ATTORNEYS FOR PETITIONER: ATTORNEY FOR RESPONDENT:
JOHN P. LOWREY PAUL M. JONES
M. BRIAN COPPINGER JONES PYATT LAW, LLC
OFFICE OF CORPORATION COUNSEL Greenwood, IN
Indianapolis, IN
IN THE
INDIANA TAX COURT
MARION COUNTY ASSESSOR, )
) FILED
Petitioner, ) Feb 14 2024, 10:35 am
)
CLERK
v. ) Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
) and Tax Court
SQUARE 74 ASSOCIATES, LLC, ) Case No. 22T-TA-00009
)
Respondent. )
ON APPEAL FROM A FINAL DETERMINATION OF
THE INDIANA BOARD OF TAX REVIEW
FOR PUBLICATION
February 14, 2024
MCADAM, J.
The Marion County Assessor has challenged the final determination of the
Indiana Board of Tax Review (“Indiana Board”) valuing Square 74 Associates, LLC’s
leasehold estate in the World of Wonders Garage at Circle Center Mall in downtown
Indianapolis for the 2010 through 2018 assessment years. The Assessor presents two
issues for the Court’s resolution. The first is whether the Indiana Board abused its
discretion when it combined two valuation estimates, one for the land and one for the
improvements, that were prepared by Square 74 using different valuation methods to
establish the market value-in-use of Square 74’s leasehold estate for 2010. The second
is whether the Indiana Board acted contrary to law when it then applied Indiana Code §
6-1.1-15-17.2 (the “burden-shifting statute”) using the value it determined for 2010 as
the prior year assessment for 2011 through 2018. Having considered both of the
Assessor’s challenges, the Court affirms the Indiana Board’s final determination.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
During the years at issue, the Indianapolis Department of Metropolitan
Development and Indianapolis Downtown, Inc. (collectively, “the City”) owned a multi-
level parking garage, commonly known as the World of Wonders Garage, located at the
Circle Center Mall in downtown Indianapolis. Square 74 leased space from the City on
the ground floor of the garage and, in turn, sub-leased it to several entities for use as
five separate restaurants. Each of the five restaurant spaces was treated as a discrete
parcel and assessed to Square 74 for property tax purposes. The assessments valued
both the improvements and the underlying land.
Square 74 appealed the assessments for all five parcels for tax years 2010
through 2018 first to the Marion County Property Tax Assessment Board of Appeals and
then to the Indiana Board. The combined assessed value for the five parcels for the
nine tax years ranged from $4,734,400 to $5,281,900.
The Indiana Board held a consolidated hearing on all of Square 74’s appeals at
the joint request of the parties. At that hearing, Square 74 presented an appraisal report
that valued its leasehold interest for each of the nine years at issue as well as the
testimony of the appraiser who prepared the report. The appraiser prepared separate
cost and income approach estimates to value the subject property, reconciling the
results into a final combined valuation estimate for each year that ranged from
2
$3,350,000 in 2010 to $3,650,000 in 2018. 1 In arriving at the final values, the appraiser
maintained that the land had no value to Square 74 because it reverted to the City at
the end of the lease. Nonetheless, the appraiser prepared a separate valuation of the
land using the sales comparison approach to use in calculating his income approach
estimate. 2 The appraiser used the sales of four comparable properties to estimate the
market value of the land during the nine tax years, resulting in a value range of
$720,195 to $1,063,824.
The Assessor responded with several criticisms of Square 74’s appraisal report
and offered testimony from a valuation analyst in his office who further critiqued the
appraisal. The Assessor did not offer its own appraisal or any other evidence indicating
the property’s value to the Indiana Board.
In its final determination, the Indiana Board evaluated each of the Assessor’s
criticisms of Square 74’s appraisal and largely rejected them as unfounded. The Indiana
Board then turned to Square 74’s appraisal. Although it did not find Square 74’s
1
The cost approach “estimates the value of land as if vacant and then adds the depreciated
cost new of the improvements to arrive at a total estimate of value.” 2002 REAL PROPERTY
ASSESSMENT MANUAL (“2002 Manual”) (2004 Reprint) (incorporated by reference at 50 IND.
