Hilliard City Schools Board of Education v. Franklin County Board of Revision ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • [Cite as Hilliard City Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    139 Ohio St. 3d 1
    ,
    2014-Ohio-853.]
    HILLIARD CITY SCHOOLS BOARD OF EDUCATION, APPELLEE, v.
    FRANKLIN COUNTY BOARD OF REVISION ET AL., APPELLEES;
    U-STORE-IT, L.P., APPELLANT.
    SOUTH-WESTERN CITY SCHOOLS BOARD OF EDUCATION, APPELLEE, v.
    FRANKLIN COUNTY BOARD OF REVISION ET AL., APPELLEES;
    U-STORE-IT, L.P., APPELLANT.
    [Cite as Hilliard City Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision,
    
    139 Ohio St. 3d 1
    , 2014-Ohio-853.]
    Taxation—Arm’s-length sale—Sale price is presumed to establish value—
    Related-party disclosure negates arm’s-length character of a sale only if it
    demonstrates that the buyer and seller are aligned in a way that makes
    their motivations atypical of the market.
    (Nos. 2012-1015 and 2012-1016—Submitted October 22, 2013—Decided
    March 11, 2014.)
    APPEALS from the Board of Tax Appeals, Nos. 2009-A-1069,
    2009-A-1070, and 2009-A-1071.
    ____________________
    Per Curiam.
    {¶ 1} In these appeals, the owner of several self-storage facilities in
    Franklin County contests the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals (“BTA”),
    which adopted the 2006 sale prices as the value of those properties for the 2006
    tax year. All the properties at issue were acquired by U-Store-It, L.P., in a bulk
    purchase in 2006. U-Store-It raises the primary contention that the 2006 sale
    involved related parties and therefore could not qualify as an arm’s-length
    transaction for purposes of valuing the properties. U-Store-It also contends that
    the sale prices cannot be used because they include consideration paid for
    personal property as well as real property.
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 2} We hold that because the record contained affirmative evidence
    supporting the use of the stated sale prices as the value of the properties for tax-
    year 2006, and because U-Store-It failed to substantiate its claim that the sale
    prices should be allocated between real and personal property, the BTA did not
    act unreasonably or unlawfully in adopting the 2006 sale prices. We therefore
    affirm the decision of the BTA.
    Facts
    {¶ 3} We confront two appeals from two BTA decisions. Case No. 2012-
    1015 addresses the 2006 tax-year value of one self-storage facility located in the
    Hilliard City School District; case No. 2012-1016 addresses the 2006 tax-year
    value of two such facilities located in the South-Western City School District.1
    All three self-storage facilities were acquired by U-Store-It in the same
    transaction, and the issue of their value turns on the resolution of the same legal
    and factual questions. The appeals were consolidated for argument before the
    master commissioner, and we now dispose of them with a single decision.
    A. The properties at issue were all sold to Jernigan Property Group in 2005,
    then sold by Jernigan to U-Store-It in 2006
    {¶ 4} Twice in a little over a year, the properties at issue were transferred.
    The first sale occurred in April 2005, in which Jernigan Property Group
    purchased several facilities; the second sale occurred in August 2006, in which
    Jernigan Property Group sold nine properties to U-Store-It for more than $44
    million. Both times, the sale contracts separately set forth the consideration for
    each property, and the 2006 sale prices as allocated by the contract were reported
    as the sale price on the conveyance-fee statements.
    1. The BTA specifically found that the 2006 value should be carried forward to tax-years 2007 and
    2008 as to all of the properties at issue. U-Store-It does not separately challenge the carry-forward
    apart from contesting the use of the sale prices for the 2006 tax year. Accordingly, our affirmance
    of the BTA’s disposition for tax-year 2006 extends to 2007 and 2008 as well.
    2
    January Term, 2014
    {¶ 5} The Hilliard City Schools Board of Education and the South-
    Western City Schools Board of Education (“school boards” or “school board”)
    filed complaints in relation to the properties located in their respective districts.
