¶ 1. The Vermont Department of Taxes (State) appeals from an Essex Superior Court decision setting the 1999 fair market value of land owned by the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) in the Town of Victory (Town). Pursuant to 32 V.S.A. § 3708, the State makes annual payments in lieu of taxes (PILOT) to towns in which ANR owns land. The PILOT payments at issue are based on the appraisal value of the land as set by the director of property valuation and review (PVR), 3 V.S.A § 2289, a division of the Department of Taxes. See 32 V.S.A. § 3708(a) (instructing director of PVR to apрraise all ANR-owned land, and directing the State to make PILOT payments). Under § 3708(d), a town that disagrees with the director’s appraisal can appeal the set value to the superior court, as the Town did in this case. In that appeal, the superior court found that the director’s valuation was invalid and set a valuation substantially above the director’s appraisal. We affirm in part, vacate the valuation of forest land set by the superior court, and remand to the director of PVR.
¶2. ANR owns ovеr 19,310 acres of land in the Town. Of that amount, 8724 acres are enrolled in the agricultural and managed forest land use value program, 32 V.S.A. §§ 3751-3763, and are not part of this appeal. Most of the remaining acreage, 10,068 acres, is located in the Victory State Forest, with a small amount, 518 acres, in the Victory Basin, also known as Victory Bog. In 1999, the director of PVR appraised the forest land at $211.05 per acre and the basin land at $183.59 per acre. The land consists of both timberland and wetlands. The record indicates that approximately eighty percent of the forest land could be commercially productive, while the basin land has little commercial viability.
¶ 3. The 1999 appraisals by the director of PVR did not change the values from those arrived at in 1995, the year of the previous appraisal. In 1995, Robert Beaulieu, then a PVR district advisor, appraised the forest and basin lands to set their values for ANR’s 1996 PILOT
a) He was physically on-site on approximately six occasions, but did not inspect the property other than what he was able to observe from his immediate location.
b) He reviewed Property Transfer Tax Returns (PTTR) for large acre sales lying in his district and in parts of adjoining districts to include more pareels[,] including Essex, Caledonia, Orleans, [and] parts of Orange and Washington counties for two years prior to 1995. From that review he selected timberland parcels over 300 acres оr larger. He excluded any sale that appeared from the PTTR to be non-arm’s length and two parcels with extreme values, one very high and one very low.
c) Using a base of 8 sales, Beaulieu calculated the per acre price for each sale, totaled the per acre values and divided by 8 to arrive at an unweighted average. This method is also referred to as a parcel-weighted mean which gives each parcel in the sales base equal weight. This produced аn average per acre value of $328.
d) Beaulieu adjusted this average for land in the Victory Forest by applying two adjustment factors. He applied a .8 factor for location (a 20% reduction from the average property in his base properties) and a .8 factor for topography (20% reduction from the average property in his base properties). The location adjustment was made due to the relative remoteness of Victory Forest and the topography аdjustment was made due to the steepness and wetness of the land.
This methodology yielded an appraisal of $211.05 per acre for the forest land and $183.59 per acre for the basin land as the basis for the 1996 ANR-land PILOT payment.
¶ 4. To determine the 1997 PILOT payment, district advisor Steams Allen reviewed the value set by Beaulieu and recommended no
¶ 5. During the appeal, the Town attacked the PVR appraisal, but did not introduce its own alternative appraisal. The State, in opposition, introduced independent evidence that supported the valuation and argued that the Town failed to meet its burden of proof because it did not introduce its own appraisal. Both sides presented several witnesses. In its findings and order, the trial court reviewed in detail both the valuation determined in 1995 and the subsequent decisions to continue that valuation for the 1997-99 PILOT payments.
¶ 6. Before addressing the merits of the appeal, the court considered the applicable standаrd of review. Observing that the standard of review for an appeal in the context of the PILOT program is not set forth in § 3708, and that this Court has not spoken on this issue, the court considered arguments from both sides. The State and the Town both agreed that the most analogous process to a PILOT appeal is an appeal of a lister’s appraisal under 32 V.S.A. § 4467. Both parties were in accord that under § 4467 the trial court reviews the appraisal de novo; however, the Town further asserted that the PVR apрraisal is given no deference whatsoever. The State, in contrast, contended that although a § 4467 appeal is de novo, a presumption of validity and legality attaches to the lister’s work, and, therefore, to overturn the appraisal, the opponent must show that the valuation was either arbitrary and capricious or unlawful. The court accepted the State’s view, and applied the arbitrary and capricious standard.