ADMIN. CODE 2.3-1-2 (2002 Supp.) (repealed 2010)) at 3; 2011 REAL PROPERTY ASSESSMENT
MANUAL (“2011 Manual”) (incorporated by reference at 50 IND. ADMIN. CODE 2.4-1-2 (2011)
(amended 2020)) at 2. The income approach is used for income producing properties that are
typically rented, converting an estimate of income or rent the property is expected to produce
into a property value through a mathematical process known as capitalization. 2002 Manual at
3; 2011 Manual at 2.
2
The sales comparison approach “estimates the total value of the property directly by
comparing it to similar, or comparable, properties that have sold in the market.” 2002 Manual at
3; 2011 Manual at 2. Here, the appraiser converted the land value he determined using the
sales comparison approach into the market rates for the ground lease by applying a
capitalization rate. The resulting market ground lease rental rates ranged from $32,580 to
$48,125. He then deducted those ground lease rates from his income valuation estimate as an
operating expense.
3
assertion that the land held no value to be probative, it found Square 74’s valuation of
the improvements under the cost approach and its valuation of the land under the sales
comparison approach to be probative. As such, the Indiana Board found that the
appraiser’s land value estimate of $720,195 and his cost estimate of the improvements
of $3,228,702, when combined, properly established the subject property’s market
value-in-use for the first year at issue, 2010, at $3,949,000. 3
The Indiana Board then determined that the assessments for all of the remaining
years under appeal (i.e., 2011 through 2018) should be reverted to the 2010 value it
had determined. The Indiana Board’s decision was predicated on its application of the
burden-shifting statute, Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-17.2. It determined that neither party
could meet their burden under the statute and that the statute required reversion to the
prior year assessment. 4 The Indiana Board determined that the Assessor could not
meet his burden because he did not offer any valuation evidence to support his
assessments. And, it determined that Square 74 could not meet its burden because it
attributed no value to the land in claiming the property’s ultimate valuation was
3
It is important to note that the Indiana Board used the appraiser’s land valuation estimate to
determine the property’s market value-in-use and not the capitalized value of the land used to
estimate the market ground lease rental rates. These values differ significantly and may not be
interchangeable.
4
The burden-shifting statute has undergone several iterations since its 2009 enactment. See,
e.g., IND. CODE § 6-1.1-15-1(p) (eff. July 1, 2009) (amended 2011); IND. CODE § 6-1.1-15-17
(2011) (repealed 2012); IND. CODE § 6-1.1-15-17.2 (2014) (repealed 2022). In this case, the
Indiana Board’s final determination indicates it applied the 2021 version of this statute. That
version of the statute requires an assessor to prove that an appealed assessment is “correct”
when an assessment increases by more than 5% over the previous year assessment. See IND.
CODE § 6-1.1-15-17.2(a) (2021) (repealed 2022) If the assessor is unable to meet that burden,
the taxpayer is afforded an opportunity to prove the correct assessment. See I.C. § 6-1.1-15-
17.2(b). Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-17.2 provides that if neither the assessor nor the taxpayer
meets their burden, the challenged assessment reverts to the prior year assessment. I.C. § 6-
1.1-15-17.2(b).
4
$3,450,000 for 2011.
The Assessor then initiated this original tax appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court’s review of Indiana Board decisions is governed by Indiana Code §
33-26-6-6, the provisions of which closely mirror those controlling the judicial review of
administrative decisions governed by Indiana’s Administrative Orders and Procedures
Act (“AOPA”). Compare IND. CODE § 33-26-6-6(e) (2024) with IND. CODE § 4-21.5-5-
14(d) (2024). Under Indiana Code § 33-26-6-6, the party seeking to overturn a final
determination of the Indiana Board bears the burden of demonstrating its invalidity. I.C.§
33-26-6-6(b). The challenger must demonstrate that the Indiana Board’s final
determination is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in
accordance with law; contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege or immunity; in
excess of or short of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations; without observance of
the procedure required by law; or unsupported by substantial or reliable evidence. I.C. §
33-26-6-6(e)(1)-(5).