    Another self-storage facility that was part of the 2006 sale is located in the
    Reynoldsburg City School District, and the BTA’s decision in that case was also
    appealed to this court. That case has settled, however. 
    134 Ohio St. 3d 1477
    ,
    2013-Ohio-770, 
    984 N.E.2d 22
    .              Nevertheless, the record of that case was
    incorporated into the records of the cases before us, and we will consult the
    evidence in that record in reviewing the BTA’s decisions.
    {¶ 6} The school boards’ complaints asked that the 2006 sale prices be
    applied to the individual properties for the 2006 tax year. The Franklin County
    Board of Revision (“BOR”) determined that the 2006 sale did not qualify as an
    arm’s-length transaction and therefore adopted the 2005 sale prices for tax-year
    2006 instead. The BTA reversed and adopted the 2006 sale prices as the 2006
    property values.
    {¶ 7} Below is a chart showing the values assigned to the properties at
    issue here for tax-year 2006, in these proceedings:
    Supreme Address    School                    Auditor   BOR value               BTA value
    Court              District                            (2005 sale              (2006 sale
    Case No.                                               price)                  price)
    2012-    5252 Nike Hilliard                  3,500,000 4,298,500               4,700,0002
    1015     Road
    2012-         5411 W.        South-          2,760,00       2,715,000          4,350,000
    1016          Broad          Western
    2012-         3300      South-               3,500,000 4,483,500               6,200,000
    1016          Southwest Western
    Blvd.
    2. With respect to the BTA’s 2006 value for the Nike Road property, the contract quoted $4.8
    million as the sale price, but the conveyance-fee statement quoted $4.7 million as the sale price.
    The BTA adopted the latter as the value of the property.
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    B. What the evidence shows
    1. Evidence pertaining to the arm’s-length character of the 2006 sale
    {¶ 8} At the November 26, 2007 BOR hearings, U-Store-It’s counsel
    introduced both testimony and documents. The documents included the purchase
    agreements for the 2005 sale to Jernigan Property Group and the 2006 sale by
    Jernigan Property Group to U-Store-It, along with closing statements and a copy
    of a Form 10-Q filed by U-Store-It.
    {¶ 9} The Form 10-Q, a filing with the Securities and Exchange
    Commission (“SEC”) required of U-Store-It Trust as a publicly traded entity
    listed on the New York Stock Exchange, disclosed that the 2006 sale was in a
    certain respect a “related-party” transaction. The disclosure points out that the
    sale contract was entered into between Jernigan Property Group as seller and U-
    Store-It as buyer on April 3, 2006. Dean Jernigan, who was president of Jernigan
    Property Group and held “a 20% beneficial interest in one self-storage facility
    partially owned by Jernigan Property Group and related companies and
    partnerships,” was appointed president and chief executive officer (“CEO”) of U-
    Store-It Trust on April 24, 2006. The transaction “was subject to review and final
    approval by a majority of the independent members of the Company’s Board of
    Trustees.”   The 10-Q further noted that “Mr. Jernigan has discontinued all
    involvement in the day-to-day management or operation of the Jernigan Property
    Group.”
    {¶ 10} U-Store-It relies on the Form 10-Q as establishing that the 2006
    sale was not at arm’s length, because it was a related-party transaction for SEC
    reporting purposes.
    {¶ 11} Kathleen Weigand, executive vice-president, general counsel, and
    secretary of U-Store-It Trust, testified. She reiterated the points made in the 10-Q
    and emphasized the importance of a noncompete clause in the 2006 sale
    agreement, to which Jernigan personally was made a party.
    4
    January Term, 2014
    {¶ 12} In her testimony, Weigand fleshed out the disclosure of the related-
    party transaction. Weigand added that Jernigan “had an interest” in the Jernigan
    Property Group, L.L.C. But notable by its absence is any testimony—or any
    statement in the Form 10-Q itself—that (1) Jernigan had previously owned or
    acquired an interest in U-Store-It Trust or that (2) Jernigan Property Group and U-
    Store-It were in any other respect under common ownership.
