Erie-Western PA Port Authority and Commodore Perry Yacht Club v. Erie County Board of Assessment Appeals and The SD of the City of Erie ~ Appeal of: The School District of the City of Erie
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port :
Authority and Commodore Perry :
Yacht Club :
:
v. : No. 960 C.D. 2018
:
Erie County Board of Assessment :
Appeals and The School District :
of the City of Erie :
:
Appeal of: The School District of the :
City of Erie :
Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port :
Authority and Commodore Perry :
Yacht Club :
:
v. : No. 961 C.D. 2018
:
Erie County Board of Assessment :
Appeals and The School District of the :
City of Erie :
:
Appeal of: Erie County Board of :
Assessment Appeals :
Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port :
Authority and Commodore Perry :
Yacht Club :
:
v. : No. 1027 C.D. 2018
: Argued: May 6, 2019
Erie County Board of Assessment :
Appeals, School District of the City :
of Erie :
:
Appeal of: Commodore Perry Yacht :
Club :
BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
OPINION
BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: July 12, 2019
The City of Erie School District (School District), Erie County Board
of Assessment Appeals (Board), and Commodore Perry Yacht Club (Yacht Club)
cross-appeal the June 12, 2018, order of the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County
(trial court), which determined the fair market value of a private marina for purposes
of its real estate tax assessment for the years 2013 through 2017. For the following
reasons, we affirm the trial court.
Background
The subject property, located at 664 West Bayfront Highway in the City
of Erie, is owned by the Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port Authority (Port Authority)
and has been leased to Yacht Club, a non-profit corporation, since 1976. The
property consists of three acres of dry land and 13 acres of water lots, numbered
from 181 to 198. The present lease, which extends through 2025, obligates Yacht
Club to pay all real estate taxes.
Yacht Club constructed a marina on the property, which uses a floating
dock system to provide boat slips to its members. The floating docks, constructed
in 2009, replaced a fixed steel dock system. Joint Stipulation of Facts, ¶¶4, 7;
Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 37a-38a.
Yacht Club has made improvements to the property. They include:
breakwalls to define the borders of the water lots, a two-story clubhouse, three picnic
pavilions, a workshop, an equipment building, a restroom building, an in-ground
swimming pool, a gravel parking lot, concrete walkways and perimeter chain-link
fencing. The lease, as modified in 1997, provides, inter alia, that “all buildings,
improvements, fixtures, machinery, and equipment of whatsoever nature at any time
constructed, placed or maintained upon any part of the leased premises shall be and
remain the property of the [Yacht Club], or its sublessees, as their interests may
appear,” and Yacht Club may remove them when the lease term ends. Certified
Record (C.R.), Item 6, Exhibit 1, at 7.
Yacht Club pays $3,220 per year to the Port Authority on March 1 of
each year. In addition, it pays a fixed rent for the boat slips that is calculated in five-
year increments, with a $10 increase every five years on each boat slip. From 2011
through 2015, the annual rent to the Port Authority was $80 per boat slip. From
2016 through 2020, the annual rent is $90 per boat slip.
In turn, Yacht Club charges its members a fee based on the lineal length
of the member’s slip or boat, whichever is larger. Members of Yacht Club also
contribute a minimum of 20 hours of volunteer work each year. A member who
does not meet this annual volunteer obligation pays a penalty of $40 for each
unworked hour. All members pay an initiation fee and annual dues of $500.
In 2012, the Erie County Bureau of Assessment proposed to assess the
property at $963,200. After an appeal by Yacht Club, the Board reduced the assessed
value to $635,200, effective January 1, 2013. Yacht Club appealed to the trial court,
asserting that the assessment was “excessive [and] inappropriately high.”1 R.R. 14a.
The School District intervened, requesting a higher assessment.
1
Yacht Club alleged, in a pretrial narrative filed with the trial court, that the previous assessed
value of the subject property was $100,000, effective January 1, 2003. C.R., Item 23, at 2.
2
Pre-Trial Motion Regarding Floating Docks
After discovery, the School District and the Board filed a pre-trial
motion seeking “to declare [Yacht Club’s] floating docks as taxable real estate
and/or fixtures.” R.R. 16a. Yacht Club responded that the floating docks are
personalty, quoting a decision of the trial court in another case, i.e., In re Appeal of
Erie-Western Port Authority and Bay Harbor Marina, 78 Erie C. L.J. 94 (No. 1594-
A-1989) (Bay Harbor).
The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing to determine whether
there were any factual differences between the instant case and the Bay Harbor
decision as well as to receive “any evidence related to whether the floating docks are
affixed to the real estate as fixtures.” Trial Court Order, 11/16/2016; R.R. 30a. The
Board presented the testimony of Scott Maas, a certified Pennsylvania real estate
appraiser and the director of the county assessment office. He testified that his
assessment did not include the value of the floating docks.