The Legislature has specifically designated the Indiana Board as the trier of fact,
charged with determining the relevance and weight to be assigned to the evidence
before it. See IND. CODE § 6-1.1-15-4(p) (2024). Like the review of administrative
decisions subject to AOPA, this Court reviews legal conclusions de novo but affords
deference to the factual determinations of the Indiana Board if they are supported by
substantial and reliable evidence. See I.C. § 33-26-6-6(e)(5); Indiana Alcohol & Tobacco
Comm’n v. Spirited Sales, LLC, 79 N.E.3d 371, 375 (Ind. 2017) (articulating the
standard of review of administrative actions under AOPA); Kellam v. Fountain Cnty.
5
Assessor, 999 N.E.2d 120, 122 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2013) (articulating the standard of review
for Indiana Board decisions). The Court may not substitute its judgment for that of the
Indiana Board by reweighing the evidence or reevaluating the credibility of witnesses.
See IND. CODE § 33-26-6-3(b) (2024); Kellam, 999 N.E.2d at 122.
DISCUSSION
Combination of the Taxpayer’s Land and Improvements Valuations
The Assessor first argues that it was an abuse of discretion for the Indiana Board
to use elements from two different aspects of Square 74’s appraisal to determine the
value of the subject property. The Assessor’s argument is premised on his position that,
while Square 74 may have valued the land in the course of completing its income
approach, the Indiana Board could not combine that land value with the improvements
value determined under the cost approach. The Court does not find the Assessor’s
argument persuasive.
The Assessor concedes that the Indiana Board is empowered to use evidence in
the record to establish the market value-in-use of a property and is not bound to the
ultimate valuations proffered by the parties when the taxpayer has the burden in the first
instance. 5 (Pet’r Br. at 6 (citing CVS Corp. v. Monroe Cnty. Assessor, 83 N.E.3d 1286,
1291 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2017)).) He contends instead that the Indiana Board is precluded
from combining the land value developed for use in Square 74’s income approach
5
Before its repeal in 2022, Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-17.2 provided an exception to this rule.
There, the language of the statute specifically circumscribed the Indiana Board’s discretion as
the trier of fact. It limited the Indiana Board to accepting or rejecting as persuasive the
assessment values put forward by the parties because of the statutory requirement for each
party “to prove that their proffered assessment is correct.” See Southlake Indiana, LLC v. Lake
Cnty. Assessor, 174 N.E.3d 177, 180 (Ind. 2021). That limitation does not control here as the
parties and the Indiana Board agreed that the burden-shifting statute did not apply to the 2010
assessment.
6
estimate with the improvements value estimate developed using the cost approach. The
Assessor’s critique is misplaced.
As explained in Indiana’s assessment manual, as well as numerous other states’
tax court decisions, under the cost approach methodology, land is valued separately
from the improvements. See, e.g., 2021 REAL PROPERTY ASSESSMENT MANUAL
(incorporated by reference at 50 IND. ADMIN. CODE 2.4-1-2 (2020)) at 2 (explaining that
“the cost approach, estimates the value of the land as if vacant and then adds the
depreciated cost new of the improvements to arrive at a total estimate of value”); accord
Medtronic Inc. v. Cnty. of Anoka, No. 02-CV-20-1935, 2023 WL 3471714, *12-13 (Minn.
Tax May 15, 2023); Stafford Hills Props. LLC v. Clackamas Cnty. Assessor, No. TC-
MD-140184N, 2015 WL 2398228, *11 (Or. T.C. May 18, 2015); Int’l Flavors &
Fragrances Inc. v. Union Beach Borough, 21 N.J. Tax 403, 417 (2004). Land is valued
using the sales comparison approach or one of several other valuation methods
depending on the available data. See Green Eagle Prop. Res., LP v. Mansfield Twp.,
Nos. 009897-2014, 003285-2015, 002372-2016, 001715-2017, 004237-2018, 2021 WL
4167094, at *22 (N.J. Tax Ct. Sept. 13, 2021) (citing APPRAISAL INSTITUTE, THE APPRAISAL
OF REAL ESTATE 36, 364-65 (14th ed. 2013). Improvements are valued by estimating the
depreciated “reproduction or replacement cost of the buildings and other
improvements.” See id. at *18 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Those two
values are then added together to establish a value for the whole property. Id.