    2. Evidence relating to the value of the properties
    {¶ 13} Weigand also testified that in conjunction with the 2006 purchase,
    U-Store-It did not commission outside appraisals, but did perform underwriting
    in-house, “placing a value on the properties based on net operating income,”
    including developing a cap rate and taking into account vacancy loss and cash
    flow from rents. This in-house underwriting was the basis for the per-property
    allocated purchase price for each parcel set forth in the 2006 sale.
    {¶ 14} Weigand’s testimony describes, in essence, an income approach,
    performed by U-Store-It itself, from which the sale prices for the individual
    properties were developed. That process also helped persuade the independent
    trustees of U-Store-It Trust that the deal was fair in the context of Dean Jernigan
    profiting from the trust’s purchase while contemporaneously being hired as the
    trust’s new CEO.
    {¶ 15} U-Store-It has also advanced an argument that the sale prices of the
    facilities at issue include personal property as well as realty. The 2006 sale refers
    to tangible personal property to be conveyed along with the realty. Attached to
    the 2006 sale contract is a bill of sale for the personal property, with an extensive
    list of personalty appended. But the bill of sale contains no indication of the cost
    or value of any individual items of personal property, nor does the sale contract
    elsewhere set forth an allocation to personalty. The same can be said of the other
    separately identified item of personal property: the intangible covenant not to
    compete.
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    C. Determinations by the BOR and the BTA
    {¶ 16} On May 4, 2009, in the Reynoldsburg case, the BOR eliminated the
    2006 sale as an arm’s-length transaction. Accordingly, the BOR ordered that the
    2005 sale prices be adopted as the value of the properties for tax-years 2005 and
    2006.
    {¶ 17} In the present cases, which involve the properties in the Hilliard
    and South-Western school districts, the record contains no deliberation of the
    BOR, but the determinations issued likewise adopted the 2005 sale prices for tax-
    year 2006.
    {¶ 18} The school boards appealed to the BTA, advocating adoption of the
    2006 sale prices. The BTA issued its decisions in these cases on May 15, 2012.
    The decision in the South-Western City Schools’ case was the lead decision, and
    the decision in the Hilliard City Schools’ case adopted the reasoning of the lead
    decision.
    {¶ 19} The BTA presumed the validity of the 2006 sale price for the value
    of the properties for tax-year 2006. South-Western City Schools Bd. of Edn. v.
    Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, BTA Nos. 2009-A-1070 and 2009-A-1071, 
    2012 WL 1869990
    , *3 (May 15, 2012). The BTA summarized U-Store-It’s objections
    as follows: “[T]he sale in question does not qualify as an arm’s-length transaction
    because it was a bulk sale with allocated prices among many properties between
    related parties and the sale included items other than real property.” 
    Id. {¶ 20}
    With respect to the bulk-sale allocation issues, the BTA relied on
    FirstCal Indus. 2 Acquisitions, L.L.C. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, 125 Ohio
    St.3d 485, 2010-Ohio-1921, 
    929 N.E.2d 426
    , to conclude that U-Store-It bore the
    burden to show that the sale prices reported on the conveyance-fee statements did
    not reflect true value.    South-Western City Schools Bd. of Edn., 
    2012 WL 1869990
    , at *3-4. According to the BTA, “[t]he property owner has provided no
    evidence or testimony with regard to the subject sale to demonstrate why the sale
    6
    January Term, 2014
    prices, as allocated to each property and set forth on the subject conveyance fee
    statements, are not reflective of the subjects’ true values.” 
    Id., *4. With
    respect
    to the nonrealty items in the sale, the BTA found that nothing in the record
    indicated that “the allocated bulk sale price was not indicative of market value”
    and concluded that “the price paid by the property owner for the subject
    properties represents the true value of the properties for tax year 2006.” 
    Id., *6. {¶
    21} With respect to the related-party issue, the BTA found that
    Jernigan’s “relationship to the seller was limited in scope, constituting a minimal
    interest in one of the nine storage facilities purchased.” 
