Court Opinion

ID: 5114175
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-02 18:31:25.443547+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:21:45.407556
License: Public Domain

GARY W. LYNCH, J.
In 2005 and 2006, Poplar Bluff Associates I, L.P. (“PB Associates”), built a forty-unit housing complex, which included: twenty two-bedroom, two-bath units; twenty one-bedroom, one-bath units; eighty-five parking spaces and forty-four covered parking spaces; a community room; and an office. The complex was built at a total cost of $4,324,356. The Butler County Assessor (“the Assessor”) determined the fair market value of the property to be $2,668,060; however, the State Tax Commission (“the Commission”) determined the fair market value to be $888,300 for the tax years 2007 and 2008. The Assessor asserts two points in this appeal: first, the Commission erred in “ruling that low income housing must be valued using the ‘Maryville Formula’ ” and, second, the Commission erred because its use of the “Maryville Formula” to value subsidized housing rather than the methods “used for other apartments and rental housing” results in a separate sub-classification of residential real property contrary to article III and article IV(b) of the Missouri Constitution. Because neither issue was raised before the Commission and thereby properly preserved for appellate review, Commission error cannot be premised upon either ground.
Facts and Procedural History
The duplexes at issue are subsidized housing under the Internal Revenue Code and are required by the terms of a land-use restriction agreement to be rented at below-market rent to low-income seniors. The United States and Missouri provide federal and state income tax credits to encourage the construction or rehabilitation of affordable housing for low-income individuals and families. These tax credits may be sold or held by the initial owner and can be taken each year for ten years. For housing in Missouri, the federal and state income tax credits are administered by the Missouri Housing Development Commission (“MHDC”).1
*816PB Associates applied to the MHDC for an allocation of federal and state income tax credits in connection with the construction of the duplexes at issue in this case and was allocated federal and state income tax credits in the approximate total annual amount of $626,000 for ten years in exchange for PB Associates’ agreement to rent the duplexes at below-market rents to low-income seniors for thirty years. PB Associates sold limited partnership interests in itself for an aggregate of $8,546,546 in cash. The limited partnership interests entitled the purchasers to receive the income tax credits and offset the credits against their federal and state income tax liabilities.2 PB Associates borrowed $800,000 and used those loan proceeds and the proceeds from the sale of the limited partnership interests to construct the duplexes at a cost of $4,324,356. Included in this cost was a $475,000 fee that PB Associates paid its general partner for the general partner’s services in developing the duplexes. The duplexes were completed in 2006.
The Assessor determined the fair market value of the duplexes on January 1, 2007, was $2,668,060. PB Associates disagreed and appealed to the Butler County Board of Equalization (“Board of Equalization”). The Board of Equalization “affirmed” the Assessor’s valuation. Based on the Assessor’s notice of change in assessed value, dated June 25, 2007, the Assessor’s valuation would produce approximately $18,150 in real property taxes. PB Associates requested review by the Commission of the Board of Equalization’s valuation, see section 138.430.1, and proposed a fair market value for the duplexes equal to $690,000.3 PB Associates’ proposed valuation would produce approximately $4,695 in real property taxes.4
An evidentiary hearing was held by the Commission’s Hearing Officer on October 29, 2008. The only issue before the Hearing Officer was the “fair market value” of the duplexes on January 1, 2007. In addition to the facts already set out, the evidence presented at the hearing included the following.
The duplexes are “subsidized housing” under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code,5 and are known as the Idlewild Apartments or Idlewild Estates. The duplexes are located on 7.33 acres with an office, community room, and covered and surface parking. The general partner of PB Associates has little or no cash capital invested in the duplexes. At the time of the hearing, the duplexes rented for $415 a month for the one-bedroom units and $468 a month for the two-bedroom units.
A limited partner receives the tax credits over ten years, but PB Associates must maintain the duplexes in compliance with MHDC rules for thirty years. PB Associates’ failure to do so could result in the loss of future tax credits and the recapture of tax credits taken in the past.
In April 2006, PB Associates entered into a Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Land Use Restriction Agreement (“LUR Agreement”) with the MHDC for the duplexes “as a condition precedent” and “in consideration of receiving an allocation of’ federal and state income tax credits. The LUR Agreement requires the duplexes to *817be rented for below-market rents to residents fifty-five years and older who earn sixty percent or less of the median income for the area (approximately $20,000 or less annually). The LUR Agreement also provides that it “shall be placed of record in the real property records of the county,” and “the covenants contained herein shall run with the land.” The LUR Agreement further provides that the MHDC “may void” any transfer of the duplexes if the transferee “fails to assume in writing the requirements of [the LUR Agreement],” and “no ... transfer ... shall occur without the prior written consent of MHDC.” In addition, the LUR Agreement provides the MHDC may apply for specific performance of the LUR Agreement. The Rental Housing Programs Application attached to the LUR Agreement shows estimated real estate taxes for the duplexes in the amount of $14,000. The LUR Agreement permits PB Associates to request a rent increase annually and provides that the MHDC “shall approve rental increases sufficient for the Owner to compensate for any net increases in taxes (other than income taxes) over which the Owner has no effective control,” however, it will not consider any request for an increase greater than seven percent of the existing rent, and rents shall not exceed the maximum allowed under the federal and state laws related to subsidized housing.
The Assessor and PB Associates “stipulated to a net operating income of $78,970, a blended loan constant of 7.47, and a tax rate of .81 percent” for the duplexes. The parties also agreed that PB Associates borrowed $800,000 to construct the duplexes.
