Westfall Hospitality Holding, LLC v. Pike County Board of Assessment Appeals ( 2016 )


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  •             IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Westfall Hospitality Holding, LLC,        :
    Appellant              :
    :
    v.                          : No. 1865 C.D. 2014
    : Argued: December 10, 2015
    Pike County Board of Assessment           :
    Appeals                                   :
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, President Judge1
    HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge2
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    PRESIDENT JUDGE PELLEGRINI                                FILED: January 6, 2016
    Westfall Hospitality Holding, LLC (Westfall) appeals the order of the
    Pike County Court of Common Pleas (trial court) that determined the fair market
    value and the assessed value of its property for the years 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012,
    2013 and 2014. At issue in this case is whether the trial court erred by accepting the
    Delaware Valley School District (School District) expert’s opinion of value over that
    of Westfall’s expert, largely based on its analysis of the comparable sales used by
    each expert. Discerning no error, we affirm.
    1
    This matter was assigned to this panel before January 1, 2016, when President Judge
    Pellegrini assumed the status of senior judge.
    2
    This case was assigned to the opinion writer before January 4, 2016, when Judge Leavitt
    became President Judge.
    I.
    A.
    Westfall is a limited liability corporation registered in New York with a
    Pennsylvania office in Matamoras Borough (Borough), Pike County (County).3
    Westfall owns a 2.54-acre property in the Borough on which it constructed a 98-
    room, 59,901 square foot Hampton Inn Hotel in 2009. The property is accessible
    from both Interstate 84 and Route 6, and it shares a drive with the neighboring Best
    Western Hotel. The purchase of the land, the construction of the building and the
    installation of its facilities, including an indoor salt water pool, cost approximately
    $7,000,000.
    In 2009, the County’s Assessment Office (Assessment Office)
    determined the property’s assessed value at $985,610 based on the predetermined
    25% of the 1994 base year fair market value of $3,942,400. The Assessment Office
    converted the base year value to reflect an estimate for 2009 by dividing the assessed
    value by the decimal equivalent of the common level ratio (CLR) computed annually
    by the State Tax Equalization Board. Because the 2009 CLR was 17.1, the estimated
    2009 market value was estimated to be $5,763,801 (the $985,610 assessed value
    divided by .171).
    The County’s Board of Assessment Appeals (Board) denied Westfall’s
    appeal and Westfall appealed the Board’s determination to the trial court. The School
    District intervened.
    3
    Pike County is a Sixth Class County. 121 The Pennsylvania Manual 6-11 (2013).
    2
    B.
    Before the trial court, Westfall presented the testimony and report of
    appraiser Joseph Fisher (Fisher).            Fisher used the sales comparison approach to
    valuation4 and selected three properties in northeast Pennsylvania as comparable
    4
    As the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has explained:
    The General Assembly and this Court have set forth the
    foundational principles for the determination of the fair market value
    of property for tax assessment purposes. A property is to be assessed
    at its actual value. 53 Pa. C.S. §8842…. Actual value means a
    parcel’s fair market value, which is “the price which a purchaser,
    willing but not obliged to buy, would pay an owner, willing but not
    obliged to sell, taking into consideration all uses to which the property
    is adapted and might in reason be applied.” The “actual or fair market
    value, while not easily ascertained, is fixed by the opinions of
    competent witnesses as to what the property is worth on the market at
    a fair sale.” In this regard, a parcel’s market value is distinct from its
    value as it is currently being used; and while this Court has not
    definitively so held, the Commonwealth Court has reasoned that a
    property’s use and its resulting value-in-use (value unique to a
    particular owner) is not to be considered in assessing the fair market
    value of property for tax assessment purposes. In assessing actual
    value, the legislature has required three approaches (1) cost
    reproduction, or replacement, as applicable, less depreciation and all
    forms of obsolescence; (2) comparable sales; and (3) income
    approach, and all three approaches to valuation must be considered in
    conjunction with one another.
    Harley-Davidson Motor Company v. Springettsbury Township, 
    124 A.3d 270
    , 279 (Pa. 2015)
    (citations and footnotes omitted). See also Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. Montgomery County Board
    of Assessment Appeals, 
    111 A.3d 267
    , 278 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (“The cost approach considers
    reproduction or replacement costs of the property, less depreciation and obsolescence. The income
    approach determines fair market value by dividing the subject property’s annual net rental income
    by an investment rate of return. The comparable sales approach compares the subject property to
    similar properties with consideration given to size, age, physical condition, location and other
    factors. Significantly, ‘[t]he trial court has the discretion to decide which of the methods of
    valuation is the most appropriate and applicable to the given property.’’) (citations omitted).