    Id., *5. Also
    significant
    were the facts that “the sales contract in question was entered into on April 3,
    2006, prior to Mr. Jernigan beginning his tenure with the buyer on April 24,
    2006” and that “the sale transaction was reviewed and approved by a majority of
    the independent members of the buyer’s board of trustees.” 
    Id. Given these
    circumstances, the BTA found that Jernigan’s role did not “compromise[ ] the
    arm’s-length nature of the sale transaction under consideration.” 
    Id. Additionally, the
    BTA noted that there was no dispute that the 2006 sale was closer to the lien
    date than the 2005 sale.
    {¶ 22} Accordingly, the BTA reversed the BOR’s decision and adopted
    the 2006 sale prices as the value of the properties for tax-years 2006, 2007, and
    2008.
    Analysis
    A. The BTA’s explicit findings may be reviewed on appeal
    {¶ 23} The school boards argue that U-Store-It has waived all of the
    arguments it advances in these appeals, because U-Store-It’s brief at the BTA
    consisted of a single paragraph that did not advance specific arguments. Despite
    the brevity of U-Store-It’s submission at the BTA, the BTA considered the issues
    raised before the BOR: whether the aggregate sale price was properly allocated
    among the real estate parcels; whether the sale, as a “related-party transaction,”
    7
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    qualified as an arm’s-length transaction under R.C. 5713.03; and whether the sale
    price would have to be allocated among real-estate and nonrealty assets in the
    sale. On appeal, U-Store-It’s briefs challenge the BTA decisions on these points.
    {¶ 24} We conclude that the doctrine of waiver is inapplicable. Because
    the BTA explicitly addressed and resolved the issues raised in U-Store-It’s
    propositions of law, those propositions are properly before this court.
    {¶ 25} The case the school board relies on, The Chapel v. Testa, 129 Ohio
    St.3d 21, 2011-Ohio-545, 
    950 N.E.2d 142
    , differs in precisely this respect from
    the present case. In that case, the BTA made no mention of the timing issue
    raised by the tax commissioner on appeal to this court. That the BTA failed to
    address the issue was not surprising: the commissioner had not raised the issue
    below.
    {¶ 26} By stark contrast, these appeals contest actual findings of the BTA.
    We have jurisdiction under R.C. 5717.04 to review the BTA decisions in light of
    the “errors complained of” in the BTA decision, and we will proceed to exercise
    that jurisdiction under these circumstances.
    B. The record supports rather than rebuts the adoption
    of the stated prices as property values
    {¶ 27} The BTA relied on case law to place the burden on U-Store-It to
    show that the amounts reported on the conveyance-fee statements as consideration
    for the realty did not equate to the value of the property. Both with respect to the
    arm’s-length-transaction issue and the allocation issues, that was correct.
    {¶ 28} Typically, a board of education makes a prima facie showing of
    value by presenting the conveyance-fee statement showing the sale and the price.
    See Worthington City Schools Bd. of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    124 Ohio St. 3d 27
    , 2009-Ohio-5932, 
    918 N.E.2d 972
    , ¶ 28-29 (when a school board
    has presented a deed and a conveyance-fee statement, rebuttal of the sale price
    “ ‘lies in challenging whether the elements of recency and arm’s-length character
    8
    January Term, 2014
    between a willing seller and a willing buyer are genuinely present for that
    particular sale’ ”), quoting Cummins Property Servs., L.L.C. v. Franklin Cty. Bd.
    of Revision, 
    117 Ohio St. 3d 516
    , 2008-Ohio-1473, 
    885 N.E.2d 222
    , ¶ 13.
    Moreover, this court has held that when a sale price has been reported on the
    conveyance-fee statement, the party opposing the use of that price typically bears
    the burden of showing that the reported price is not the proper value. FirstCal,
    
    125 Ohio St. 3d 485
    , 2010-Ohio-1921, 
    929 N.E.2d 426
    , ¶ 25.