In its Order Affirming Hearing Officer Decision Upon Application for Review, the Commission stated:
It is within the State Tax Commission’s discretion to determine what method or approach it shall use to determine the true value in money of property. The correct methodology for valuing subsidized housing projects is the methodology set out in Maryville Properties and followed by [PB Associates]. That methodology is accurate because (1) rent restrictions are considered through the use of actual income rather than market income; (2) additional management requirements and expenses are accounted for through use of actual expenses which are in excess of market expenses; and (3) the actual loan-to-value ratio and the subsidized interest rate demonstrates and accounts for any and all risks involved in the property as well as the benefits flowing to the property.
(Internal footnotes omitted).
PB Associates called state-certified appraiser John T. Robertson and also submitted the written testimony of state-certified appraiser Robert E. Marx. Robertson and Marx determined an “equity dividend rate” equal to nine percent for the duplexes was appropriate based on sales of non-subsidized or “conventional” apartments with upward adjustments for “marketability,” “illiquidity,” and a debt-to-equity ratio of twenty-to-eighty percent. The equity dividend rate is the return an equity investor would require on its investment to convince the investor to invest in the property. Tax credit equity is a subsidy and is not equity from which an investor would want a return. Based on Robertson and Marx’s opinion that an appropriate equity dividend rate for the duplexes was nine percent, PB Associates took the position before the Hearing Officer that the duplexes had a value under the “Maryville Formula” of $721,303 on January 1, 2007. Kenneth N. Vitor, an officer of PB Associates’ general partner, testified that there is no active market for the sale of subsidized housing. Robertson also testified that *818there is a “lack of sales” of subsidized housing “in the market.”
The Assessor called certified general real estate appraiser Charles E. Trail. Trail testified: He prepared an appraisal of the duplexes that is “restricted ... for use in valuing subsidized housing,” that “is not a market value,” and that is “based on application of the Maryville Properties formula.” He did not prepare a cost- or sales-comparison-approach appraisal of the duplexes and noted that “there is not an active market of subsidized housing properties.” Based on the Maryville and Lake Ozark Village decisions,6 he calculated an equity dividend rate of .3952 percent based on “information and factors from” the specific duplexes at issue. In Trail’s view, these decisions indicate you should not “use market rates, such as conventional markets, but you use rates generated by ... the subject property or ... at best, the subject market segment, which is subsidized housing.” The equity dividend rate is the cash-on-cash rate. The source of non-borrowed funds actually used in the construction of subsidized housing (i.e., whether generated by the sale of tax credits and required to be so used, or contributed by an investor) does not matter in calculating the equity dividend rate for the subsidized housing under the “Maryville Formula.” Equity in a property “is the difference between what [the] property is worth and what’s owed on it.” With a newly constructed property that is being put to its highest and best use, the cost of the property’s construction should be “similar” to the property’s worth. Although “true value in money” means what a willing buyer would pay a willing seller in an arm’s-length transaction, he testified this concept was not relevant to the valuation of subsidized housing in Missouri because the Commission required subsidized housing to be valued in “a certain way.”7 Trail’s opinion was that the duplexes had a value under the “Maryville Formula” equal to $8,648,081 on January 1, 2007.8
On April 1, 2009, the Hearing Officer adopted the view of the experts for PB Associates, with the exception that the Hearing Officer eliminated the upward adjustments for marketability and illiquidity and determined the equity dividend rate to be 8.875 percent. Using this equity dividend rate, the Hearing Officer determined the true value in money of the duplexes to be $888,300 on January 1, 2007, under the “Maryville Formula.” The Hearing Officer applied the “Maryville Formula” as follows:
Overall capitalization rate:
Ratio of loans to “value” [$800,000 divided by $4,324,356 equals .185] times the loan constant [.0747] 1.38%
Ratio of “equity” to “value” [$3,524,356 divided by $4,324,356 equals .815] times the “equity dividend rate” [.08375] 6.70%
*819“Tax rate” 0.81%
Sum 8.89%
Net operating income $78,970
“Indicated value” [$78,970 divided by .0889] $888,301.46
The Assessor filed an application for review with the Commission, see section 138.432, claiming that the Hearing Officer erred in accepting PB Associates’ capitalization rate and that the Hearing Officer inappropriately, incorrectly, and improperly gave weight to PB Associates’ band of investment method to calculate the value of the equity portion of the capitalization rate. The Assessor’s application requested the Commission to enter “[a]n order establishing the value of the property based on application of the Maryville Properties method that complies with Ma-ryville Properties decision that requires utilization of ‘actual interest and capitalization rates.’ ”
The Commission entered its order affirming the Hearing Officer’s decision and adopted and incorporated in its order the Hearing Officer’s decision and findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Assessor filed a petition for judicial review of the Commission’s order in the circuit court. See section 138.470. The circuit court reversed the Commission’s decision on the basis that it misapplied the law. This appeal follows. We review the Commission’s decision rather than the circuit court’s judgment. The Assessor is the “party aggrieved” by the Commission’s decision and, as such, the Assessor filed the appellant’s and reply brief in this appeal pursuant to Rule 84.05(e).9
Standard of Review
The Western District of this Court recently described our standard of review as follows:
On an appeal from a judgment of a trial court addressing the decision of an administrative agency, we review the decision of the administrative agency and not the judgment of the trial court. Bird v. Mo. Bd. of Architects, 259 S.W.3d 516, 520 n. 7 (Mo. banc 2008). Notwithstanding, in our mandate, we reverse, affirm or otherwise act upon the judgment of the trial court. Id.