The School District presented the testimony of David R. Lloyd, Jr., a
certified real estate appraiser.2 Lloyd opined that it is “very labor intensive” to install
and remove the floating dock system. Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 1/23/2017, at 129.
Lloyd noted that electrical lines “feeding out into the main docking area” could not
2
At the hearing, the School District’s counsel moved to qualify Lloyd “as an expert in the field of
real estate appraisal to render an opinion to a reasonable degree of certainty … that the floating
docks and dock system located at [Yacht Club] actually constitute fixtures[.]” Notes of Testimony
(N.T.), 1/23/2017, at 115, 121. The trial court allowed the testimony but stated that whether the
floating docks are personalty or fixtures is “the ultimate question for the Court to decide.” Id. at
115. It has been well established that expert testimony may assist the court to determine a factual
matter, but the court alone decides questions of law. See PA. R.E. 702(b) (allowing specialized
knowledge of expert witness to assist trier of fact to understand evidence or determine a fact in
issue). The question of whether property is realty or personalty “is a question of law to be based
on the facts as to the property owner’s manifest conduct.” Wilson v. Ridgway Area School District,
596 A.2d 1161, 1164 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1991) (emphasis added).
3
easily be disconnected. Id. at 131-32. Further, the metal collars that surround the
200 pilings would have to be unbolted to separate the docks from the pilings. The
gangways bolted to the bulkheads on land would also need to be removed to free the
floating docks.
Yacht Club presented the testimony of its treasurer, Henry W. Bujalski.
He testified that the docks were floated to staging areas and then connected using a
cotter pin system. He stated that the pins can be removed without special equipment.
The main docks are about 40 feet long and 10 feet wide. Finger piers are the
narrower docks dividing the slips that provide access to the boats. Bujalski
explained that to keep the floating docks in place, pilings were pounded into the
basin floor to a depth of approximately 42 inches. The floating docks are not
attached to the pilings; instead, the docks “ride on a roller system up and down the
[pilings]” based on the water levels. Id. at 86.
Bujalski testified that the floating docks are not removed in winter. On
occasion, the finger piers have been “lifted out of the water” for repairs by using a
pontoon boat. Id. at 78. According to Bujalski, there is no reason to remove the
docks other than “obsolescence and normal repair and maintenance.” Id. at 106.
The docks have not reached critical obsolescence, although one of the main docks
may have to be “pull[ed]” out because of damage. Id. at 105. Bujalski further stated
that some of the floating docks will need to be reconfigured to accommodate larger
boats. The parties agreed that the floating docks can be removed without damage to
the realty or the docks.
By order of February 6, 2017, the trial court denied the motion of the
School District and the Board to have the floating docks declared taxable realty. The
trial court reasoned that the facts in the present case could not be distinguished from
4
those in Bay Harbor and, further, Section 8811(a) of the Consolidated County
Assessment Law (Assessment Law),3 53 Pa. C.S. §8811(a), does not identify
floating docks as taxable real estate.
Hearings on Assessment Appeals
The trial court then held two hearings on November 21, 2017, and
January 16, 2018, on Yacht Club’s assessment. Maas, the Board’s appraiser,
testified that the subject property is assessed at $635,200, which consists of $292,650
for the land (dry land and water lots) and $342,550 for buildings and improvements.
The assessment record for the property was introduced as evidence.
Maas testified that to assess the value of the land, he “looked at the
values across the waterfront” and determined the value “by neighborhooding them
to what we could find in the marketplace of property that sold over time.” N.T.,
11/21/2017, at 10. Maas did not consider the lease between the Port Authority and
Yacht Club; rather, he compared the subject property to waterfront properties “that
were actually sold.” Id.
Maas testified that he used an income approach to set a fixed value of
$8,283 per boat slip. He determined the income per boat slip by looking to the
revenue a boat slip generates in the Erie marina market. He used a similar method
to value the parking lot spaces. Maas used a cost approach to assess the value of the
buildings and improvements on the property less depreciation for age and condition.
Maas also considered the location of the subject property but not the profits
generated by the marina’s operations. Maas testified that he uses the same approach
to evaluate all marinas in Erie County.
3
The Assessment Law, enacted on October 27, 2010, and effective January 1, 2011, applies to the
counties of the second class A, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth classes. 53 Pa. C.S.
§8801(b)(1)(i). Erie County is a third class county.