    {¶ 29} U-Store-It maintains that it succeeded in rebutting the 2006 sale
    prices by showing that (1) the 2006 sale was a related-party transaction, thereby
    failing to qualify as an arm’s-length transaction, and (2) the sale included personal
    property as well as real property, without allocating a value between the different
    kinds of property. We now examine these contentions in detail.
    1. The related-party disclosure in Form 10-Q did not rebut
    the propriety of using the sale prices as property values
    {¶ 30} U-Store-It claims that the 2006 sale prices cannot be used to value
    the properties because that year’s sale was not at arm’s length.3 To determine the
    validity of this contention, it is essential to explain why a relationship of the
    parties may prevent a sale from indicating the market value of the property.
    {¶ 31} Both the appraisal literature and the case law define “market value”
    in part in terms of whether the buyer and the seller act as “typically motivated
    market participants” who are acting “in their own self-interest.”                         See, e.g.,
    Internatl. Assn. of Assessing Officers, Property Assessment Valuation 17-19 (2d
    Ed.1996) (quoting the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice
    definition that calls for a buyer and a seller to be “typically motivated” and to be
    3. In U-Store-It’s view, the related-party disclosure is dispositive and establishes that the 2006 sale
    prices cannot establish the property values. A weak form of this argument might contend merely
    that a burden should be placed on the school board to show that the sale prices ought to be used.
    But because the record furnishes an affirmative basis for adopting the sale prices as the property
    9
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    “acting in what they consider their best interests,” 
    id. at 18);
    American Institute of
    Real Estate Appraisers (now the Appraisal Institute), The Dictionary of Real
    Estate Appraisal 194-195 (1984) (definition of “market value” calling for the
    buyer and seller to be “motivated by self-interest”); Appraisal Institute, The
    Appraisal of Real Estate 22-25 (13th Ed.2008) (quoting various definitions of
    market value to the same effect); N. Royalton City School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v.
    Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    129 Ohio St. 3d 172
    , 2011-Ohio-3092, 
    950 N.E.2d 955
    , ¶ 33 (“one primary characteristic of an arm’s-length sale is that the parties
    act in their own self-interest”); AEI Net Lease Income & Growth Fund v. Erie Cty.
    Bd. of Revision, 
    119 Ohio St. 3d 563
    , 2008-Ohio-5203, 
    895 N.E.2d 830
    , ¶ 25 (a
    “typically motivated” transaction is one in which the buyer and seller are pursuing
    their own financial interests), citing Cummins Property Servs., L.L.C. v. Franklin
    Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    117 Ohio St. 3d 516
    , 2008-Ohio-1473, 
    885 N.E.2d 222
    , ¶ 31,
    and Rhodes v. Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    117 Ohio St. 3d 532
    , 2008-Ohio-
    1595, 
    885 N.E.2d 236
    , ¶ 10. It follows that the inquiry into whether “the parties
    to a sale are related bears on whether they are self-interested for purposes of R.C.
    5713.03.” N. Royalton, ¶ 33.
    {¶ 32} In N. Royalton, we further explained that the related-party inquiry
    is important “because related parties may be pursuing the identical interest of
    common owners rather than acting as separately interested, typically motivated
    actors in the marketplace.” 
    Id. {¶ 33}
    The classic related-party situation arises when the interests of the
    seller and the buyer are aligned (atypically for the market) by their being under
    common ownership. For example, in Shiloh Automotive, Inc. v. Levin, 117 Ohio
    St.3d 4, 2008-Ohio-68, 
    881 N.E.2d 227
    , a sale was arranged between MTD
    Products, Inc., as the seller and Shiloh Industries, Inc., as the purchaser. MTD
    values, we need not decide and do not reach the question whether U-Store-It’s referring to the
    Form 10-Q placed a burden of going forward on the school board.
    10
    January Term, 2014
    owned a 37 percent interest in Shiloh at the outset; during the negotiation of the
    contract, MTD increased its ownership in Shiloh to majority status: the seller thus
    owned 51 percent of the buyer. 
