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THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
___________________________
Strafford
No. 2018-0680
VENTAS REALTY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
v.
CITY OF DOVER
Argued: October 23, 2019
Opinion Issued: January 10, 2020
Hamblett & Kerrigan, P.A., of Nashua (Kevin P. Rauseo and Andrew J.
Piela on the brief, and Mr. Rauseo orally), for the plaintiff.
Mitchell Municipal Group, P.A., of Laconia (Walter L. Mitchell and Laura
Spector-Morgan on the brief, and Ms. Spector-Morgan orally), for the
defendant.
HICKS, J. The plaintiff, Ventas Realty Limited Partnership (Ventas),
appeals an order of the Superior Court (Howard, J.) denying its request for an
abatement of the real estate taxes it paid the defendant, the City of Dover
(City), for the 2014 tax year. We affirm.
The trial court found, or the record establishes, the following facts. The
subject real estate consists of a 5.15-acre site containing a skilled nursing
facility serving both short-term and long-term patients, two garages, and a
parking lot. At issue is the City’s April 1, 2014 assessment of the real estate at
a value of $4,308,500. Ventas alleges that it timely applied to the City for an
abatement of its 2014 taxes. The City presumably denied or failed to act upon
the request, and Ventas, thereafter, petitioned the superior court for an
abatement pursuant to RSA 76:17 (Supp. 2018), alleging that the City had
unlawfully taxed the property in excess of its fair market value.
The trial court held a two-day bench trial at which the parties’ experts
testified. Ventas’s expert was Raymond A. Dennehy, III, president of Health
Care Valuation Advisors, Inc. The City’s expert was Melanie Kosich, a former
nursing home administrator and director of Tellatin, an entity affiliated with
Integra Healthcare Services. The parties stipulated that in 2014, the City used
an equalization ratio of 95.1%.
Both experts opined that the property’s highest and best use is as a
skilled nursing facility. The experts also agreed that the most reliable method
for determining the property’s fair market value is the income capitalization
method, although the City’s expert also completed analyses under the sales
comparison and cost approaches. Both experts examined the same
comparable properties and they also used similar definitions of “fair market
value.” In his May 2016 report, Dennehy concluded that the property’s fair
market value as of April 1, 2014, at its highest and best use as a skilled
nursing facility, was $1,700,000. In her October 2017 report, Kosich opined
that the property’s fair market value as of April 1, 2014, at its highest and best
use as a skilled nursing facility, was $4,700,000.
The main difference between the approaches of the two experts is that
Kosich used both market projections and the property’s actual income and
expenses from 2012, 2013, and 2014 to forecast the property’s future net
income, while Dennehy did not. Dennehy used the property’s actual income
and expenses for the 11 months before the April 1, 2014 valuation date,
without any market-based adjustments.
Despite their different approaches, the experts gave similar estimates of
the property’s projected gross income for tax year 2014: Kosich’s estimate was
$10,063,865, and Dennehy’s estimate was $10,147,068. Both experts also
used similar capitalization rates: Kosich used a 13.5% capitalization rate, and
Dennehy used a 12.6% capitalization rate. At trial, Ventas stipulated to
Kosich’s capitalization rate.
The experts differed greatly in their estimates of the property’s projected
gross operating expenses for tax year 2014. Dennehy relied upon the
property’s actual operating expenses for the 11 months before the April 1, 2014
valuation date, opining that the expenses for those months, annualized to
represent a full year, “provide[d] the most reliable indication of the subject’s
stabilized operating expenses.” He calculated the property’s gross operating
expenses to be $9,936,601. Dennehy observed that the subject property’s
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operating expenses are higher per patient day than in comparable properties,
but opined that “this reflects the lower occupancy at the subject than the
comparables, which results in higher expenses per patient day.”
By contrast, after examining the expenses of comparable facilities and
applying an inflation factor based upon market trends, Kosich assigned values
to the different categories of operating expenses. For example, as to nursing
expenses, Kosich used the property’s actual nursing expenses in 2013 and
2014 for each category of nursing professional and compared those expenses
with the 2013 nursing expenses of five comparable properties. She took into
account the ratio of total revenue that nursing typically represents for a skilled
nursing facility (30% to 45%) and applied an inflation rate to nursing expenses
based upon market trends. Based upon those figures, she assigned a value to
the property’s forecasted nursing expenses that fell within its actual 2013 and
2014 expenses and the average expenses of the comparable properties. She
conducted a similar analysis for other categories of operating expenses.
