income
6 and expenses from the Property to derive a value different from the Assessor’s and
7 the Assessor failed to introduce evidence showing Taxpayer did not use a generally
8 accepted appraisal technique in arriving at that different value. The Assessor
9 responds that because the record contains evidence supporting its valuation of the
10 property, the Board’s finding below should remain undisturbed.
11 {13} The standard to overcome the presumption of correctness, however, does not
12 require a taxpayer to prove that the Assessor’s valuation is not supported by the
13 evidence, as the Assessor contends. Nor is it to present evidence which is more
14 reliable than the Assessor’s, as the Board intimated. Instead, to overcome the
15 presumption of correctness, a taxpayer need only present evidence tending to
16 dispute the valuation of the Assessor. See San Pedro I, 2017-NMCA-008, ¶ 22.
17 {14} In San Pedro I, we considered whether Taxpayer presented sufficient
18 evidence to overcome the statutory presumption of correctness when it “proposed a
19 market value based upon its own application of the income method of valuation.”
20 Id. ¶ 22. Noting that “[Taxpayer’s] application of the income method of valuation
9
1 [using actual expenses] differs from that advocated by the Assessor,” and that the
2 Assessor did not claim that Taxpayer’s methodology was not a generally accepted
3 appraisal technique, we concluded that Taxpayer’s evidence of value disputed the
4 factual correctness of the Assessor’s method of valuation. Id. Thus, Taxpayer
5 overcame the statutory presumption of correctness and “shifted the burden of proof
6 to the Assessor to prove that his or her method of valuation utilized a generally
7 accepted appraisal technique.” Id. (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation
8 omitted).
9 {15} At the hearing before the Board that gave rise to this appeal, Taxpayer again
10 presented evidence using actual expenses to calculate the value of the Property
11 applying the income method of valuation, with the result differing from that
12 advocated by the Assessor, just as it had in San Pedro I. Once again, the Assessor
13 did not claim Taxpayer’s approach was not a generally accepted appraisal
14 technique. As was the case in San Pedro I, Taxpayer’s evidence of differing value
15 “tends to dispute the factual correctness of the method of valuation.” Id. (
16 alterations, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted.) “[T]he burden of proof
17 [therefore] shifted to the Assessor to prove that her method of valuation utilized a
18 generally accepted appraisal technique.” Id. (alteration, internal quotation marks,
19 and citation omitted).
20 The Assessor Failed to Provide Substantial Evidence That She Used a
21 Generally Accepted Appraisal Technique.
10
1 {16} We next turn to the issue of whether substantial evidence exists to support
2 the Board’s conclusion that the Assessor used a generally accepted appraisal
3 technique in her application of the income method to value the Property. See id. ¶¶
4 23, 25. Initially, we note that the Board found that Taxpayer did not show that the
5 Assessor failed to use generally accepted appraisal techniques, implicitly
6 concluding that the Assessor’s appraisal techniques were, in fact, generally
7 accepted.
8 {17} Taxpayer raises three specific objections to challenge the Board’s implicit
9 finding. First, Taxpayer argues that the Assessor improperly imposed a flat
10 percentage expense limit in calculating the value of the Property. Second,
11 Taxpayer contends that the Assessor’s use of market data for five unidentified
12 properties to calculate the applicable expense rate violated his right to a fair
13 hearing and therefore, due process rights. Third, Taxpayer claims that the Board’s
14 findings that the Assessor used a generally accepted appraisal technique was not
15 supported by substantial evidence because it was based exclusively on hearsay and
16 did not include evidence that the income and expense information relied upon by
17 the Assessor were for properties that were comparable to Taxpayer’s Property. At
18 the root of all three of Taxpayer’s arguments is his objection to the Assessor’s use
19 of five unidentified properties to calculate the expense rate to be used in the
20 valuation of the Property. “Whether an appraisal technique is ‘generally accepted’
11
1 is a question of fact.” Id. ¶ 20. We defer to the Board’s factual determinations
2 where they are supported by substantial evidence. See El Castillo Ret. Residences
3 v. Martinez, 2017-NMSC-026, ¶ 21, 401 P.3d 751.
4 {18} In applying the income method of valuation to value Taxpayer’s Property,
5 the Assessor used a combination of market and actual data. Because Taxpayer’s
6 argument on appeal focuses on the information relied upon by the Assessor to
7 calculate the expense rate component of the Assessor’s income method valuation,
8 we begin our analysis there.
9 {19} At the hearing before the Board, the Assessor presented a pro forma
10 explaining her calculation of the value of the Property using the income approach.
11 The pro forma notes that the Assessor applied a forty-five percent expense rate1 in
12 arriving at a valuation of $923,800. Juanita Chavez, an employee of the Assessor,
13 testified that to determine the appropriate expense rate to calculate the Property’s
14 value, the Assessor compiled information related to expense rates for other office
15 buildings in the area and arrived at a forty-one percent expense rate, which she
16 increased to forty-five percent for purposes of calculating the Property’s value. The
17 expense information contains five entries listing two properties on San Pedro
18 Drive, two properties on Uptown Boulevard, and one property on Prospect. The
1
In reviewing the Assessor’s calculations, we note, as the district court did, that
the amount of operation expenses set out in the Assessor’s pro forma used to
calculate the Property’s value is actually forty-eight percent of the effective gross
income, rather than the forty-five percent noted.