    Id. at ¶
    8-9. We affirmed the BTA’s conclusion
    that the sale could not be regarded as an arm’s-length transaction that furnished
    the value of the personal-property assets, because of the “collective, mutual
    interests” of the parties. 
    Id. at ¶
    30.
    {¶ 34} We have acknowledged that another type of relationship between
    the parties may defeat the arm’s-length character of the sale. If the sale of
    property constitutes one element of a larger contractual relationship, the existence
    of those other contractual provisions may create motivations for the seller and the
    buyer that are atypical of the market as a whole. See Cummins, 
    117 Ohio St. 3d 516
    , 2008-Ohio-1473, 
    885 N.E.2d 222
    , ¶ 30, fn. 4; S. Euclid/Lyndhurst Bd. of
    Edn. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    74 Ohio St. 3d 314
    , 317, 
    658 N.E.2d 750
    (1996) (in a sale-leaseback situation, “a willing buyer would pay less for property
    if the leaseback arrangement limited the amount of rent the buyer could collect”).
    {¶ 35} Because it does not establish an alignment of interest or other
    motivations atypical of the market, U-Store-It’s statement in the Form 10-Q that
    the parties are related fails to rebut the presumptive arm’s-length character of the
    2006 sale.
    {¶ 36} The disclosure in the Form 10-Q does not intimate any common
    ownership of Jernigan Property Group and U-Store-It. To be sure, the disclosure
    does state that Jernigan personally had an ownership interest in one of the
    properties transferred, but there is no indication that Jernigan owned a share of U-
    Store-It as of the time of sale, or that the seller and buyer were otherwise under
    common ownership.
    {¶ 37} Moreover, the Form 10-Q disclosure shows that in spite of Jernigan
    being hired by U-Store-It in conjunction with the sale, he did not exercise control
    over the sale itself. First, the contract was signed on April 3, before Jernigan
    11
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    assumed his position with the buyer on April 24. Second, the sale was approved
    by the independent trustees of U-Store-It.        Thus, even as the Form 10-Q
    disclosure raises concerns about common ownership, it dispels them.
    {¶ 38} U-Store-It refers to Financial Accounting Standards (“FAS”) No.
    57, Related Party Disclosures, created by the Financial Accounting Foundation, as
    well as to a publication of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
    that discusses FAS No. 57 to support its argument. U-Store-It argues that the very
    fact that a related-party disclosure is required under accounting principles means
    that the sale cannot be regarded as presumptively arm’s length for tax valuation
    purposes. But a review of the accounting standard shows that that conclusion is
    not justified. The accounting standard states that “[t]ransactions involving related
    parties cannot be presumed to be carried out on an arm’s-length basis,” because
    “free-market dealings may not exist.” (Emphasis added.) But the standard also
    acknowledges that particular circumstances may be shown that substantiate the
    arm’s-length character of the transaction. Accordingly, FAS No. 57 does not,
    contrary to U-Store-It’s assertions, establish that a related-party transaction is
    necessarily one that is not at arm’s length.
    {¶ 39} The accounting standards call for disclosure in order to put
    investors on notice of circumstances material to evaluating the sale and to permit
    further inquiry into those circumstances.       But it is not the requirement of
    disclosure that disqualifies a sale as arm’s length; rather, it is the content of that
    disclosure. A related-party disclosure negates the arm’s-length character of the
    sale if and only if it demonstrates that the interests of the seller and the buyer are
    aligned in a way that makes their motivations atypical of the market in general.
    Because in this case the Form 10-Q disclosure did not unequivocally establish an
    alignment of interests between Jernigan Property Group and U-Store-It, and
    because Weigand’s testimony furnished an affirmative basis for relying on the
    12
    January Term, 2014
    allocated sale prices, the BTA could reasonably and lawfully decide to adopt the
    2006 prices as the property values.