Ultimately, Kosich estimated the property’s total forecasted operating expenses
to be $9,016,402.
The trial court concluded that “Dennehy’s approach . . . does not
accurately reflect the overall value of the property based on forecasted net
income the property would have generated on the open market in 2014,” and,
thus, decided that Ventas had not “sufficiently proved the property’s fair
market value under the income capitalization approach.” Accordingly, the trial
court ruled that Ventas failed to meet its burden of proof to obtain an
abatement for tax year 2014. This appeal followed.
To succeed on its tax abatement claim, Ventas had the burden of proving
by a preponderance of the evidence that it paid more than its proportional
share of taxes for tax year 2014. See Porter v. Town of Sanbornton, 150 N.H.
363, 367 (2003). “To carry the burden of proving disproportionality, the
taxpayer must establish that the taxpayer’s property is assessed at a higher
percentage of fair market value than the percentage at which property is
generally assessed in the town.” Id. at 368; see Appeal of Pub. Serv. Co. of
N.H., 170 N.H. 87, 94 (2017).
Generally speaking, fair market value refers to “the price which in all
probability would have been arrived at by fair negotiations between an owner
willing to sell and a purchaser desiring to buy, taking into account all
considerations that fairly might be brought forward and reasonably given
substantial weight in such bargaining.” Society Hill at Merrimack Condo.
Assoc. v. Town of Merrimack, 139 N.H. 253, 255 (1994) (quotation omitted); see
Appeal of Pennichuck Water Works, 160 N.H. 18, 37 (2010). The determination
of fair market value is a question of fact. Society Hill at Merrimack Condo.
Assoc., 139 N.H. at 255. As the trier of fact, the trial court was entitled to
accept or reject such portions of the evidence as it found proper, including that
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of expert witnesses. Public Serv. Co. of N.H. v. Town of Bow, 170 N.H. 539,
542 (2018).
We will uphold the trial court’s factual findings and rulings unless they
lack evidentiary support or are legally erroneous. Marist Bros. of N.H. v. Town
of Effingham, 171 N.H. 305, 309 (2018). We do not decide whether we would
have ruled differently than the trial court, but rather, whether a reasonable
person could have reached the same decision as the trial court based upon the
same evidence. Id. Thus, we defer to the trial court’s judgment on such issues
as resolving conflicts in the testimony, measuring the credibility of witnesses,
and determining the weight to be given evidence. Id.
In this case, both experts used the income capitalization method to
determine the fair market value of the subject property. The income
capitalization method “is an established and well-accepted method for
determining the value of income-producing property,” such as the skilled
nursing facility at issue. Brickman v. City of Manchester, 119 N.H. 919, 921
(1979) (quotation omitted). “The income capitalization approach” to calculating
the fair market value of real estate “measures the present value of property on
the basis of the future net income the property could produce for the owner.”
Rollsworth Tri-City Trust v. City of Somersworth, 126 N.H. 333, 335 (1985).
“The net income is the [income] the property would generate on an open
market, less the normal and usual costs of operation.” Id. “This figure is then
capitalized to determine present worth.” Id.
On appeal, Ventas argues that the trial court erred by crediting Kosich’s
appraisal over Dennehy’s appraisal. According to Ventas, doing so was error
because: (1) Kosich’s appraisal “inappropriately reduced the nursing and
medical costs incurred by the facility” (bolding omitted); (2) the comparable
properties that Kosich used did not “offer[ ] the same mix of services that
[Ventas] offered”; (3) Kosich “had no medical or nursing training” and,
therefore, “had no idea what a safe staffing level was for this facility, given its
patient needs, and whether the suggested cuts to the facility expenses would
cause the remaining nurses” to risk losing their licenses or would risk patient
health and safety; (4) Kosich’s appraisal violates public policy because it
arbitrarily reduces the facility’s nursing expenses; and (5) Kosich used post-
assessment data. As to nursing expenses, in particular, Ventas argues that
“absent evidence from the City that demonstrated the facility’s expenses were
excessive for this particular property, it was error for the Trial Court to adopt
the City’s opinion as to appropriate nursing expenses, which was based on a
‘market rate,’ and thus, the City’s capitalization of income calculation.”