¶ 7. Turning to the merits of the appeal, the trial court, although recognizing that there is a significant amount of “individual discretion and judgment involved in appraisal methodology,” rejected the 1999 appraisal. In reaching the conclusion that the 1999 appraisal was invalid, the court first addressed the 1995 Beaulieu appraisal. The court found this appraisal unreliable stating, “its ad hoe and essentially arbitrary nature reflects both the lack of any guiding standardized appraisal methodology or procedures on the part of PVR at that time, and an approach that relies primarily on vague general impressions rather than feasible empirical research and evaluation.”
¶ 9. After reviewing the Beaulieu appraisal, the court addressed the subsequent reviews conducted by the various district advisors. The court concluded that these reviews were fatally flawed. Specifically, the court found that in 1997 Allen’s review showed that he accepted the Beaulieu valuation “based upon general familiarity with the area” and had no knowledgе of the lack of a comparable basis in the comparable parcels. Similarly, Lay reviewed the Beaulieu appraisal, but conducted no independent inquiry into the valuation. In like manner, Westinghouse only reviewed Lay’s workfile and did not review the original appraisal. Also, Westinghouse was aware of two land transactions that he did not take into account when reviewing valuation for the 1999 PILOT payment. The first transaction, which was being finalized in
¶ 10. Given these findings, the court ruled that there was insufficient evidence to show that the valuation of the bаsin land was inaccurate, but concluded that the 1999 valuation of the Victory Forest land was invalid. The court explained it found the 1995 appraisal questionable and arbitrary. Additionally, it found the subsequent reviews insufficient and in contravention of § 3708(a)(1), which requires an “appraisal value for the current year.” Accordingly, the court found the valuation arbitrary and unlawful because it did not reflect the statutory mandate of § 3708. The court rejected the State’s argument that the Town failed to meet its burden becausе it did not introduce an independent appraisal and found that “sufficient evidence was elicited during the course of the hearing to establish a fair market value based on the testimony of the numerous witnesses, most of whom were or are involved in appraising timberland property.” The court then went on to arrive at its own valuation for the forest land.
¶ 11. In setting its own valuation, the court explained that it found two transactions highly relevant. The first was the 1995 acquisition by the Nature Conservancy of 2600 acres, 1100 of which are in the town of Victory. The land in this transfer was valued at $275 per acre. The second was the transfer in 1999 of approximately 15,000 acres to GMO Forestry at $247 per acre. The court noted that this second transaction was particularly relevant because it was an arm’s length transfer of a large tract of timberland that was similar in size and location to the forest land. Finding this second transaction highly persuasive, the court adopted this valuation and set the forest land value at $247 per acre.
¶ 12. While the court’s order explained in full detail the flaws in the 1995 valuation and its adoption in subsequent years, it did not address the additional evidence submitted by the State supporting the $211 per acre valuation. Accordingly, following the issuance of the order, the State moved pursuant to Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure 52(b) and 59(e) to amend the court’s findings and judgment. The State requested
¶ 13. The State argues that the trial court erred because: (1) it disregarded the additional evidence supporting the $211 valuation and based its decision primarily on perceived flaws in the Beaulieu valuation; (2) it did not accord any deference to the value set by the director of PVR; (3) it chose a value of $247 per acre based on a sale that occurred after the 1999 valuation date and ignored substantiаl evidence introduced by the State supporting a lower value; and (4) it failed to make findings of uncontested fact in its initial order and failed to amend its findings to incorporate those facts. The State has not appealed the court’s determination that the PVR valuation was arbitrary and capricious.