5
Yacht Club presented the testimony of Robert Glowacki, a certified
appraiser. He assessed the property at $940,570 for the year 2013, which declined
to $576,789 for the year 2017. As did Maas, Glowacki used the cost approach to
determine the value of the buildings and improvements on the property. To value
the land, he used the income approach. In doing so, he first calculated the gross
rental amount Yacht Club paid to the Port Authority, which was $80 per boat slip
annually from 2011 through 2015, and $90 per boat slip for the years 2016 through
2020. He then reduced that amount by 2% to account for management and
administrative expenses. The net figure was then divided by a capitalization rate of
7%. Using these calculations, Glowacki arrived at a land value of $193,000 for tax
years 2013 through 2015 and $217,000 for tax years 2016 through 2017.
Glowacki testified that he did not consider the annual boat slip fees
collected by Yacht Club. Rather, he considered only the Port Authority’s income
from its lease with Yacht Club. Glowacki explained that he did not consider Yacht
Club’s income from the boat slips because floating docks are “trade fixtures.” N.T.,
11/21/2017, at 88.
Lloyd, the School District’s appraiser, assessed the property at
$1,700,000 for the tax year 2013, and $1,715,400 for 2017. He testified that he used
the cost approach to assess the buildings and improvements, and he used the income
capitalization approach to assess the land. Lloyd first set a leased fee value of the
property based on the annual rent paid to the Port Authority.4 Lloyd then valued the
4
A “leased fee” is “[a]n ownership interest held by a landlord with the right of use and occupancy
transferred by the lease to others.” Tech One Associates v. Board of Property Assessment, Appeals
and Review of Allegheny County, 53 A.3d 685, 688 n.8 (Pa. 2012) (Tech One) (quotations omitted).
6
property’s leasehold interest, which is “what can be leased on the property.” 5 Id. at
204. In doing so, Lloyd calculated all potential income that Yacht Club could derive
from a “for-profit marina,” including boat slip fees, guest dockage and boat storage.
Id. at 193, 205. He testified that his methodology establishes the market price that a
potential marina purchaser is willing to pay.
Bujalski responded that Yacht Club does not charge its members for
boat storage, which is included as “a benefit of membership.” Id. at 34. Bujalski
explained:
[Y]ou actually have to look at the whole picture, because
everybody bills their revenue picture differently. Meaning, we
charge work party, some don’t. Some emphasize higher dues.
Some for-profit marinas don’t have dues, because it’s not
membership, therefore they have a higher dockage rate. So we
have to look at the whole picture and culmination in terms of
what the total cost is. Some charge for a per square foot, versus
a foot long base. Some charge for air conditioning, electricity
use. So everyone’s a little different.
Id. (emphasis added). All parties agreed that the highest and best use of the subject
property is as a private marina.
Trial Court Opinion
In an opinion and order dated June 12, 2018, the trial court upheld the
Board’s assessment of $635,200. The trial court rejected the testimony of Glowacki
because he did not consider the income Yacht Club received from the boat slip fees,
which the trial court found integral to the valuation of a private marina. Although
the floating dock system is not itself taxable, it “play[ed] [a role] in determining the
5
A “leasehold interest” is “[t]he interest held by the lessee (the tenant or renter) through a lease
transferring the rights of use and occupancy for a stated term under certain conditions.” Tech
One, 53 A.3d at 689 n.13 (quotations omitted).
7
assessment value of the subject property under the income capitalization approach.”
Trial Court op. at 7. The trial court found that Glowacki engaged in an improper
value-in-use analysis “driven by the conscious efforts of a non-profit to keep the
costs to its membership as low as possible,” which resulted in an understated
valuation of the subject property. Id. at 29.
The trial court rejected Yacht Club’s argument that it was double
taxation to consider both its leasehold interest and the Port Authority’s rental
income. The trial court held that Tech One, 53 A.3d 685, established that a
taxpayer’s leasehold interest is integral to an assessment. The trial court also
rejected Yacht Club’s argument that a leasehold interest is not a specifically
enumerated object of taxation under Section 8811(a) of the Assessment Law.
The trial court rejected Lloyd’s valuation analysis as overstated. The
trial court found that Lloyd had also engaged in a value-in-use analysis “based solely
on the perspective of a for-profit marina motivated to charge for all possible forms
of revenue.” Trial Court op. at 29. By including the income that other marinas
generate for guest moorings and boat storage, Lloyd overlooked the fact that “these
fees may be built into the value of a boat slip in the open market.” Id. at 27. The
trial court credited Bujalski’s testimony that all marinas set their fees in different
ways. The trial court found that it is appropriate to use boat slips to establish the
value of a marina, as Maas did in his assessment. Id. at 9.
The trial court reasoned that the marketplace contains a “blend of non-
profit and for-profit marinas,” but neither Glowacki nor Lloyd “provided a credible
picture of the assessed value of a marina in this blended market.” Id. at 29. The trial
court concluded that neither Yacht Club nor the School District rebutted the Board’s
assessed value.
8
The School District and the Board appealed to this Court. Yacht Club
cross-appealed.