In this case, Square 74 presented an appraisal estimating the value of the
subject property. That appraisal contained a land value estimate developed using the
sales comparison approach and an improvements value estimate developed using the
7
cost approach. Square 74 believed the land value should not be included. The Indiana
Board disagreed. By adding the two valuations (i.e., land and improvements) together,
the Indiana Board simply exercised its discretion as the finder of fact to weigh the
evidence before it and determine the market value-in-use of the subject property. It
found the separate valuations of the land and the improvements persuasive, and the
Assessor did nothing to demonstrate that that evidence was unreliable or otherwise
unpersuasive. The addition of a land value estimated using the sales comparison
approach to an improvements value estimated using the cost approach is consistent
with accepted practice. The Assessor’s objection to that combination conflates the land
value prepared for use in Square 74’s income approach with the income approach
estimate itself. (See Pet’r Br. at 7; Pet’r Reply Br. at 3.) The record is clear that the land
value estimate used by the Indiana Board was prepared separately using the sales
comparison approach, not the income approach.
Moreover, the Indiana Board’s determination is consistent with its statutory
charge to support its findings of ultimate fact (i.e., the market value-in-use of the subject
property) with its findings of basic facts (i.e., Square 74’s land value estimate and
improvements value estimate). See, e.g., IND. CODE § 6-1.1-15-4(j) (2024). Much like
LEGO bricks, basic facts form the buildings blocks that the trier of fact assembles to
create its ultimate findings. See Allen v. Scherer, 452 N.E.2d 1031, 1034 (Ind. Ct. App.
1983) (“Basic findings are facts which the [administrative] agency determines, after
considering all the evidence, to be true and relevant to the factual determinations which
must be made in order to decide the case. Ultimate findings are conclusions which flow
rationally from the basic findings.”) (citation omitted); accord Pack v. Indiana Fam. &
8
Soc. Servs. Admin., 935 N.E.2d 1218, 1221-24 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010). That is precisely
what the Indiana Board did here. It took the basic facts of the land value and the
improvements value and assembled them into its ultimate finding of the market value-in-
use of Square 74’s property.
The Assessor’s burden for overturning the Indiana Board’s decision on appeal is
well established. He must show that the decision “is clearly against the logic and effect
of the facts and circumstances before [the Indiana Board.]” Kooshtard Prop. I, LLC v.
Monroe Cnty. Assessor, 38 N.E.3d 750, 753 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2015) (citation omitted). The
Indiana Board’s decision must be “patently unreasonable . . . without consideration of
the facts and in total disregard of the circumstances.” Spirited Sales, 79 N.E.3d at 380
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Here, the Indiana Board’s decision was
reasonable, consistent with accepted practice, and within its discretion as the trier of
fact. Consequently, the Indiana Board did not abuse its discretion. 6
Application of the Burden-Shifting Statute to the Taxpayer’s Consolidated Appeal
In an alternative argument, the Assessor contends that the Indiana Board erred
when it ordered Square 74’s 2011 through 2018 assessments to revert to the
$3,949,000 value that was determined for 2010. He argues that, in ordering the
6
The Assessor also appears to make a related argument that Square 74 failed to sustain its
burden to rebut the presumption that the assessment is correct because Square 74 did not
make a prima facie case. (See Pet’r Reply Br. at 4-5.) He appears to argue that the Indiana
Board was limited to upholding his original assessment for that reason because Square 74’s
proffered valuation lacked a land value and Square 74 never requested that the land value be
included in its valuation. (See Pet’r Br. at 6; Pet’r Reply Br. at 4-5.) But the Assessor has
conceded that the Indiana Board is allowed to weigh all of the evidence before it and adjust the
valuations offered by the parties in order to determine a property’s market value-in-use. See
supra p. 6. Therefore, to the extent that the Assessor argues that the Indiana Board was limited
to choosing the property value proffered by Square 74 and could not weigh the evidence
presented to determine the value itself, he has already conceded that the Indiana Board is not
so limited.