    2. U-Store-It failed to demonstrate that the sale prices were misallocated or that
    they included amounts attributable to the purchase of personal property
    {¶ 40} U-Store-It’s second proposition of law states that the BTA decision
    is unreasonable and unlawful because the board made “no inquiry as to [the] basis
    for the allocation of the purchase price.” We disagree.
    {¶ 41} The BTA adopted sale prices that were fully allocated under the
    sale contract and reported as the consideration for the realty on the conveyance-
    fee statements.   Under FirstCal, 
    125 Ohio St. 3d 485
    , 2010-Ohio-1921, 
    929 N.E.2d 426
    , ¶ 22-25, the burden lay squarely on U-Store-It to prove an allocation
    that would reduce the value of the property. See also Bedford Bd. of Edn. v.
    Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    132 Ohio St. 3d 371
    , 2012-Ohio-2844, 
    972 N.E.2d 559
    , ¶ 22. U-Store-It did not discharge that burden.
    {¶ 42} As for reallocation of the total sale price among the parcels,
    Weigand’s testimony strongly contravened the theory that the reported sale prices
    were misallocated. As for an allocation of part of the total sale price to personal
    property, U-Store-It’s burden was to present “corroborating indicia” in support of
    such an allocation. Sapina v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    136 Ohio St. 3d 188
    ,
    2013-Ohio-3028, 
    992 N.E.2d 1117
    , ¶ 18. If the in-house underwriting at U-Store-
    It took the value of personal property into account, that fact should have become
    clear through U-Store-It’s evidence. But the testimony offered by U-Store-It did
    not indicate that the sale prices separately took personal-property value into
    account.
    {¶ 43} U-Store-It relies on the bare fact that a considerable amount of
    tangible personal property, plus the intangible asset of the noncompete clause,
    transferred along with the real estate. But it was not unreasonable on this record
    for the BTA to conclude that in the context of an aggregate $44 million purchase
    13
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    of self-storage facilities, the parties did not contemplate attaching any separate
    value to the personal property.
    {¶ 44} U-Store-It cites Consol. Aluminum Corp. v. Monroe Cty. Bd. of
    Revision, 
    66 Ohio St. 2d 410
    , 
    423 N.E.2d 75
    (1981), for the proposition that the
    BTA had a duty to inquire into the allocation of the sale prices. That citation is
    unavailing, because the evidence in the present case, unlike the record in Consol.
    Aluminum, affirmatively shows the propriety of allocating the entire sale price to
    the realty.
    {¶ 45} Moreover, Consol. Aluminum involved a purchase of an entire
    aluminum division, consisting of realty and personalty used in a manufacturing
    business. By contrast, self-storage is a real-estate business: it involves leasing
    the use of real property, much as apartment buildings and hotels do. It follows
    that the income approach performed by U-Store-It’s in-house underwriting likely
    arrived at a figure reflecting an overwhelming predominance of real-property
    value. See St. Bernard Self-Storage, 
    115 Ohio St. 3d 365
    , 2007-Ohio-5249, 
    875 N.E.2d 85
    , ¶ 24 (“The income generated by that [self-storage] business derives
    from St. Bernard’s granting the right to use space, either outdoors or within the
    buildings,” and therefore “[a]s a matter of pure logic, rent revenue relates to such
    rights and privileges [appertaining to the land and improvements]”), and Dublin
    Senior Community Ltd. Partnership v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, 80 Ohio
    St.3d 455, 460, 
    687 N.E.2d 426
    (1997) (in a senior living facility, rent for an
    apartment could properly be taken into account when valuing realty, as opposed
    to charges for food service and housekeeping, which constituted nonrealty
    business revenue); compare LTC Properties, Inc. v. Licking Cty. Bd. of Revision,
    
    133 Ohio St. 3d 111
    , 2012-Ohio-3930, 
    976 N.E.2d 852
    , ¶ 20-22 (noting that under
    the income approach to valuing congregate care facilities, the income earned by a
    comparable facility was too closely tied to operating the business of eldercare to
    be indicative of the value of the real property); accord Hilliard City Schools Bd.