I. School District and the Board’s Appeal
On appeal,6 the School District and the Board raise two issues. First,
they argue that the trial court erred in rejecting the School District’s expert evidence.
Second, they challenge the trial court’s refusal to declare the floating docks as
fixtures. We address these issues seriatim.
A. Lloyd’s assessment and expert testimony
The School District and the Board first challenge the trial court’s
rejection of Lloyd’s assessment. That Yacht Club is a nonprofit entity is irrelevant
because the property had to be valued upon the “highest and most profitable use.”
School District Brief at 31, 35 (quoting Pennypack Woods Home Ownership
Association v. Board of Revision of Taxes, 639 A.2d 1302 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994)
(Pennypack)). Further, Lloyd correctly applied the income capitalization approach
by considering all potential income that Yacht Club could derive from the real estate,
such as fees for guest moorings and winter storage. At the same time, Lloyd
excluded the income derived from boat cleaning revenue, membership dues and
miscellaneous sales, which did not relate to the real estate. The School District
contends that the trial court “did not and could not point to any impermissible
revenue stream that was included in Mr. Lloyd’s income approach to value.” School
District Brief at 41. Yacht Club responds that the School District seeks, in essence,
6
This Court’s review determines whether the trial court abused its discretion, committed an error
of law, or rendered a decision unsupported by substantial evidence. Walnut-Twelve Associates v.
Board of Revision of Taxes, 570 A.2d 619, 622 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1990). The trial court, as fact-finder,
has discretion over evidentiary weight and credibility determinations. 1198 Butler Street
Associates v. Board of Assessment Appeals, County of Northampton, 946 A.2d 1131, 1138 n.7 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2008).
9
“to hypothecate and tax a business operation predicated on presumed rentals.” Yacht
Club Second Brief at 14.
In a tax assessment appeal, the trial court proceeds de novo. Murtagh
v. County of Berks, 715 A.2d 548, 552 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1998). Once the taxing
authority’s assessment is admitted into the record, it has made the prima facie case
on the assessment. The burden then shifts to the appellant to present sufficient,
competent, and credible evidence to overcome the taxing authority’s prima facie
case. Deitch Company v. Board of Property Assessment, 209 A.2d 397, 402 (Pa.
1965).
The Assessment Law requires that real property be assessed at its
“actual value.” 53 Pa. C.S. §8842. The actual value is a parcel’s fair market value,
which has been defined as “the price which a purchaser, willing but not obliged to
buy, would pay an owner, willing but not obliged to sell, taking into consideration
all uses to which the property is adapted and might in reason be applied.” Harley-
Davidson Motor Company v. Springettsbury Township, 124 A.3d 270, 279 (Pa.
2015). The Assessment Law authorizes three approaches to a valuation: (i) the cost
approach; (ii) the comparable sales approach; and (iii) the income approach, which
divides a subject property’s annual net rental income by an investment rate of return.
53 Pa. C.S. §8842(b); Harley-Davidson, 124 A.3d at 279. A trial court has discretion
to decide which method of valuation is most appropriate for a given property. Aetna
Life Insurance v. Montgomery County Board of Assessment Appeals, 111 A.3d 267,
278 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015).
When determining fair market value, the property tax assessment “must
include all relevant factors having a bearing on that value.” Harley-Davidson, 124
A.3d at 283. The assessment must include “the entire property and not merely its
10
constituent elements.” Tech One, 53 A.3d at 700. The property must be valued
based upon its current use even where an appraiser opines that the highest and best
use of the property is different. Harley-Davidson, 124 A.3d at 280-81 (the “ways in
which a property hypothetically could be used by potential buyers are properly
considered by an expert in evaluating what a willing buyer would pay for a property;
however, the subject property should not be valued as though it were already in that
hypothetical condition.”).
Here, the Board’s appraiser, Maas, testified that he assessed the
property at $635,200, which consisted of $292,650 for the land (dry land and water
lots) and $342,550 for the improvements. Because the property assessment record
was admitted into evidence, the burden then shifted to the School District to present
evidence sufficient to overcome the Board’s prima facie case. Deitch Company, 209
A.2d at 402.
The School District argues that Lloyd’s expert testimony constituted
“more than sufficient competent evidence” to overcome the presumed validity of the
taxing authority’s assessed value. School District Brief at 42. Lloyd’s evaluation is
based upon “market data” collected from his “extensive research on the
marketplace.” School District Brief at 32-33. However, the School District does
not challenge Maas’ opinion on market value. Maas testified that he established a
value of $8,283 per boat slip based upon the revenue a slip generates in the Erie
marina market. Maas also considered the location of the marina, “looked at the
values across the waterfront” and determined the value “by neighborhooding them
to what we could find in the marketplace of property that sold over time.” N.T.,
11/21/2017, at 10. The School District did not present any evidence to show how
Maas’ analysis was flawed.