9
reversion, the Indiana Board misapplied the provisions of Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-17.2
and, as a result, unfairly shifted the burden of proof to him post-hearing and mid-
decision without any notice.
Resolution of this issue turns on the question of what qualifies as a prior tax year
assessment under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-17.2, as that is the starting point for
determining the applicability of the burden-shifting statute in the first instance and for
applying the statute’s reversionary clause in the second. Typically, the prior tax year
assessment will be the original assessment as issued by the county assessor. However,
Section 17.2 acknowledges the possibility that the original assessment might have
changed after the county assessor issued it and allows for three alternative values:
In calculating the change in the assessment for purposes of this
section, the assessment to be used for the prior tax year is the
original assessment for that prior tax year or, if applicable, the
assessment for that prior tax year:
(1) as last corrected by an assessing official;
(2) as stipulated or settled by the taxpayer and the assessing
official; or
(3) as determined by the reviewing authority.
IND. CODE § 6-1.1-15-17.2(a) (2021) (repealed 2022). 7 Which of these alternatives
applies depends on the facts and circumstances of the particular case.
Here, the parties disagree about the scope of the third alternative—a prior year
7
The Court notes that the definition of “assessment for [the] prior tax year” is included in two
places in the statute – subsection (a) dictates whether the burden-shifting statute applies in the
first instance and subsection (b) triggers the application of the reversionary clause. See I.C. § 6-
1.1-15-17.2(a)-(b). While the language defining prior year assessment varies slightly between
the two subsections, the differences are not material to the question in this case. For simplicity,
the Court’s analysis focuses on the definition related to application of the burden-shifting statute
in the first instance, but it applies equally to both subsections.
10
tax assessment “as determined by the reviewing authority.” Both parties agree that the
Indiana Board is a “reviewing authority” and that the resolution of the appeal in this case
“determined” an assessment. But they disagree about when the reviewing authority’s
determination must be made. The Assessor contends that Section 17.2 only permits the
use of a prior year assessment if it was determined before the taxpayer’s appeal is
initiated. He takes exception to the Indiana Board’s use of the new 2010 assessment
announced for the first time in its final determination as a prior year tax assessment
“determined by the reviewing authority.” The Court disagrees.
The Court’s analysis begins and ends with the language of Indiana Code § 6-1.1-
15-17.2 itself. Statutory words and phrases are to be given their “clear and
unambiguous meaning” and understood “in their plain, ordinary, and usual sense.”
Southlake Indiana, LLC v. Lake Cnty. Assessor, 174 N.E.3d 177, 179 (Ind. 2021)
(citation omitted). The language of Section 17.2 is straightforward. There is nothing that
limits the time period for considering assessments “determined by the reviewing
authority.” The statute makes no distinction between assessments “determined” before
or after the initiation of the taxpayer’s appeal. This silence is dispositive. By the plain
language of the statute, the Indiana Board is a “reviewing authority” that has
“determined” the assessment for a prior tax year. That that determination was made
during the course of an administrative appeal is not part of the statutory inquiry. The
$3,949,000 value therefore became Square 74’s 2010 assessment “as determined by
the reviewing authority” and the starting point from which Square 74’s 2011 appeal was
to proceed. To impose a limitation like the one urged by the Assessor would require
adding words to the statute that are not there. Courts may not do this. See Kitchell v.
11
Franklin, 997 N.E.2d 1020, 1026 (Ind. 2013) (“Court’s may not ‘engraft new words’ onto
a statute or add restrictions where none exist”) (citation omitted).
While the impact is great in this case because it affects eight tax years, the
rationale for applying the statute’s plain language is nonetheless sound. It facilitates the
resolution of claims involving multiple tax years and common issues in a single appeal
rather than through a series of separate proceedings. And it is consistent with broader
goals of judicial economy and efficiency.
The Assessor objects that he did not have notice that the burden-shifting statute
would apply in this case and was therefore unfairly surprised when the burden of proof
shifted to him in the middle of the appeal. 8 Yet, the Indiana Board specifically raised the
question of the burden of proof at the outset of the hearing and asked the parties if they
agreed which party had the burden “at least with regard to the first year[.]” (Cert. Admin.
