{¶ 1} Thе Board of Education of the Canal Winchester Local School District (“BOE”) appeals from a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals (“BTA”), in which the BTA adopted a reduced valuation of an Amerihost motel property. The BTA predicated the reduction on the report and testimony of an expert appraiser that the owner, AP Hotels of Illinois, Inc., presented to the BTA. On appeal, the BOE contends that the BTA erred by adopting a valuatiоn that the appraiser had certified as of January 1, 2003, as the value of the property on January 1, 2002. In support of the BTA’s decision, the property owner relies on oral testimony of the appraiser tying the value stated in the appraisal report to the January 1, 2002 lien date.
{¶ 2} Although we agree with the BOE that the opinion of value as of January 1, 2003, did not constitute an expert’s certification of value for tax year 2002, we find that the BTA performed an indeрendent valuation based on a record that contained sufficient evidence to support its conclusion. We therefore affirm.
I
{¶ 3} For tax year 2002, the auditor valued the 1.791-acre property at $2,300,800. In its complaint to the Franklin County Board of Revision (“BOR”), AP Hotels sought a reduction of value to $1,500,000. At the BOR hearing, AP Hotels presented no appraisal, but relied upon evidence of declining demand and increased competition, along with a study of comparаble motel sales, as factors
{¶ 4} At the BTA hearing, AP Hotels presented the oral testimony and the аppraisal report of Samuel Koon. Koon had prepared an appraisal report using the cost, comparative-sales, and income methods to determine a value as of January 1, 2003. AP Hotels offered thе report to establish a value for the property for tax year 2002, although the lien date for tax year 2002 was one year before the date on the appraisal itself.
{¶ 5} Koon testified concerning the general situation оf motel properties after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. He also gave the following testimony in a colloquy with the property owner’s counsel:
{¶ 6} “Q: If you were asked, would your opinion be higher or lower with regard to January 1, 2002 or January 1, 2003? What would be your answer?
{¶ 7} “A: I think the number would be the same.”
{¶ 8} The BTA first cited Olmsted Falls Village Assn. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision (1996),
{¶ 9} The BOE asserts that the BTA committed reversible error by rеlying on an appraisal that did not value the property as of the lien date of tax year 2002. In Olmsted Falls Village Assn., 75 Ohio St.3d 552,
{¶ 10} This proposition regarding the timing of valuation applies directly to the present ease. Here the expert appraiser, Samuel D. Koon, prepared an appraisal report using the cost, comparative-sales, and income methods to determine a value as of January 1, 2003. AP Hotels then introduced that report to establish a value for the property as of January 1, 2002, the lien date for tax year 2002.
{¶ 11} In the other case noted by the BTA, Freshwater v. Belmont Cty. Bd. of Revision,
{¶ 12} On its face, this case presents a potential pitfall in light of the precepts of Olmsted Falls and Freshwater: the BTA could have erroneously used the determination of value in the appraisal report as an expert opinion for the earlier year in light of the oral testimony at the hearing — even though the value was not certified by the appraiser as to the earlier lien date. In appraising real property generally, the appraiser certifies the opinion and the report. “Whether the certification is included as part of the introduction or presented on a separate, signed page, certification is important because it establishes the appraiser’s position, thereby protecting both the appraiser’s integrity and the validity of the appraisal.” Appraisal Institute, Appraisal of Real Estate (12th Ed.2001) 616. Through the certification process, the appraiser takes responsibility for the opinions and conclusions set forth in the report.
{¶ 13} To rely on the appraisal report as constituting an expert opinion of value for the 2002 tax year wоuld constitute error. Koon’s oral testimony at the BTA hearing falls short of constituting a certification that the value set forth in the report constitutes the value of the property as of the earlier lien date. Simply comparing thе testimonial words with the certification language in the written
{¶ 14} A careful reading of the BTA’s decision convinces us, however, that the BTA did not commit the error described in the foregoing paragraph. The BTA’s citation of Olmsted Falls and Freshwater shows that it realized it had to avoid treating the appraisal report for tax year 2003 as a certified value for tax year 2002. Instead, the BTA viewed the testimony and the report together as evidence of value as of January 1, 2002, and on the basis of that evidence the BTA concluded that the value оf the property as of that date was $1,600,000. As detailed in the next section, we find no legal error in the BTA’s analysis or conclusion.
Ill
{¶ 15} Because there was no express certification of value for the 2002 lien date before it, the BTA faсed a two-step task that our cases have prescribed. The BTA undertook to review the record to determine (1) whether it contained sufficient evidence to enable the BTA to perform an independent determination of value, and, if so, (2) what the value was. Dayton-Montgomery Cty. Port Auth. v. Montgomery Cty. Bd. of Revision,
{¶ 16} We conclude that the BTA properly conceived and carried out its duty. The appraisal report set forth extensive discussion of comparablе sales, the property’s income and expenses, and the nature of the motel market that was pertinent to January 1, 2002, as well as January 1, 2003. Although the appraiser did not certify his ultimate opinion of value as of the 2002 tax lien datе, his certification that the “statements of fact contained in this report are true and accurate” did permit the BTA to use the factual information set forth in the report. Moreover, AP Hotels had submitted similar and additional supportive information to the BOR.
{¶ 17} This factual information in the appraisal report and the additional evidence before the BOR constituted an adequate basis for dеtermining value. The evidence also corroborated Koon’s hearing testimony that in the period immediately after the September 11 terrorist attacks the demand for motel rooms decreased. Additionally, the geographiс area surrounding the property had an oversupply of motel rooms. Finally, Koon’s own statement that the value as of January 1, 2002, would not have been higher or lower than the value on January 1, 2003, furnished an increment of evidence in suрport of that allegation, and the BTA found that the other evidence supported that statement.
{¶ 18} Under these circumstances, it would have been error for the BTA to revert to the auditor’s valuation of $2,300,800. Colonial Village Ltd. v. Washington Cty. Bd. of Revision,
{¶ 19} Given the evidence before it, the BTA acted reasonably and lawfully when it adopted a rеduced valuation for the motel property. We therefore affirm.
Decision affirmed.
Notes
. The BOE includes in its supplement an illegible copy of what it claims is a conveyancе fee statement evidencing a sale of the property in May 2006. Not only did the BOE not introduce this document into evidence at the BTA, the document presumably did not even exist until some 11 months after the close of the June 2005 BTA hearing. The BOE urges thаt we take judicial notice of this document, but judicial notice does not furnish litigants an exception to the rule that evidence must be timely offered in a judicial proceeding. We decline to consider the document, and we order that it be stricken from the record of this appeal.