11
The School District argues that the trial court improperly rejected
Lloyd’s consideration of all potential income that could derive from the real estate.
However, the trial court credited Bujalski’s testimony that marina fees vary because
some marinas, such as Yacht Club, build extraneous fees into the boat slip fees while
others may keep their slip fees as low as possible. The trial court, as the fact-finder,
has discretion in matters of credibility and evidentiary weight. 1198 Butler Street
Associates, 946 A.2d at 1138 n.7. Here, the trial court’s factual findings are
supported by substantial evidence and will not be disturbed.
The School District’s reliance on Pennypack, 639 A.2d 1302, is
misplaced. In that case, a nonprofit housing cooperative providing affordable
housing to veterans and defense workers appealed its real estate tax assessment. The
trial court set the assessment without considering the cooperative’s articles and by-
laws, which imposed restrictions on income and transferability of ownership of its
real estate. On further appeal, this Court affirmed and held that the cooperative’s
restrictions were “self-imposed,” which “should not act to keep the real estate taxes
arbitrarily low.” Id. at 1305.7
7
The Pennypack court further distinguished the case from In re Johnstown Associates, 431 A.2d
932 (Pa. 1981) (Johnstown), and Appeal of Marple Springfield Center, Inc., 607 A.2d 708 (Pa.
1992) (Marple). Johnstown involved a low-income apartment building subsidized through the
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). HUD set the rents below the prevailing
rate for comparable non-subsidized units and restricted the transferability of the units. The
Supreme Court in Johnstown held that the income and transferability restrictions must be
considered for purposes of real estate tax assessment. Marple involved a shopping center being
leased on a long-term basis for less than its current market value. The taxpayer’s predecessor in
title had entered into a lease with its anchor tenant under which the tenant had options to renew
the lease at a fixed low rent until the year 2044. The Supreme Court in Marple extended its holding
in Johnstown and held that tax assessors of any property should consider legally binding rent
restrictions, regardless of whether the restrictions are due to federal regulation, because a buyer
cannot “anticipate income at current market levels.” Marple, 607 A.2d at 709. The Pennypack
court found that the above-described restrictions came from “an outside force” and must be
considered when appraising a property; by contrast, the cooperative’s restrictions on income and
12
Pennypack stands for the principle that a property must be assessed at
its actual value. Here, contrary to the School District’s argument, Maas’ assessment
did not rely on Yacht Club’s income restrictions or its nonprofit status; rather, he
assessed the property’s market value by considering “the values across the
waterfront” and the income that boat slips generate in the Erie marina market. N.T.
11/21/2017, at 10. In upholding the Board’s assessment, the trial court rejected
Glowacki’s valuation as understated because it was “driven by the conscious efforts
of a non-profit to keep the costs to its membership as low as possible.” Trial Court
op. at 29. Pennypack is inapposite.
The trial court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence, and
thus, we affirm its conclusion that the School District failed to rebut the Board’s
prima facie case.
B. Floating docks
The School District and the Board argue, next, that the trial court erred
in concluding that the floating docks were not fixtures subject to real estate taxation.
They contend that the trial court’s conclusion is at odds with this Court’s decision in
In re Sheetz, Inc., 657 A.2d 1011 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1995). The Yacht Club counters that
Sheetz is distinguishable from the case at bar. In any event, the trial court correctly
held that Section 8811(a) of the Assessment Law does not identify the floating docks
as taxable real estate.
transferability were “self-imposed” in light of the cooperative’s power to amend its by-laws and
articles. Pennypack, 639 A.2d at 1305.
Although the present case also involves a long-term lease for below-market rent, Marple
is distinguishable in that it did not involve real estate that was owned by a lessee; rather, the
landowner (taxpayer) in that case owned both the parcel of land and the shopping center built
thereon. Our Supreme Court held that Marple does not preclude the valuation of real estate that
is owned as a leasehold interest. Tech One, 53 A.3d at 687.
13
Section 8811(a) of the Assessment Law provides as follows:
(a) Subjects of taxation enumerated.—Except as provided in
subsection (b), all subjects and property made taxable by the laws
of this Commonwealth for county, city, borough, town, township
and school district purposes shall, as provided in this chapter, be
valued and assessed at the annual rates, including all:
(1) Real estate, namely:
(i) houses;
(ii) house trailers and mobile homes permanently
attached to land or connected with water, gas,
electric or sewage facilities;
(iii) buildings permanently attached to land or
connected with water, gas, electric or sewage
facilities;
(iv) lands, lots of ground and ground rents, trailer
parks and parking lots;
(v) mills and manufactories of all kinds, furnaces,
forges, bloomeries, distilleries, sugar houses, malt
houses, breweries, tan yards, fisheries, ferries and
wharves;
(vi) all office buildings;
(vii) that portion of a steel, lead, aluminum or like
melting and continuous casting structure which
encloses or provides shelter or protection from the
elements for the various machinery, tools,
appliances, equipment, materials or products
involved in the mill, mine, manufactory or
industrial process; and
(viii) telecommunication towers that have become
affixed to land.
