Pеtitioner appeals by right the final opinion and judgment of the Tax Tribunal establishing for the tax years 2004-2006 the true cash value (TCV), the state equalized value (SEV), and the taxable value (TV), of two parcels of property on which petitioner operates a hotel. We affirm but remand for correction of
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A hearing referee conducted a three-day hearing at which petitioner presented evidence that the TCV of each of the properties was less than the amount listed on the assessment rolls, and respondent presented evidence that the TCV of each of the properties was more than that listed on the assessment rolls. Because the hearing referee found petitioner’s evidence and valuation method more persuasive than that of respondent, he issued a proposed opinion and judgment adopting the valuations of petitioner’s expert. See MCL 205.726. Resрondent filed objections to the hearing referee’s proposed opinion and judgment. On review of the record and the parties’ pleadings, the Tax Tribunal ruled that the hearing referee had improperly credited petitioner’s appraiser, stating that two of the appraiser’s appraisals should have been accorded little or no weight. The tribunal mainly discredited the two appraisals because the same appraiser had prepared a third appraisal for purpоses of obtaining financing and it was strikingly different. But the tribunal otherwise adopted the hearing referee’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, including the referee’s finding that respondent’s evidence that the value of each of the properties was greater than that listed on the tax rolls should also be discounted. The Tax Tribunal’s findings read, in part:
5. Respondent’s Exhibit E (Petitioner’s 2002 Appraisal for Finance Purposes with Exhibits) was properly admitted into evidence. However, the POJ [the hearing referee’s proposed oрinion and judgment] failed to state*629 that Exhibit E was admitted solely for impeachment purposes. Although Exhibit E was not admitted for valuation purposes, the [hearing referee] still failed to take the appraisal into consideration in the rendering of its [sic] decision.
9. Ultimately, Petitioner’s appraiser should have been awarded little credibility for the large differences in the two appraisals. The disparity in the two reports is not explained by the September 11th bombing of New York, the unemployment, the location or thе factors that were not cited in the original appraisal that would not have changed given the short time span between the reports as asserted by Petitioner. The inconsistencies between the reports cast enough uncertainty that the Tribunal finds that Petitioner’s December 31, 2003 appraisal is given very minimal weight.
10. The [hearing referee’s] analysis of why Respondent’s appraisal was given little weight is adopted. As such, the Tribunal finds that Respondent’s assessments for the subject properties for the tax years at issue are affirmed. Petitioner failed to carry the burden of establishing the true cash value of the property. Conversely, Respondent failed to meet its burden of proving the subject property’s assessments should be changed from that reflected on the tax rolls. Therefore, the true cash, state equalized, and taxable values for the subject property are as follows:
Parcel Number: 41-14-05-276-011
Year TCV SEV TV
2004 $1,528,400 $764,200 $642,403
2005 $1,595,600 $797,800 $756,178
2006 $1,595, 600 $797,800 $672,293[1 ]
*630 Parcel Number: 41-14-05-276-001[2 ]
Year TCV SEV TV
2004 $116,400 $58,200 $48,998
2005 $121,600 $60,800 $50,124
2006 $146,000 $73,000 $51,778
11. Given the above, the Tribunal modifies the Proposed Opinion and Judgment, as indicated herein, and adopts the modified Proposed Opinion and Judgment as the Tribunal’s final decision in this case. See MCL 205.726. The Tribunal also incorporates by reference the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law contained in the modified Proposed Opinion and Judgment in this Final Opinion and Judgment.
Therefore,
IT IS ORDERED that the property’s values for the 2004, 2005 and 2006 tax years shall be as set forth in this Final Opinion and Judgment. [Final Opinion and Judgment, pp 5-9 (Michigan Tax Tribunal Docket No. 310739, entered September 17, 2009).]
Petitioner appeals by right, MCL 205.753(1), asserting that the Tax Tribunal committed several errors of law and also made several erroneоus factual findings.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court’s ability to review decisions of the Tax Tribunal is very limited. Columbia Assoc, LP v Dep’t of Treasury,
With respect to general valuation principles in the Tax Tribunal, the petitioner has the burden to establish the true cash value of property. MCL 205.737(3); Great Lakes Div of Nat’l Steel Corp v Ecorse,
This case also presents issues of statutory interpretation, which are questions of law that this Court
III. ANALYSIS
Petitioner first argues that the Tax Tribunal erred as a matter of law and fact by stating in ¶ 5 of its final opinion and judgment that respondent’s exhibit E was admitted into evidence. The record does not support petitioner’s claim.
At the hearing before the hearing referee, respondent’s exhibits were marked alphabetically and exhibit E was identified as a 2002 appraisal of the subject property prepared for petitioner by the same expert who testified for petitioner at the hearing and who also prepared two other appraisals (petitioner’s exhibits 1 and 2) admitted into evidence for tax-valuation purposes. Respondent’s attorney moved for the admission of exhibit E during the cross-examination of petitioner’s appraiser “for purposes of impeachment, rebuttal, and to, for the witness’s credibility.” Petitioner’s attorney objected on grounds of relevancy and also because respondent could impeach the witness by simply questioning him about his appraisals. The hearing referee ruled regarding respondent’s exhibit E:
*633 [Hearing Referee]: As I said before, the respondent in this instance as to this witness is entitled to cross-examination. Part of cross-examination is to impeach the credibility of the witness.
[Hearing Referee]: Wait. And to that extent, this — let’s put it this way: The admissibility is on the basis of its use in the impeachment of this witness.
[Hearing Referee]: Now, as to the ultimate value, it is not being considered for that purpose.