“Pursuant to Mo. Const, art. V, section 18 and section 536.140, we must determine ‘whether the agency’s findings are supported by competent and substantial evidence on the record as a whole; whether the decision is arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable or involves an abuse of discretion; or whether the decision is unauthorized by law.’ ” Henry v. Mo. Dept. of Mental Health, 351 S.W.3d 707, 712 (Mo.App. W.D.2011) (quoting Coffer v. Wasson-Hunt, 281 S.W.3d 308, 310 (Mo. banc 2009)).
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When an administrative agency decision is based on the agency’s interpretation and application of the law, we review the administrative agency’s conclusions of law and its decision de novo, and we make corrections to erroneous interpretations of the law. Algonquin Golf Club v. State Tax Commission, 220 S.W.3d 415, 418 (Mo.App. E.D. 2007).
*820... “This court reviews the decision of the [Commission] and not the hearing officer, Cohen v. Bushmeyer, 251 S.W.3d 345, 350 n. 4 (Mo.App. E.D.2008), unless, as here, the [Commission] incorporated the decision of [the] hearing officer, in which case we consider both together, Loven v. Greene County, 94 S.W.3d 475, 477 (Mo.App. S.D.2003).” Peruque, LLC v. Shipman, 352 S.W.3d 370, 374 (Mo.App. E.D.2011).
Rinehart v. Bateman, 363 S.W.3d 357, 362-63 (Mo.App.2012).
Analysis
The Assessor raises two points on appeal, asserting that (1) the Commission erred “in ruling” that subsidized housing “must be valued using the ‘Maryville Formula!,]”’ and (2) that the Commission’s erroneous use of the “Maryville Formula” to value subsidized housing rather than using those methods used “for other apartments and rental housing” creates a separate subclassification of residential real property in violation of articles III and IV(b) of the Missouri Constitution. The Assessor raised neither of these issues to the Commission and thereby failed to preserve them for our appellate review.
“The general rule is that a court should not set aside administrative actions unless the agency has been given a prior opportunity, on timely request by the complainant, to consider the point at issue.” Mills v. Fed. Soldiers Home, 549 S.W.2d 862, 868 (Mo. banc 1977). This court has applied this rule in an appeal from a decision of the Commission in Reeves v. Snider, 115 S.W.3d 375 (Mo.App.2003). We noted that
Taxpayers never injected the “lack of authority” issue into the case in any fashion before the STC [ (State Tax Commission) ] rendered its decision. They could have injected this “authority” issue via their petition for review, but failed to do so. They could have objected to the appraisers’ testimony and reports on the basis that Snider was never authorized to hire them, but failed to do so. They cannot “sandbag” the assessor, the STC, and this court by raising the issue as a post-hearing matter. Point denied.
Id at 380-81. In addition, this rule is implicitly embodied in the statutory requirement that the application for review filed with the Commission, by any party who is subject to a decision and order of a hearing officer, including the assessor, “shall contain specific detailed grounds upon which it is claimed the decision is erroneous.” Section 138.432.
Just as we would not allow the taxpayers in Reeves to sandbag the assessor, the STC, and this court then, we will not allow the Assessor to sandbag PB Associates, the Commission, or this court now. Not once during the hearing did the Assessor raise the issue that the Maryville formula should not be used to value the subject subsidized housing or that its use violated the Missouri Constitution. The Assessor did not object to the testimony by PB Associates’ experts purportedly applying the “Maryville Formula” on the basis that the formula was inapplicable or its application was unconstitutional. In fact, the Assessor’s own expert in his testimony purported to apply the “Maryville Formula,” to the exclusion of any other method for valuing the property. We acknowledge he took this position because the Commission had previously stated in its published decisions that the “Maryville Formula” was the correct methodology to value subsidized housing. See, e.g., Lake Ozark Village v. Whitworth, 2004 WL 1172803 (Mo. State Tax Comm’n Apr. 29, 2004) (“In this case, and all subsequent subsidized housing cases, the correct methodology for va*821luing subsidized housing projects is the methodology set out in Maryville Properties.”) (underlined emphasis added). The Assessor, however, did not offer any evidence of any other methodology he claimed should have been used by the Hearing Officer or the Commission. To presume that the Hearing Officer and the Commission would have either rejected such an offer or would not have considered such evidence, if admitted, is nothing but conjecture and speculation.
In addition to not raising these issues during the hearing, the Assessor did not raise either issue in his application for review filed with the Commission, as required by section 138.432. Moreover, the Assessor’s petition for review expressly requests the Commission to apply the “Ma-ryville Formula.” This request directly contradicts the points now raised by the Assessor on appeal that the “Maryville Formula” is inapplicable and unconstitutional. Under section 138.432, the Commission has broad authority to “affirm, modify, reverse, or set aside the decision and order of the hearing officer on the basis of the evidence previously submitted in such case, [to] take additional evidence, or [to] remand the matter to the hearing officer with directions.” Section 138.432. The Assessor’s failure to raise these issues in his application for review deprived the Commission of these possible actions it could have taken to address the issues now raised for the first time on appeal.
While there may be serious and substantial questions that can be raised about the use of the “Maryville Formula” to value any or all subsidized housing, the Commission should be given a fair opportunity to address them before they are considered on appeal by either a circuit court or an appellate court. Raising these questions before the Commission gives it the opportunity to develop an appropriate record to fully consider them and, if necessary, to support appropriate appellate review of its answers.
Because the Assessor’s claims of Commission error were not raised to the Commission, they were not properly preserved for appellate review. In the absence of any preserved error, the Commission’s decision and order must be affirmed. Therefore, the judgment of the circuit court, which reversed the decision of the Commission and remanded the cause for reconsideration, is reversed.
DON E. BURRELL, P.J., concurs.
NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, J., dissents in separate opinion.