    3
    properties. The first comparable property was a Quality Inn and Suites in Mount
    Pocono Borough, Monroe County, which sold for $5,031,000, excluding furniture,
    fixtures and equipment (FF&E) in January 2008. Fisher made a 10% adjustment to
    take out the FF&E; a 20% adjustment because it is located in Mount Pocono, a
    popular tourist area; a 10% adjustment due to superior access compared to access to
    Westfall’s property; a 10% adjustment based on the superior rooms; and deducted 5%
    due to 16 fewer guest rooms than the subject property. Fisher’s total adjustment to
    this comparable was $35,000, his appraised value was $4,190,000, with a per room
    value of $42,805.
    Fisher’s second comparable property was another Hampton Inn in
    Sugarloaf Township, Luzerne County, at the intersections of Interstate 81 and Route
    93, which sold for $6,100,000 in April 2006. He made a 10% adjustment due to its
    inferior location; a 10% adjustment for 25 more rooms; a 10% adjustment for
    superior rooms; a 5% adjustment for superior access; a 5% adjustment for land-to-
    building ratio; and an adjustment for FF&E. Fisher’s appraised value for the second
    comparable was $4,370,000, with a per room value of $44,635.
    Fisher’s third comparable was a Fairfield Inn and Suites in Sugarloaf
    Township, Luzerne County, which sold for $4,370,000 in April 2006. Fisher made
    upward adjustments of 10% each due to an inferior location and a larger gross
    building area, but he made downward adjustments for superior access, superior
    accommodations and FF&E.        He valued the property at $3,850,000 after the
    adjustments with a per room value of $39,333. Based on the foregoing comparables
    and based upon the sales comparison approach, Fisher valued the instant property at
    4
    $3,920,000, with a per room value of $40,000 which is $65.44 per square foot of
    gross building area.
    Fisher also used the income capitalization approach to valuation. He
    used the actual occupancy/vacancy rate for the property for November 2009,
    46%/54%, and an 80% vacancy rate for the meeting rooms.                       He also used the
    expenses from the property’s books for the year after opening and determined that the
    property had a net operating income of $540,157.                  He ultimately arrived at a
    valuation of $4,100,000 for the property or $41,837 per guest room, and $68.45 per
    square foot of gross building area after the FF&E was deducted from his calculations.
    However, he explained that “[t]his approach is given secondary weight in this
    analysis and provides support for the value indicated by the sales comparison
    approach.” (Reproduced Record (RR) at 429a).5
    The School District presented the testimony and report of appraiser
    Robert Henkelman (Henkelman). Henkelman used nine comparable properties in
    determining his valuation under the sales comparison approach. Henkelman’s first
    comparable is a 120-room Hampton Inn in Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, that sold
    5
    Fisher also used the cost approach to valuation which he indicated is most relevant when a
    property is new or nearly new and has minimal accrued depreciation. He used the Marshall & Swift
    Valuation Service, a “nationally recognized” source in appraisal practice to try to calculate the
    reproduction or replacement cost of any given building. (RR at 35a). He stated that the average
    and median selling prices for commercial properties in Pike County for the period January 2005 to
    October 2008 was $184.65 and $135.64, respectively, and that the average and median size of the
    buildings were 3,972 and 3,215 feet, respectively. (Id. at 429a). He opined that the sales
    comparison and income approaches support his final valuation of $4,000,000 or $66.78 per square
    foot of gross building area or $40,816 per guest room. (Id.).
    5
    in May 2008, the same month as the instant property, for $6,600,000 without FF&E.
    This comparable was 20 years old at the time of sale, and while it is near Interstate
    81, it is not visible and it is “on a very difficult site,” “four miles away off Route 115
    tucked behind an office building” and is subject to a number of easements. He
    calculated an adjusted unit rate of price of $66,000 per room.
    Henkelman’s second comparable is a 78-room Hampton Inn in Franklin
    Township, Carbon County, that sold in February 2006 for $5,124,000 without FF&E.
    (RR at 303a). He stated that “[t]his is an excellent, excellent comparable because it
    was sold in almost new condition,” but that it is “more cramped” so “[a] minimal net
    positive adjustment of 5% is indicated.” (Id. at 145a, 326a). He stated that while it is
    near the Pennsylvania Turnpike, it is not visible and it is not at an interstate
    interchange. He calculated an adjusted rate of $68,976 per guest room.
