Ohio tax decision - and Florida's definition of real property
In Florida, there is a definition of Real Property, which is land, buildings, and fixtures thereto. So, we think the Ohio justices understood the principles.
Sales = Assessed Tax Value?
Thu Oct 12, 2006 7:53 am (PST)
Thu Oct 12, 2006 7:53 am (PST)
Should shopping centers pay property taxes based on retail sales the facility generates?
from PlainVanillaShell.com"
The part owner of an Ohio shopping center thinks so and has contested other means of tax assessment all the way to the state's top court.The shopping center is SouthPark Center in suburban Cleveland, and the part owner is an affiliate of Dillard's, Inc., which built a department store at the center at a cost of $14,927,945.
A controversy soon arose when the county auditor valued the Dillard's store at $17,036,714 the year after it opened for business.A subsidiary of Dillard's argued, however, that the property had a fair-market value of only $6,860,250.
After a hearing, the local board of revision made no change in the county auditor's valuation.An appeal followed, but the Board of Tax Appeals valued the Dillard's property at $14,945,000. That figure, based on the estimated cost of the property, pleased neither Dillard's nor county officials, whose appraiser set the value of the property at $22 million.
The controversy eventually made its way to the Supreme Court of Ohio, which upheld the Board of Tax Appeals valuation.The justices explained the fallacy of using sales per square foot as a factor in determining a retail property:
Assume two identical anchor department store buildings in the same mall, operated by different owners. If one store has higher sales per square foot than the other, is the property housing the store with the lower sales worth less than the building housing the store with the higher sales?
The two buildings in the hypothetical mall should be valued the same if they are identical.
Added the justices:
If property of this type were to be valued based on the owner's projection of sales, this could lead to a manipulation of sales projections, so that failure to attain the erroneous sales projection would result in a reduced valuation of the property.... If it is the real property that is being valued, its valuation cannot be made to vary depending on the success or lack thereof of the businesses located on the property. The business factors and the real-property factors must be separated when the real property is being valued for tax purposes.
The justices therefore accepted the Board of Tax Appeals cost-based valuation figures.
Higbee Company v. Cuyahoga County Board of Revision, 839 N.E.2d 385,Decision: January 2006, Published: March 2006."
Do you want to lower your property taxes? Ad valorem taxes are based upon valuation methods, modified by state laws and regulations. CPS knows due process procedures and value applications should be applied to your real and tangible taxes. If you have a question, or need professional services, for a free consultation, contact CPS at 1-305-372-9200 in South Florida, 1-352-245-7441 in Central Florida, or email us at cps1@flash.net.


2 Comments:
Property tax in Florida is OUTRAGEOUS!!! I lost my home in hurricane Ivan; sold what was left of it and moved to Tampa, Fl. I am building a house here on a private road, no city water, no city sewer and 3 blocks from the nearest fire hydrant. My property taxes will be around $10,000 per year. This is insane---I am 66 and as a result of out of control property appraisers across the state of Florida; my social security check will be totally signed over to the tax man of Hillsborough County.
Someone in the State government had to start the ball rolling to RAISE everyone's property taxes. This just did not happen by itself!!
I SUGGEST THAT THE VOTERS VOTE AGAINST ALL OF THE INCUMBENTS NOW IN OFFICE. SEND A MESSAGE TO THE POLITICIANS!!! I am mad as hell and I am not going to take this silently. I am writing on every blog, every newspaper in Florida and all tourists agencies to let people all over the country know how the government is stealing money from it's Florida residents.
Anonymous should realize that the reason why tax levels are higher is that elected officials in each government taxing authority are approving budgets that are higher.
When values goes up, millage rates should go down, to sustain efficient levels of spending. But, local taxing authorities do not adopt the "roll back" rate, to correspond with the taxes paid the previous year. In most instances, they adopt a millage rate that's higher.
The result is higher taxation.
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