R. at 2611.) Both parties affirmed that the taxpayer had the burden, and the record
reveals no attempt by the Assessor to seek clarification as to any later year. 9 Ultimately,
8
The Assessor has made it clear that he is not raising a due process claim. (See Oral Arg. Tr.
at 46-47.) The Court thus leaves aside the question of whether the application of the burden-
shifting statute could conflict with due process or other constitutional limitations as that question
was not raised here.
9
This is not the first time that the Indiana Board has stated that the burden-shifting statute can
apply to subsequent years after it has determined the assessment for an earlier year. See, e.g.,
CVS Corp. #6640-02 v. Madison Cnty. Assessor, Nos. 48-003-11-1-4-00661-16, 48-003-12-1-4-
00660-16, 48-003-13-1-4-00659-16, 48-003-14-1-4-00654-16, 48-003-15-1-4-00658-16, 48-
003-16-1-4-00651-17, at 38-39 ¶ 113 (Ind. Bd. Tax Rev. Oct. 15, 2019), available at
https://www.in.gov/ibtr/files/CVS_6640_48-003-11-1-4-00661-16.pdf (last visited 2/13/2024)
(indicating that “[t]he burden for later years necessarily depends [on] how [the first year is]
resolve[d]”); accord DeDomenic Revocable Living Tr. v. Bartholomew Cnty. Assessor, Nos. 03-
011-12-1-5-10001, 03-011-13-1-5-00001, 03-011-14-1-5-10027-15, 03-011-15-1-5-00132-15, at
12 ¶ 47 (Ind. Bd. Tax Rev. Apr. 3, 2017), available at https://www.in.gov/ibtr/files/Ellen-W-
DeDominic-Revoc-Living-Trust-03-011-12-1-5-10001-etc.pdf (last visited 2/13/2024) (“The
parties dispute who had the burden of proof for 2012; Shadeland Station Apartments I, LLC v.
Marion Cnty. Assessor, Nos. 49-400-08-1-4-00007, 49-400-09-1-4-90005-15, 49-400-10-1-4-
82831-15, 49-400-11-1-4-82221-15, 49-400-08-1-4-00008, 49-400-09-1-4-90004-15, 49-400-
12
the procedural uncertainty the Assessor alleges here stems from his own litigation
strategy. He agreed to a consolidated resolution of all nine years of Square 74’s tax
appeals and did not present any valuation evidence of his own during the administrative
proceedings in this matter. Not only was the Assessor presumed to know and
understand the law that was applicable to the case, he was empowered to make
strategic decisions about how best to try the case in light of that law. The Assessor took
a substantial risk by electing not to present any evidence of value as part of his case,
particularly given the fact that the taxpayer presented an expert appraisal covering all
nine years at issue. Regardless of which party had the burden in the first instance, the
Assessor was on notice that the Indiana Board might be persuaded by the taxpayer’s
valuation evidence. The strategy may have ultimately proved unsuccessful, but it is not
a basis for overturning the Indiana Board’s decision.
To prevail on this claim, the Assessor must demonstrate that the Indiana
Board’s final determination violated a statute, a constitutional provision, a legal principle,
or a rule of substantive or procedural law. See Fraternal Order of Eagles No. 3988, Inc.
v. Morgan Cnty. Prop. Tax Assessment Bd. of Appeals, 5 N.E.3d 1195, 1200 (Ind. Tax
Ct. 2014). Because the Court agrees with the Indiana Board’s reading of the burden-
shifting statute, the Court rejects the Assessor’s contention that the Indiana Board’s
application of Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-17.2 was contrary to law.
CONCLUSION
The Assessor has not demonstrated to the Court that the Indiana Board erred
10-1-4-82830-15, 49-400-11-1-4-82220-15, at 15 n.6 (Ind. Bd. Tax Rev. Mar. 10, 2016),
available at https://www.in.gov/ibtr/files/Shadeland_Station_49-400-08-1-4-00007_etc.pdf (last
visited 2/13/2024).
13
when it established the market value-in-use of Square 74’s leasehold estate or that it
misapplied Indiana Code § 6-1.1-15-17.2. Consequently, the Court AFFIRMS the
Indiana Board’s final determination in its entirety.
14