All of Ventas’s arguments fault the trial court for finding Kosich’s
valuations more credible than Dennehy’s. See Public Serv. Co. of N.H., 170
N.H. at 542. “Credibility, of course, is for the trial judge to determine as a
matter of fact and if the findings could reasonably be made on all the evidence,
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they must stand.” Id. (quotation omitted). Ventas’s assertions “concern the
proper weight to be accorded” Kosich’s testimony and report. LLK Trust v.
Town of Wolfeboro, 159 N.H. 734, 739 (2010). “However, we defer to the trial
court’s judgment on such issues as resolving conflicts in the testimony,
measuring the credibility of witnesses, and determining the weight to be given
evidence.” Id.
Moreover, even if we were to agree with Ventas that Kosich’s methodology
was flawed, Ventas does not prevail in this appeal. Ventas had the burden of
proof, not the City. See Porter, 150 N.H. at 367. To the extent that Ventas
argues that it met its burden of proving disproportionality solely by showing
that Kosich’s methodology was flawed, we disagree. See LLK Trust, 159 N.H. at
739. “Disproportionality, and not methodology, is the linchpin in establishing
entitlement to a petition for abatement.” Id. (quotation and brackets omitted).
“While it is possible that a flawed methodology may lead to a disproportionate
tax burden, the flawed methodology does not, in and of itself, prove the
disproportionate result.” Id. (quotation and brackets omitted).
Contrary to Ventas’s contention, the trial court did not “adopt” Kosich’s
appraisal; rather, it determined that Dennehy’s appraisal failed to meet
Ventas’s burden of proof. Specifically, the court found that Dennehy’s
appraisal “did not result in [a] credible opinion[ ] of market value and made
specific findings to support its rejection of [that] appraisal[ ].” Appeal of Pub.
Serv. Co. of N.H., 170 N.H. at 97.
The trial court faulted Dennehy for failing to explain how the property’s
actual income and expenses compared to market rates, ruling that without
such information, his report did “not provide sufficiently reliable evidence of
the property’s future net income.” The court observed that Dennehy failed to
analyze “how the property would perform on the open market” during the 2014
tax year. The court noted that “while Dennehy [did] not completely ignore the
income and expenses of comparable properties, he [did] not utilize the
comparable properties as evidence of market projections, as required under the
income capitalization approach.” Instead, “he merely explain[ed] why the
actual income and expenses of the comparable properties are different from the
actual income and expenses of the subject property.” The trial court concluded
that “[w]hile these explanations may provide justification for adjusting . . .
market-based income and expenses to reflect the specific features of the
subject property that would contribute to its inability to obtain market level
income, Dennehy [did] not establish or consider those necessary market
figures.” See Appeal of Net Realty Holding Trust, 128 N.H. 795, 800 (1986)
(upholding rejection of the taxpayer’s appraisal, in part, because the taxpayer
failed to demonstrate “that the income figures represented the rental income
available on the market as distinguished from contract rent, that is, actual
income derived from insufficiently profitable leases” where the expert failed to
present evidence of comparable rentals to substantiate his claim that the
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taxpayer’s rental income represented market levels and there was other
evidence that at least some of the rates had fallen below market-level);
Brickman, 119 N.H. at 921 (holding that because evidence supported implied
finding that rental unit vacancies would increase in the future, master did not
err by allowing certain deductions for such vacancies when calculating
shopping center’s projected gross and net income).
The trial court determined that, with respect to expenses in particular,
Dennehy’s report failed to demonstrate that the property’s actual expenses
“constitute the expenses the facility would incur on the open market.” The
court observed that “even though the facility may experience higher costs as a
result of higher levels of admissions and discharges, higher uses of intravenous
drugs, and higher levels of laboratory work, Dennehy does not explain how
these characteristics would impact the facility’s expenses on the open market
in 2014 when compared with other facilities.” The court concluded that
“[w]ithout forecasting the cost and demand for these services on the open
market in 2014, [Ventas] provides no way to determine whether the facility
would incur the same expenses in 2014 as it did in the prior year.”
The record supports these findings. Dennehy observed in his report that
“the subject property has a lower occupancy rate than the comparables,” and
that, as a result, it “has higher operating expenses per patient day than the
comparables.” Dennehy testified that he did not adjust the property’s actual
operating expenses because, in his opinion, “given the occupancy, given the
competitive position of this property, and understanding the physical and
functional limitations of the property, . . . competent management had
adjusted expenses appropriately to take care of patients, take care of the
building the best they could, and provide appropriate care.” Dennehy further
testified that the subject facility was operated “competently” based upon his
interview of the facility’s administrator.