12
1 Assessor testified that the expense rate information she used was provided to the
2 Assessor’s office by other taxpayers and was for properties located in the same
3 neighborhood designation as Taxpayer’s Property. Ms. Chavez explained that the
4 five properties she used to calculate the expense rate were all office buildings,
5 were all properties offering full-service leases, and were all of the office buildings
6 in the same neighborhood whose information was available to her. The expense
7 rates shown are for the years 2011, 2012, and 2013 and range from twenty-five
8 percent of effective gross income to fifty-nine percent of effective gross income. It
9 is unclear whether the entries are for five different properties or just three, as the
10 two Uptown Boulevard properties and two San Pedro Drive properties show
11 expense rates for different years, allowing for the possibility that the Assessor’s
12 information shows the expense rate for the same properties over different time
13 periods.
14 {20} To rebut the information provided by the Assessor, Taxpayer provided
15 testimony from realtor, Ken Shaffer, and from appraiser, Ron Alfred. When asked
16 for his expert opinion on the market expense rate for office space similar in age to
17 the Property, Alfred presented two data sheets for properties he contended were
18 similar. The first property, located on Louisiana Boulevard, was quickly
19 discounted because it was subject to triple-net leases, requiring tenants to pay the
20 cost of most property expenses. Alfred, however, also pointed to a building located
13
1 in downtown Albuquerque, which he conceded was not located in the same area as
2 the Property, but was newer in effective age and similar in construction type and
3 type of lease. The downtown property, Alfred testified, had an expense rate of
4 fifty-nine percent of effective gross income.
5 {21} Taxpayer also called Ken Shaffer, a commercial realtor, to testify on his
6 behalf. Shaffer testified that commercial realtors generally develop an APOD for a
7 property in order to bring it to market to sell. Generally, his APOD contains all
8 expenses usually connected with an office building. Use of an APOD, he testified,
9 is a generally accepted appraisal technique to develop the net operating income of
10 a property relative to the income approach.
11 {22} Addressing the Assessor’s information, Shaffer testified that expense rate
12 information averaged from five properties is not statistically reliable, and the
13 Assessor should have used at least thirty properties. Explaining the considerations
14 at play in evaluating property values and expense rates, Shaffer testified that Class
15 C office properties, such as Taxpayer’s Property, face the biggest challenge in the
16 existing market, with owners frequently having to offer a period of free rent,
17 significant tenant improvements, and a short lease term. Further, Shaffer noted that
18 to determine whether expenses are “ordinary and necessary,” as required by the
19 regulation, they must be set out by line-item in order to be properly reviewed.
20 Finally, Shaffer explained that expense rates will differ between commercial
14
1 properties and it was necessary to consider the property itself, stating as one such
2 example, “You have a lot of common area and trees to take care of, that’s going to
3 give you higher expenses because you have a lot more land to take care of.”
4 {23} Considering the evidence that was presented, we cannot say that, under the
5 circumstances of this case, the Board’s factual determinations are supported by
6 substantial evidence. See id. Just as we found that the Assessor failed to provide
7 sufficient evidence that the expense rates on which she relied applied to
8 Taxpayer’s office building in San Pedro I, we find similar shortfalls here. See
9 2017-NMCA-008, ¶ 25. We are unable to determine from the evidence presented
10 by the Assessor whether the properties upon which she relied to arrive at her
11 expense rate were of the property type of Taxpayer’s Property. See id. (noting that
12 without data showing that forty-five percent is appropriate for the property type at
13 issue, we cannot conclude the assessor used generally accepted appraisal
14 techniques); see also Edith J. Friedman, Encyclopedia of Real Estate Appraising,
15 at 381 (3d ed. 1978) (stating that “[t]he cost of operating an office building varies
16 with its age, condition in which it has been maintained, size, shape, height,
17 mechanical and other equipment, and the services provided by the landlord”).
18 Shaffer testified that Class C properties such as Taxpayer’s face unique challenges,
19 requiring the owners of those properties to incur expenses that are not applicable to
20 owners of other office buildings. Absent data showing that the five properties on
15
1 which the Assessor relied to arrive at her forty-five percent expense rate are either
2 similar to Taxpayer’s Property in those qualities that affect the operating expenses
3 of an office building or that the Assessor adjusted the expense rate to account for
4 the lack of similarity, we cannot conclude that the Assessor’s valuation was
5 conducted using generally accepted appraisal techniques.
6 {24} We understand that the Assessor is subject to certain statutory constraints
7 that limit her ability to disclose information related to the Property. See § 7-38-
8 19(E) (requiring information regarding income and expenses of specific property
9 may only be released as authorized by Section 7-38-4). Nonetheless, the Assessor
10 is permitted to release information if it is to be used in a way that does not identify
11 the property owner. Section 7-38-4(A)(5). Nothing in the statute prohibits the
12 assessor from testifying about the itemized expenses, age, size, and condition of
13 comparable properties on which the Assessor relies, as well as the services
14 provided by the landlords for those properties. See Encyclopedia of Real Estate
15 Appraising, supra, at 381. Nonetheless, the Assessor did not provide the Board
16 with that information. We find that, on whole record review, substantial evidence
17 does not exist to support the conclusion that the Assessor used generally accepted
18 accounting principles when she valued Taxpayer’s Property.
19 CONCLUSION
16
1 {25} We therefore reverse the district court’s order and remand the matter to the
2 district court with instructions to vacate the Board’s decision and remand the
3 matter to the Board for further proceedings in accordance with this decision.
4 {26} IT IS SO ORDERED.
5 ______________________________
6 JULIE J. VARGAS, Judge
7 WE CONCUR:
8 _____________________________
9 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
10 ______________________________________
11 KRISTINA BOGARDUS, Judge
17