14
(2) All other things now taxable by the laws of this
Commonwealth for taxing districts.
53 Pa.C.S. §8811(a). As noted by the trial court, Section 8811(a) of the Assessment
Law does not identify floating docks as taxable real estate. Nevertheless, chattel that
is affixed to the land can become real estate for purposes of a tax assessment. Sheetz,
657 A.2d at 1013. The question of whether property is realty or personalty is one of
law “to be based on the facts as to the property owner’s manifest conduct.” Wilson
v. Ridgeway Area School District, 596 A.2d 1161, 1164 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1991).
Sheetz involved a question of whether canopies covering gasoline
pumps at a service station became part of the taxable real estate under the former
Fourth to Eighth Class County Assessment Law. 8 This Court looked to Clayton v.
Lienhard, 167 A. 321 (Pa. 1933), where the Supreme Court identified three classes
of chattel: (1) furniture and similar items, which are always personalty; (2) items
annexed to the building or land to the extent they could not be removed without
causing material injury to the realty or themselves, which are always realty; and (3)
items affixed to the realty that can be removed without damaging the item or the
realty, which items can be either realty or personalty, depending on the
circumstances. Sheetz, 657 A.2d at 1012-13.
Because the gas pump canopies fell into the third category, this Court
considered: (1) the manner by which the canopies were affixed to the land; (2)
whether the canopies were essential to the property’s use as a gas station; and (3)
whether the canopies were intended to be permanent. Id. at 1013. Among these
factors, the intention of the parties is of “paramount importance.” Id. at 1014. This
Court explained:
8
Act of May 21, 1942, P.L. 571, as amended, formerly 72 P.S. §§5453.101 - 5453.706, repealed
by the Act of October 27, 2010, P.L. 895.
15
The prior considerations—the manner in which the property is
affixed and the reason it is done in the particular situation—can
be looked at as merely objective manifestations that aid in
determining the intention of the parties. That is so because the
intention of the party is not so much what a particular party
intended his legal rights to be, as it is what intended use of the
property was manifested by the conduct of the party. The
permanence required is not equated with perpetuity. Just because
they have been and can be moved does not mean the intention
was not to make them permanent. It is sufficient if the item is
intended to remain where affixed until worn out, until the
purpose to which the realty is devoted is accomplished or until
the item is superseded by another item more suitable for the
purpose.
Id. (internal quotations and citations omitted).
We concluded in Sheetz that canopies were realty. Weighing between
20 and 35 tons each, the canopies were mounted on pillars attached to the ground by
bolts sunk in a poured concrete foundation, which, in turn, were also covered with
concrete. Although the canopies could be removed with little damage to the real
property, significant effort would have been required to disassemble them into
component parts while leaving the poured concrete foundation in place. The record
did not indicate that anyone intended to remove the canopies as long as the property
was being used as a gasoline station.
Here, it is undisputed that the water lots are “lands” subject to real estate
taxation under Section 8811(a) of the Assessment Law. 53 Pa.C.S. §8811(a)(1)(iv).
The question is whether the floating docks are so affixed to the water lots that they
have become part of the real estate for tax assessment purposes. The trial court
concluded that the evidence presented by the School District and Board did not
“distinguish this case from the precedent set in the Bay Harbor case[, 78 Erie C. L.J.
94].” Trial Court Order, 2/6/2017, at 1. In that case, Bay Harbor Marina installed
16
floating docks by fastening individual modules of sheet aluminum together. The
sheet aluminum modules floated on the water surface and were kept in place by bolts
attaching them to pilings driven into the harbor bottom. The floating docks could
be adjusted to form different configurations and were routinely removed during the
winter months, without damage to the adjacent land or to the docks themselves. Bay
Harbor Marina was allowed to remove the floating docks at the end of the lease term.
In Bay Harbor, the trial court held that the floating docks were personalty.
Likewise, here, Bujalski testified that the floating docks are fastened
together by a system of cotter pins, which can be removed without special
equipment. The docks are not attached to the pilings but “ride on a roller system up
and down the [pilings]” based on the water levels. N.T., 1/23/2017, at 86. Docks
can be removed without damage to the land and can be adjusted to form different
configurations. Bujalski testified that certain parts of the floating docks would be
reconfigured to accommodate larger boats. Further, the lease allows Yacht Club to
remove the floating docks at the end of the lease term. Finding Yacht Club’s floating
dock system similar to that in Bay Harbor, the trial court adopted the holding in Bay
Harbor that the floating docks were personalty.