Thus, the record reflects that respondent’s exhibit E was admitted for the limited purpose of impeaching petitioner’s appraiser. This is thе purpose for which the Tax Tribunal utilized exhibit E. The tribunal did not err as a matter of fact or law. That one page of exhibit E was admitted later in the hearing as part of another exhibit does not alter the fact that all of exhibit E had previously been admitted for the purpose of impeaching petitioner’s appraiser.
Next, petitioner argues that the Tax Tribunal erred by revisiting the credibility of petitioner’s appraiser and the weight assigned to his appraisals. We disagree.
Petitioner cites MCR 2.613(C) and caselaw for the proposition that appellate courts will defer to credibility determinations by the fact-finder. It is true that this Court will not assess witness credibility. Great Lakes Div of Nat’l Steel Corp,
Section 26 of the Tax Tribunal Act, MCL 205.726, authorizes the Tax Tribunal to “appoint 1 or more hearing officers to hold hearings.” Furthermore, except for proceedings in the residential property and small claims division of the tribunal, tribunal hearings “shall be conducted pursuant to chapter 4 of the administrative procedures act of 1969,
As noted, chapter 4 of the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) governs hearings in the Tax Tribunal, except those in the residential property and small claims
(1) A party may request a rehearing or reconsideration of a decision by a hearing officer or referee by filing a written request for a rehearing with the tribunal and submitting a copy to the opposing party within 21 days of the entry of the opinion and judgment hy the hearing officer or hearing referee. The request shall demonstrate good cause as to why a rehearing shall be held....
(4) For purposes of this rule, “good cause” means any of the following:
*636 (a) Error of law.
(b) Mistake of fact.
(c) Fraud.
(d) Any other reason the tribunal deems sufficient and material.
In summary, MCL 205.726 provides: “A proposed decision of a hearing officer or referee shall be considered and decided by 1 or more members of the tribunal.” We hold that in fulfilling this statutory responsibility, the Tax Tribunal may make its own determinations regarding the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be assigned to evidence in the record. Consequently, we conclude that the Tax Tribunal did not err by reconsidering petitioner’s appraiser’s credibility and the weight to be given the evidence he provided.
Petitioner next argues that the Tax Tribunal erred by employing an incorrect valuation method and by not independently determining the value of the property. Specifically, petitioner argues that (1) the valuations on the assessment rolls were determined by the cost-less-depreciation method, (2) because the properties produced income, the tribunal was required to determine their value by the income-capitalization method, and (3) by adopting the existing assessed valuations, the tribunal did not make its own independent determination of value using the corrеct valuation method. We disagree.
Our constitution provides for the uniform taxation of property assessed at not in excess of 50 percent of its true cash value. Const 1963, art 9, § 3. The Legislature has defined “true cash value” as meaning “the usual selling price at the place where the property to which the term is applied is at the time of assessment, being
Other than providing a broad framework and numerous factors to be considered, the Legislature has not specified methods of valuation that assessors must employ. Antisdale,
We also disagree with petitioner’s argument that because the properties were income producing, the income-capitalization method of valuation is the only acceptable method of determining the properties’ true cash value. Petitioner relies on Southfield Western, Inc v Southfield,
In this case, the parties each presented expert witnesses who testified at the Tax Tribunal proceedings. Both experts presented appraisals of the subject properties using both the income-capitalization method and the sales-comparison or market approach. Petitioner’s expert and his appraisals concluded that the TCV of each of the properties was less than that listed on the assessment rolls. Respondent’s expert and her appraisals concluded that the TCV of each of the properties was more than that listed on the assessment rolls. The Tax Tribunal was under no obligation to accept the valuation figures or the approach to valuation advanced by either petitioner or respondent. Teledyne Continental Motors v Muskegon Twp,
Next, we disagree with petitioner’s argument that the Tax Tribunal committed an error of law or adopted a wrong principle by finding that the properties’ assessed valuation on the tax rolls was also the properties’ true cash value. In the Tax Tribunal, a property’s assessed valuation on the tax rolls carries no presumption of validity. Consol Aluminum Corp, Inc v Richmond Twp,
We conclude that the Tax Tribunal did not abdicate its responsibility to independently determine the subject properties’ true cash value when it adopted the properties’ assessed valuation on the tax rolls. There was competent and substantial evidence in the record supporting the tribunal’s determination. In other contexts, this Court has found no clear error by the fact-finder when it determines that the value of property lies within the range of values as testified to by experts. For example, a jury award in a condemnation case “ ‘will be upheld ... if it is supported by competent evidence as long as the amount is not lower than the minimum, or higher than the maximum valuation placed by the witnesses on the property sought to be condemned.’ ” State Hwy Comm’r v Hessell, 5 Mich App
Petitioner next argues that the tribunal committed an error of law by not reiterating a separate, concise statement of facts and conclusions of law. MCL 205.751(1) provides that “[a] dеcision and opinion of the tribunal ... shall be in writing or stated in the record, and shall include a concise statement of facts and conclusions of law....” Also, MCL 24.285, incorporated into tribunal proceedings through MCL 205.726, provides that “[a] final decision or order of an agency... shall include findings of fact and conclusions of law separated into sections captioned or entitled ‘findings of fact’ and ‘conclusions of law’, respectively.” Here, the hearing referee’s proposed opinion and judgment contаined separate sections labeled
We affirm but remand to the Tax Tribunal for correction of the apparent clerical errors set forth in footnotes 1 and 2 of this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Notes
The parties agree that this is an error and that the correct 2006 TV is $678,864.
The parties agree that the correct parcel number is 41-14-05-276-009.
The current version of this rule provides that a party may timely file exceptions to a hearing referee’s proposed decision that “shall demonstrate good cause as to why the decision should be modified or a rehearing held.” The definition of “good cause” in subsection 4 remains unchanged. 2009 AACS, R 205.1348 (effective October 19, 2009).