. For general background information on subsidized housing, see Missouri Housing Development Commission, Rental Production > Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) Program, http://www.mhdc.com/rentaL production/low_inc_tax_pgrm.htm (last visited Nov. 14, 2012); Megan J. Ballard, Profiting from Poverty: The Competition Between For-Profit and Nonprofit Developers for Low-Income Housing Tax Credits, 55 Hastings L.J. 211, 211-19 (2003).

. See Ballard, supra, at 216-19 & nn. 31-32.

. All statutory references are to RSMo 2000, unless otherwise indicated.

. We use this calculation because PB Associates shows this as the tax for the Commission’s valuation of $888,300. We do not reach a determination if it is the correct mathematical amount.

.See 26 U.S.C. § 42 (West 2011) (effective October 4, 2004).

.We understand Trail’s references to the "Maryville” and "Lake Ozark Village” decisions to be to the Commission's administrative decisions in Maryville Properties, L.P. v. Nelson, 2000 WL 509484 (Mo. State Tax Comm'n Apr. 27, 2000), as modified by Maryville Properties, L.P. v. Nelson, 83 S.W.3d 608 (Mo.App.W.D.2002), and in Lake Ozark Village v. Whitworth, 2004 WL 1172803 (Mo. State Tax Comm’n Apr. 29, 2004).

. He only valued it this way because of the Commission's finding that the "Maryville Formula” would be used.

. We have arrived at somewhat different numbers in our calculations of the formula used; however, for the purpose of the issue raised in this appeal, it is not necessary to set forth those numbers.

. All rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2012).