The School District and the Board argue that the trial court erred in this
holding because it did not follow Sheetz, 657 A.2d 1011. Notably, the Bay Harbor
analysis used the three-part Sheetz test to conclude that the floating docks were
personalty. See Bay Harbor, 78 Erie C. L.J. at 98 (quoting Appeal of Penn-Lehigh
Corporation Upon Washington Township Route 29, Lehigh County, 159 A.2d 56
(Pa. Super. 1960) (discussing three classes of chattel in connection with real estate)),
and Noll by Noll v. Harrisburg Area YMCA, 643 A.2d 81 (Pa. 1994) (discussing the
three-part test in determining when a chattel becomes a fixture). In any case, Sheetz
17
is distinguishable. Unlike the canopies, which were mounted on pillars attached to
the ground by bolts sunk in a poured concrete foundation, the Yacht Club’s docks
are not attached to the pilings but float on the water. Although essential to the use
of the property as a marina, the floating docks are not intended to be “affixed until
worn out” or “until the purpose to which the realty is devoted is accomplished.” Id.
at 1014. Rather, they have been lifted out of the water for repair and can be
reconfigured or disassembled with no damage to the property.
We affirm the trial court’s holding that Yacht Club’s floating docks
constituted personalty, not realty.
II. Yacht Club’s Cross-Appeal
On cross-appeal, Yacht Club raises two issues for our consideration,
which we consolidate for our analysis. It argues that its leasehold interest is not
taxable real estate under the Assessment Law and that the trial court erred in relying
on Tech One, 53 A.3d 685, which distinguished “leased fee” and “leasehold” interest
“in the context of making clear that items meeting the statutory definition of ‘real
estate’ are taxable regardless of who owns or holds an interest in them.” Yacht Club
Brief at 19. Because Yacht Club has not entered into a lease with third parties, the
trial court erred by setting its leasehold value on the basis of “a presumed rental.”
Id. at 24 (quoting Downingtown Area School District v. Chester County Board of
Assessment Appeals, 131 A.3d 152 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (Downingtown)). Yacht
Club contends that its appraiser, Glowacki, has assessed the entire 16 acres of land,
consisting of both the dry land and the water lots. Considering the property’s
leasehold interest results in taxing the land twice.
The School District and the Board counter that Yacht Club’s leasehold
interest generates annual income “significantly more” than the rent it pays to the Port
18
Authority. School District Brief at 22. The slip fees are tantamount to a lease,
regardless of what Yacht Club calls them. Thus, the trial court correctly followed
Tech One by using the Port Authority’s leased fee interest and Yacht Club’s
leasehold interest to value the real estate.
Yacht Club contends that its leasehold interest, in the form of boat slips,
is not taxable real estate under the Assessment Law. Our Supreme Court’s decision
in Tech One is directly on point.
In Tech One, the taxpayer purchased undeveloped land and entered into
a 50-year lease agreement with a developer that constructed buildings, which were
then sublet to tenants. To determine the fair market value of the property, the
taxpayer proposed to capitalize the annual rental income it received from the
developer under the lease. Tech One, 53 A.3d at 688-89. The taxpayer argued that
the buildings and improvements were not taxable real estate because they were
owned by the developer, not the taxpayer. The Supreme Court rejected this
argument, holding, inter alia, that it is the “elemental physical characteristics of a
particular property, i.e., its structure and features, which are determinative of
whether it constitutes one of the specifically enumerated types of real estate in [the
General County Assessment Law].”9 Id. at 697. The mere fact that the buildings
and improvements to the land were owned by the developer did not alter the fact that
the buildings were a type of real estate enumerated in the General County
Assessment Law.
9
Act of May 22, 1933, P.L. 853, as amended, 72 P.S. §§5020-1 - 5020-602. The General County
Assessment Law was repealed insofar as it relates to second class A, third, fourth, fifth, sixth,
seventh and eighth class counties, by Section 6(1)(ii) of the Act of October 27, 2010, P.L. 895,
known as the Consolidated County Assessment Law, 53 Pa. C.S. §§8801-8868, effective January
1, 2011.
19
The Supreme Court upheld the methodology that aggregated the value
of the taxpayer’s leased fee interest and the value of the developer’s leasehold
interest. Tech One, 53 A.3d at 701. It rejected the taxpayer’s proposal to consider
only the value of taxpayer’s “income stream over the life of the lease and the value
of its reversionary interest at the end of the lease term.” Id. at 688-89. The Supreme
Court explained that “the market value of the entire tax parcel” consisted of the land
and the improvements and, thus, “the value of any portion which is owned as a
leasehold interest could [not] be disregarded.” Id. at 703.