¶ 14. We conclude that this appeal is governed by our determination of the proper standard of review for appeals from PVR appraisals under § 3708, and do not reach the other issuеs raised by the State. As the trial court observed, § 3708 does not state the standard of review that the court must use when hearing a valuation appeal from PVR, and we have not addressed the issue. In essence, the superior court ruled that it could not uphold the PVR valuation under any standard of review and that it was required, therefore, to determine the proper valuation. We review the court’s interpretation of the law de novo. In re Beckstrom,
¶ 15. First, the Town contends that the superior court should review the director’s appraisal de novo, and then establish the property value bаsed on a preponderance of the evidence. The Town argues that de novo review is proper when there is neither an adjudicatory proceeding at the agency level, nor a definitive record of the admin
¶ 16. To preserve the appropriate separation of judicial and executive powers, we presume that judicial review of administrative decisions is deferential absent a clear statement of contrary intent. See Dep’t of Taxes v. Tri-State Indus. Laundries, Inc.,
¶ 17. We recognize that review on the record is more appropriate in contested cases where there has been an adjudication in the agency. See 3 V.S.A. § 801(b)(2) (defining “contested case” as a proceeding in which legal rights, privileges or duties are required to be determined by an agency “after an opportunity for hearing”). We havе held, however, that the presumption against de novo review also applies where there has been no hearing in the agency and the statute says only that review will occur “by appeal.” Conservation Law Found. v. Burke,
¶ 18. The second possibility is that the review standard should be the same as that for property tax appeals under 32 V.S.A. § 4467. Although the parties differ on what § 4467 review entails, each looks to this statute in part to support its position. As noted above, § 4467 calls for de novo review. We have held, however, that in such appeals the town appraisal is presumed valid until the taxpayer produces some evidence to the contrary. Littlefield v. Town of Brighton,
¶ 19. Using the § 4467 approach does have some advantages, as the appeal process undertaken in property taxation valuation disputes is familiar to courts, towns and the PVR, and the decision in dispute — a property valuation appraisal — would often be the same in both instances. In fact, this appears to be the standard the superior court
¶20. There are important differences, however, between appeals brought pursuant to §4467 and those taken under §3708. As our analysis of de novo review, supra, concludes, we are unwilling to adopt a form of de novo review without explicit statutory support. While § 4467 explicitly provides for de novo review, § 3708 does not. The Legislature could have included similar languаge in § 3708 — or referred to § 4467 — if it intended de novo review in this context. Further, a town official prepares the property tax appraisals that a citizen may challenge under § 4467, while a state agency appraises land for purposes of the PILOT program that the town then may appeal under §3708. This reversal of roles reflects the different purposes the two statutory schemes serve. Towns use property tax appraisals to determine the amount of tax a landowner owes, while the Stаte uses PILOT appraisals to calculate the benefit, see 32 V.S.A. § 3702 (describing payments under similar program for other state-owned property as “state grant in lieu of property taxes”), it will confer upon an affected town. Because the appraisals serve different purposes, it is understandable that the Legislature might intend the relevant appeals to proceed with different standards of review. Moreover, the Legislature may believe that the director of PVR has a different level of expertise in appraising real property than a local lister, and, therefore, is entitled to a more deferential review standard.
¶ 21. For the . above reasons, we conclude that the Legislature did not intend that § 3708 appeals be governed by the same standard and procedures that it established for § 4467 appeals. In particular, the statutory language is so different that a different standard of review must have been intended. See Town, of Killington v. State,
¶ 22. The third possibility is that the Legislature intended the superior court to treat § 3708 appeals just as it treats appeals from other administrative actions — that is, it should review the record and overturn the agency’s determination only if it finds it arbitrary and capricious. See, e.g., Burke,
¶ 28. We addressed a similar question in Burke, where the Conservation Law Foundation appealed ANR’s decision to grant a medical waste incinerator an air pollution control permit. Id. at 118-20,
¶ 24. Here, the superior court explicitly stated its intention to review the appraisаl for arbitrary and capricious action, found PVR’s valuation to be arbitrary or capricious, but then proceeded to establish a new property valuation based on its de novo evaluation of the evidence. Once the court determined that the State had acted arbitrarily and capriciously, because its methodology was fundamentally flawed, it should have remanded the matter back to PVR to determine the valuation anew after correcting the flaws the court found. See Burke,
The order affirming the valuation of the land in the Victory Basin is affirmed. The order setting the valuаtion of the land in Victory State Forest is vacated. The matter is remanded to the Director of Property Valuation and Review for redetermination of the appraisal of the land in Victory State Forest pursuant to 32 V.S.A. § 3708(a) and in light of the findings and conclusions of the Essex Superior Court with respect to the appraisal that was appealed.
Notes
There is another PILOT program for other state-owned property. 32 V.S.A §§ 3701-3707. It has a separate appeals statute. Id. § 3704(b).
The State also requested that the court make these findings in its post-trial request for findings.
Section 3708 states, in pertinent part: “The seleetboard of a town aggrieved by the appraisal of property by the division of property valuation and review under this section may ... appeal from that appraisal to the superior court of the district in which the property is situated.” 32 V.S.A. § 3708(d).
We further note that the Town itself did not treat this appeal as a trial de novo of the land’s value, because it failed to introduce evidence to support its own appraisal of the land’s value.