    14
    January Term, 2014
    of Edn. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    128 Ohio St. 3d 565
    , 2011-Ohio-2258,
    
    949 N.E.2d 1
    , ¶ 33 (because most of the income earned by a hotel was from the
    rental of space, the court rejected an allocation to goodwill as an asset separable
    from the realty).
    3. The BTA’s determination of value was supported
    by reliable and probative evidence
    {¶ 46} Ultimately, U-Store-It’s arguments fail because the record in this
    case affirmatively establishes a basis for relying on the 2006 sale prices as the
    value of the realty. Namely, the underwriting performed by U-Store-It “plac[ed] a
    value on the properties based on net operating income”: the staff developed a
    capitalization rate and took into account vacancy loss and cash flow from rents.
    In this manner, the staff determined what a reasonable investor would pay for the
    properties in order to obtain the income that the properties generate. That in-
    house valuation was the basis for the purchase prices allocated for each parcel set
    forth in the 2006 sale contract.
    {¶ 47} We will accept a contractual allocation of sale price to individual
    properties when “other indicia on the face of the contract, the circumstances
    attending the allocation, or some other independent evidence establishes the
    propriety of the allocation.” St. Bernard Self-Storage, L.L.C. v. Hamilton Cty. Bd.
    of Revision, 
    115 Ohio St. 3d 365
    , 2007-Ohio-5249, 
    875 N.E.2d 85
    , ¶ 19.
    Weigand’s testimony in the context of the present case furnishes specific
    “circumstances attending the allocation”: the sale prices in the contract resulted
    from an income-approach valuation of the properties at issue conducted in-house
    by the purchaser. That testimony thereby furnishes direct support for the BTA’s
    decision to adopt the sale prices as the value of the individual properties.
    {¶ 48} As we have often acknowledged, “ ‘[t]he fair market value of
    property for tax purposes is a question of fact, the determination of which is
    primarily within the province of the taxing authorities, and this court will not
    15
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    disturb a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals unless it affirmatively appears
    from the record that such decision is unreasonable or unlawful.’ ” EOP-BP
    Tower, L.L.C. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    106 Ohio St. 3d 1
    , 2005-Ohio-
    3096, 
    829 N.E.2d 686
    , ¶ 17, quoting Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision v. Fodor, 
    15 Ohio St. 2d 52
    , 
    239 N.E.2d 25
    (1968), syllabus.         In light of the foregoing
    discussion, it cannot be said that the record lacks support for the BTA’s
    conclusion, much less that there is “a total absence of evidence to support” its
    findings. See HealthSouth Corp. v. Testa, 
    132 Ohio St. 3d 55
    , 2012-Ohio-1871,
    
    969 N.E.2d 232
    , ¶ 14. Accordingly, because “ ‘the record contains reliable and
    probative support’ ” for the BTA’s decision, we will affirm it. Satullo v. Wilkins,
    
    111 Ohio St. 3d 399
    , 2006-Ohio-5856, 
    856 N.E.2d 954
    , ¶ 14, quoting Am. Natl.
    Can Co. v. Tracy, 
    72 Ohio St. 3d 150
    , 152, 
    648 N.E.2d 483
    (1995).
    Conclusion
    {¶ 49} For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the BTA acted
    reasonably and lawfully in adopting the 2006 sale prices as the value of the
    properties at issue. We therefore affirm the decisions of the BTA.
    Decisions affirmed.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., and PFEIFER, LANZINGER, KENNEDY, FRENCH, and
    O’NEILL, JJ., concur.
    O’DONNELL, J., dissents and would reverse the decisions of the BTA.
    ____________________
    Rich & Gillis Law Group, L.L.C., Kelley A. Gorry, Mark H. Gillis, and
    Jeffrey H. Rich, for appellees Hilliard City Schools Board of Education and
    South-Western City Schools Board of Education.
    Sleggs, Danzinger & Gill Co., L.P.A., Steven R. Gill, and Todd W.
    Sleggs, for appellant.
    _________________________
    16