Here, since 1976 the Port Authority has leased the property to Yacht
Club, which has constructed the marina and created boat slips for its members.
Yacht Club proposes to assess the property by capitalizing the annual net rental
income that the Port Authority receives under the lease, i.e., the contract rent the Port
Authority receives over the term of the lease and its reversionary interest. The
parties agreed that the highest and best use of the subject property is as a private
marina; thus, the Port Authority’s leased fee interest alone is not determinative of
the value of the marina. Indeed, in assessing fair market value, “all uses to which
the property is adapted and might in reason be applied” must be considered. Harley-
Davidson, 124 A.3d at 279. In sum, the trial court’s consideration of Yacht Club’s
leasehold interest to determine the value of the property is fully consistent with Tech
One.
Yacht Club next argues that unlike Tech One, in which the buildings
and improvements that the developer constructed during the lease term were real
estate subject to taxation, its leasehold interest consists of boat slips, which are not
identified as taxable under Section 8811 of the Assessment Law. This argument
ignores the fact that the water lots are “lands” subject to taxation under the
20
Assessment Law. 53 Pa. C.S. §8811(a)(1)(iv). To ascertain the fair market value of
the water lots, “all relevant factors having a bearing on that value” must be
considered. Harley-Davidson, 124 A.3d at 283. Section 8811 does not foreclose
consideration of the income that water lots can realize from boat slips. See In re
Consolidated Appeals of Chester-Upland School District, 200 A.3d 1052 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2018) (the fact that Section 8811(b)(4) of the Assessment Law excludes
advertising signs from taxation does not exclude consideration of any potential
income that a property owner may receive from the placement of the sign on the
property to determine the fair market value).
Alternatively, Yacht Club argues that because it has not entered into
any subleases, its leasehold value must be assessed at zero, as was done in
Downingtown, 131 A.3d 152. In that case, the owner of a 2.66-acre parcel
constructed a one-story building and a parking lot and entered into a long-term lease
of the premises to a pharmacy. The lease rental was 58.5% above market rate, and
the pharmacy was responsible for paying the real estate taxes for the property. The
pharmacy had no subtenants and no rental income. The pharmacy argued that
because the rent was above-market, it had a “negative leasehold,” which should be
assessed a negative value. Relying on Tech One, we held that both the property
owner’s leased fee interest and the pharmacy’s leasehold interest must be considered
in assessing the property. The pharmacy did not sublease the space, and the
economic reality was that “a willing buyer would pay $0 for the lease because no
one would be interested in paying above-market rent.” Downingtown, 131 A.3d at
157. However, the pharmacy’s payment of above-market rent did not have a
negative effect on the value of the property.
21
Downingtown is distinguishable. Although Yacht Club members do
not execute a “lease,” they pay an annual fee to use and occupy a specified area
within the water lots, in the form of boat slips. Further, there are key differences
between the economic realities of Downingtown and the present case. In
Downingtown, the pharmacy was paying above-market rent, and the trial court found
that “a willing buyer would pay $0 for the lease.” Id. Here, Yacht Club does not
dispute that it has been paying below-market rent to the Port Authority and has a
positive leasehold interest.
For these reasons, we conclude that the trial court properly considered
Yacht Club’s leasehold value to determine the fair market value of the property and,
further, did not overvalue the leasehold interest.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court did not err in holding that
Yacht Club and the School District failed to rebut the presumption that the Board’s
assessment of the property was valid. The trial court did not err or abuse its
discretion in using both the Port Authority’s leased fee interest and Yacht Club’s
leasehold interest to determine the fair market value of the property. Finally, the
trial court did not err in holding that the floating docks are personalty not subject to
real estate taxation under Section 8811 of the Assessment Law.
For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s June 12, 2018, order.
_____________________________________
MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
22
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port :
Authority and Commodore Perry :
Yacht Club :
:
v. : No. 960 C.D. 2018
:
Erie County Board of Assessment :
Appeals and The School District :
of the City of Erie :
:
Appeal of: The School District of the :
City of Erie :
Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port :
Authority and Commodore Perry :
Yacht Club :
:
v. : No. 961 C.D. 2018
:
Erie County Board of Assessment :
Appeals and The School District of the :
City of Erie :
:
Appeal of: Erie County Board of :
Assessment Appeals :
Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port :
Authority and Commodore Perry :
Yacht Club :
:
v. : No. 1027 C.D. 2018
:
Erie County Board of Assessment :
Appeals, School District of the City :
of Erie :
:
Appeal of: Commodore Perry Yacht :
Club :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 12th day of July, 2019, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Erie County, dated June 12, 2018, in the above-captioned matter
is AFFIRMED.
_____________________________________
MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge