Plaintiff, Rutland Country Club, owns approximately 275 acres of land in the City of Rutland, 95 acres of which are used for an
Following an unsuccessful appeal to the Board of Civil Authority, plaintiff appealed to the Director of the Division of Property Valuation and Review pursuant to 32 V.S.A. § 4461. It contended that the property had not been appraised at fair market value and that the resultant taxes did not reflect a proportional share of value as compared to other properties within Rutland in violation of the Vermont and United States Constitutions. Following a hearing de novo before a board of appraisers (board) appointed by the Director, the $264,000.00 appraisal value was reaffirmed. Plaintiff appeals. We reverse.
The board certified four questions to this Court. We will examine the second and third questions in the first part of this opinion. Questions one and four will be considered in section two.
I.
32 V.S.A. § 4467 provides that in an appeal taken to the board there is a presumption that the appraisal is valid and the property owner has the burden of going forward with evidence to overcome that presumption.
New England Power Co.
v.
Town of Barnet,
Plaintiff’s attempt to meet the burden imposed by the statute consisted of presenting testimony by an expert witness, who is an independent appraiser, to the effect that the property within Rutland at issue had a fair market value of $327,500.00. In addition, the expert testified that if the City had calculated the listed value using the same ratio to the fair market value as was used for other properties in Rutland, calculated at 59.5 per cent of fair market value, the property would have been listed at $194,750.00. In making these calculations, the expert witness used the “market data” approach, comparing sales of similar properties with the property being appraised. See Id. at 505,
The expert testified he then computed the listed value of the property according to the dictates of 32 V.S.A. § 4467, comparing the sales price of other property sold within Rutland to the value at which those properties were listed for taxation purposes after the sale. The resultant percentage, as discussed above, differed substantially from the City’s calculations.
The board, in finding that the expert’s testimony did not constitute sufficient “credible” evidence to overcome the presumption of validity of the City’s appraisal, challenged the market data approach used by plaintiff’s expert and the use of property outside Vermont in making the appraisal. Presumptions of the type found in Title 32, known as “locative” presumptions, place the burden of going forward with evidence on a party against whom they operate as a rule of law but are without any independent probative value.
Gardner
v.
Department of Social Welfare,
We previously stated in a similar land assessment case that the presumption of validity of a city’s evaluation is overcome when “credible evidence” is introduced “fairly and reasonably” indicating that the property was assessed at more than the fair market value or that the listed value exceeded the percentage of fair market value applied generally to property within the community.
New England Power Co., supra,
The use of the phrase “credible evidence,” however, does not require that the board sit as a trier of fact and determine whether the facts introduced to overcome the presumption are more believable than the facts supporting the board’s assessment. “[I]f and when enough rebutting evi
dence is admitted to make a question for the jury on the fact involved, the presumption disappears and goes for naught.”
Id.
at 24,
In the case at bar, the testimony offered by plaintiff’s expert was sufficient to “burst the bubble” of the presumption, causing it to disappear. The board, however, in concluding that the evidence was inadequate to overcome the burden imposed by Title 82, seems to have incorrectly assigned evidentiary weight to the presumption, see
Estey
v.
Leveille,
Once the presumption of validity disappears, the burden of persuasion remains on the taxpayer as to all contested issues.
New England Power Co., supra,
II.
Plaintiff also contends that the findings rendered in the proceeding are insufficient as a matter of law. Findings should explicitly state the material facts,
In re Fuller,
Certified questions one, two, and four are answered in the affirmative. Certified question three is answered in the negative. Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The expert testified that he did not use the “cost” approach due to difficulties in securing reliable data for country club land improvements, and difficulties in assigning obsolescence and depreciation to any of the estimated cost figures. “Income” approach was rejected due to a lack of reliable data within the market and because the profitability of the golf course depends upon efficiency of management. See Id.