Ventas argues that Dennehy’s use of “actual expenses versus market
data in his calculations” was proper because “the subject property differs from
other properties in the market.” To support this assertion, Ventas relies upon
Royal Gardens Co. v. Concord, 114 N.H. 668 (1974), City of St. Louis v. Union
Quarry & Construction Co., 394 S.W.2d 300 (Mo. 1965), and In re Appeal of
V.V.P. Partnership, 647 A.2d 990 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1994). None of these cases
stand for the proposition that use of actual expenses instead of market
expenses is proper when the subject property differs from other properties in
the market.
In addition, Ventas asserts that the property’s “actual expenses are
consistent with what is prevalent in the market.” This assertion is inconsistent
with Dennehy’s report in which he stated that “the subject property has higher
operating expenses per patient day than the comparables.”
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The trial court also found that Dennehy’s approach to calculating fair
market value was flawed because he relied upon the property’s actual income
and expenses for only the 11 months preceding April 1, 2014. The court
observed that, although Dennehy described the property’s operating expenses
for those months as “consistent” with the property’s operating expenses for the
last eight months of 2013, in fact, the two time periods overlapped. Thus, the
court determined,
the similarities between these two figures are not a result of nearly
identical expenses in two consecutive years, which might provide
some support that the income and expenses of the following year
will closely track the income and expenses of prior consecutive
years. Rather, these figures are likely similar because they are
derived from eight months of the same year (May 2013 through
December 2013).
(Emphasis added.) The court concluded that “even if Dennehy could accurately
project market expenses for the 2014 tax year based only on actual income
over a period of prior years[,] . . . his analysis compares two figures from
roughly the same period of time rather than figures from separate consecutive
years,” which is “insufficient to accurately forecast . . . the net income the
property would earn in 2014.” Additionally, the court found that “while
Dennehy refers to data from the preceding 11 months as the ‘Stabilized
Estimate,’ he provides only conclusory assertions to explain how he came to his
conclusion.” Dennehy’s report supports these findings.
In sum, the trial court “made numerous, specific findings which are
supported by the record,” as to why it rejected Dennehy’s appraisal. Appeal of
Pub. Serv. Co. of N.H., 170 N.H. at 99. Because the trial court’s findings
regarding Dennehy’s appraisal are supported by the record and are not
erroneous as a matter of law, we uphold them. Id. Accordingly, we uphold the
trial court’s determination that Dennehy’s appraisal failed to meet Ventas’s
burden of proof.
Ventas next argues that the trial court erred by considering the 2015
transfer of ownership of the property from Ventas to a related entity to be
relevant. Ventas asserts that the 2015 transfer was not arms-length, does not
reflect the property’s 2014 value, and should not have been considered.
However, the trial court did not rely upon the transfer as evidence of the
property’s 2014 value. Rather, the court relied upon Ventas’s use of the City’s
assessment for transfer tax purposes to assess Ventas’s credibility.
At the time of the 2015 transfer, Ventas represented to the City assessor
that the property’s value was $4,308,500, the same value at which the City had
assessed the property. Ventas used this value for transfer tax purposes when
the property was conveyed. The court stated that this fact “cast[ ] further
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doubt on [Ventas’s] position that it is paying a disproportionate amount of
taxes.” While acknowledging that the property was not actually transferred for
$4,308,500 because “the property transfer occurred as a result of a corporate
split,” the court determined that the fact that Ventas used the City’s
assessment for transfer tax purposes made its assertions regarding the
inaccuracy of that assessment not credible. We find no error in the trial court’s
reliance upon Ventas’s use of the City’s assessment to judge Ventas’s
credibility.
To the extent that Ventas makes other arguments in its brief, they either
are insufficiently developed for our review, see Sabinson v. Trustees of
Dartmouth College, 160 N.H. 452, 459 (2010), or do not warrant extended
consideration, see Vogel v. Vogel, 137 N.H. 321, 322 (1993). Any issue that
Ventas raised in its notice of appeal, but did not brief, is deemed waived. See
In re Estate of King, 149 N.H. 226, 230 (2003).
Affirmed.
BASSETT, HANTZ MARCONI, and DONOVAN, JJ., concurred.
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