OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
David and Bonnie Faulk appeal a superior court decision upholding a Kenai Peninsula Borough (Borough) property valuation. The valuation, calculated for tax purposes, appraised the Faulks’ property at more than twice what the Faulks had paid for the property approximately thirty days before the appraisal. Both the Borough Board of Equalization (Board) and the superior court upheld the valuation. On appeal to this court, the Faulks assert that the Board denied their appeal without making adequate findings. We agree and remand the case to the superior court with directions to remand the matter to the Board for additional findings.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
On December 1, 1993, David and Bonnie Faulk purchased the Harbor Lights Condominium Project (Property) for $495,000. The Property, located in Seward, consisted of twelve condominium units. It had been purchased by the previous owner in 1990 for $565,000. The Faulks apparently attribute the $70,000 difference between the 1990 and the 1993 prices to the previous owner’s failure to make necessary repairs. David Faulk testified at length about the poor condition of the Property and asserted that repair problems had stigmatized it. He estimated the total repairs at between $420,000 and $480,-000. In contrast, the Borough questioned whether the Property was truly stigmatized and asserted that the cost of repairs was approximately $168,000.
On January 1, 1994, the Borough’s assessor valued the Property for tax purposes at $1,055,400. That figure represented a value of $70,600 for each of the twelve condominium units plus $208,200 for the land. The parties agree that the Borough’s assessor estimated the value of the Property by the comparable sales method. 1 They also agree *751 that there were no condominium complexes in Seward other than the Property that the assessor could have used in the comparable sales analysis. Thus, the assessor estimated the value of the Property by comparing the selling prices for five townhouses in the Seward area. Following the valuation, the Faulks unsuccessfully appealed to the Board and the superior court.
At the hearing before the Board, the Faulks argued that the assessment was improper or excessive because (1) the Property was in poor condition and repairs would be more costly than the appraiser estimated, (2) the Property was not comparable to any of the units that the appraiser used in his comparable sales analysis, and (3) the best way to value the Property was by reference to the recent arms-length sale in which the Faulks purchased the Property. After the Faulks stated their case, one Board member moved for a vote on the Faulks’ appeal and stated that the Board should uphold the appraiser’s valuation “for the reason that the appellant, Mr. Faulk, has not presented sufficient evidence to prove an unequal, excessive or improper valuation.” With no further discussion the Board voted six to one to deny the Faulks’ appeal. This appeal followed.
III. DISCUSSION 2
We have previously concluded that “[t]he threshold question in an administrative appeal is whether the record sufficiently reflects the basis for the [agency’s] decision so as to enable meaningful judicial review.”
Fields v. Kodiak City Council,
The Borough first points out that under AS 29.45.210(b) the Faulks bore the burden of proving that the assessment was erroneous. According to the Borough, therefore, the language of the Board’s motion constitutes an adequate finding because it indicates that the Faulks did not satisfy their burden. We disagree. The motion presented to the Board reveals little about the Board’s reason for denying the Faulks’ appeal other than explaining in conclusory fashion that the Board was not persuaded by the Faulks’ arguments and evidence. Because all taxpayers bear the burden of proof when challenging a Borough assessment, such a statement would be true of any decision by the Board to deny a party’s appeal.
The Borough also argues that the language of the Board’s motion, when viewed in light
of the entire
record, “constitutes sufficient findings to support the Board’s decision.” As indicated previously, in
Coffey,
Unlike the Commission in Coffey, the Board did not make findings that might provide us with a starting point for evaluating the Board’s decision-making process. Without such guidance, we can only speculate about why the Board thought that the Faulks’ evidence was insufficient.
In particular, the language of the Board’s motion does not facilitate review of how the Board addressed the assessor’s treatment of the recent price paid by the Faulks for the Property. In
CH Kelly Trust v. Municipality of Anchorage, Bd. of Equalization,
In this case, we can only guess how the Board resolved the conflicts between the Borough’s and the Faulks’ evidence relating to the recent sale price. On the one hand, the Faulks presented uncontradicted evidence that they had purchased the Property approximately thirty days before the assessment in a bona fide arm’s length transaction in the open market. 3 On the other hand, the appraiser opined that, when valued individually, the twelve units would have a total value greater than $495,000 because the Faulks probably received a bulk discount for purchasing all twelve units of the Property at once. Significantly, however, the appraiser never explained why he stated in his written report that the alleged bulk discount was twenty-five to thirty-five percent but testified that the discount was “anywhere from 30 to 50 per cent.” 4
The Board neither indicated whether it agreed with the appraiser’s bulk discount theory nor how, if at all, it resolved the discrepancies between the appraiser’s written report and testimony. It also failed to address the Faulks’ contention that the poor condition of the Property and lack of comparable condominium complexes demonstrated that the assessed value should have been closer to $495,000 than to $1,055,400. Thus, we have an inadequate basis for determining whether the Board reasonably denied the Faulks’ appeal. 5
*753
Where an agency has failed to make adequate findings, we typically remand the ease to the superior court with directions to remand the matter to the agency for additional proceedings.
Kenai Peninsula Borough v. Ryherd,
IV. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the decision of the superi- or court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The comparable sales method is a technique for estimating the value of a specific piece of real properly by "comparing, weighing, and relating” sales of sites similar to the property being appraised. American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers, The Appraisal of Real Estate 135 (6th ed. 1974).
. We give no deference to the decision of the superior court because that court acted as an intermediate court of appeal.
CH Kelly Trust v. Municipality of Anchorage, Bd. of Equalization,
.Specifically, David Faulk testified that (1) the Property had been on the market for "quite a while,” (2) other potential investors had "walked away from [it] at the same price,” (3) the Faulks were not related to the prior owner and did not know her or her family prior to the sale, and (4) the prior owner had been represented by an independent real estate agent.
. A twenty-five percent discount suggests a fair market value of approximately $660,000, well below the $1,055,400 assessed value of the Property, while a fifty percent discount indicates a fair market value of approximately $990,000, only slightly less than the assessed value.
. Because we conclude that the Board did not provide an adequate statement of the reasons for its decision, we cannot address the Faulks' argu *753 ments that attack the merits of the Board’s decision.