    Henkelman’s third comparable is a 103-room Best Western in Clarks
    Summit, Lackawanna County, that sold in October 2008 for $8,035,000. He stated
    that this comparable was the only full service hotel and that he had extensive
    knowledge about it because he has previously appraised portions of the property. He
    stated that “[t]here is a substantial negative adjustment for this FULL service hotel
    compared to the subject LIMITED service facility” and a negative adjustment for its
    location, but a positive adjustment for its $2,000,000 renovation at the time of sale.
    (RR at 326a). He calculated an adjusted rate of $68,413 per guest room.
    Henkelman’s fourth comparable is a 70-room Country Inn & Suites in
    South Middleton Township, Cumberland County, that sold in July 2009 for
    6
    $5,400,000 without FF&E. He stated that this comparable is in a better location
    because “[i]t has high visibility from I-81,” it is a “pretty nice sale” because it was
    constructed in 2008, it sold within a year of construction, and it has 70 rooms. (RR at
    149a, 326a). He calculated an adjusted unit rate of $69,429 per room.
    Henkelman’s fifth comparable is an 88-room Hilton Garden Inn in
    Strabane Township, Adams County, that sold in August 2009 for $6,550,000 without
    FF&E. He stated that “[t]his is a fine similar hotel that is 5 years young,” and “[t]he
    location of the hotel is superior; however the age of the hotel is inferior.” (RR at
    327a). He testified that it is an 88-room limited service hotel, which is “maybe just
    one little level below the Hampton as far as quality,” with an indoor pool. (Id. at
    150a-151a). He calculated “[a] total of negative 10% indicates an adjusted rate of
    $66,989/room.” (Id. at 327a).
    Henkelman’s sixth comparable is the same 82-room Quality Inn &
    Suites in Mount Pocono Borough used by Fisher as his first comparable. He stated
    that it was a former motel site and that some of the old motel rooms are still used. He
    stated that “[a]t the time of sale it was an average but decent hotel,” but that it had
    lost its franchise and “[t]he site since the sale has greatly deteriorated.” (RR at 327a).
    He stated that “the locations are overall similar,” but that “[t]he main adjustment is
    for the age of the building and its use of the old motel units” with [a] net 10%
    positive adjustment.” (Id.). He calculated an adjusted unit rate of $67,489 per room.
    Henkelman’s seventh comparable is a 65-room Best Western Plus hotel
    in Fairview Township, York County, that sold in March 2008 for $3,575,000 without
    7
    FF&E. (RR at 316a). He stated that it “is a more modest hotel but only 2 years old at
    the time of sale” and that “[i]t has a similar location along I-83.” (Id. at 327a). He
    stated that “both the interior and exterior are more modest compared to the subject
    and the site is cramped.” (Id.). He calculated that “overall, a positive 15% is
    indicated or an adjusted rate of $63,250/room.” (Id.).
    Henkelman’s eighth comparable is a 78-room Country Inn & Suites
    hotel in East Lampeter Township, Lancaster County, that sold in October 2008 for
    $8,550,000 without FF&E. (RR at 318a). He stated that “[i]t has been recently
    renovated” and that it “has an overall appeal similar” to the instant property, but that
    “[t]he amenities are somewhat superior” and that “this is a significantly superior
    property mainly due to its location.” (Id. at 327a). He concluded that “[a] net
    negative 35% is warranted and the adjusted rate is $71,250/room.” (Id.).
    Finally, Henkelman’s ninth comparable is a 67-room Country Inn &
    Suites hotel in York Township, York County, that sold in March 2013 for $3,700,000
    without FF&E. (RR at 321a). He stated that it “is a very similar type hotel property
    in a similar location along I-83” as the instant property. (Id. at 327a). He stated that
    “[i]t is an older hotel (13 years) that has been renovated,” that “[i]ts location is
    similar,” and that “[t]he amenities are similar.” (Id.). However, he stated that “[t]he
    main difference is the new condition of the subject vs. the 13-year age of this hotel
    and the older rooms … that need renovation….” (Id.). He calculated “[a] net
    positive adjustment of 15% is indicated and the adjusted unit rate is now
    $63,507/room.” (Id.).
    8
    Henkelman stated that he personally inspected all of the comparable
    buildings thoroughly, including the mechanical systems, pools, roofs and the guest
    rooms. (RR at 124a, 328a). He testified that all of the comparables, except for the
    third, are limited service hotels with an indoor pool, hot breakfast, kitchen and dining
    room. (Id. at 151a). After comparing all of the nine comparable properties to the
    instant property, and adjusting room rates based on age, location, quality and
    amenities, he determined that the fair market value of the instant property was
    $6,500,000 or $67,000 per room based on the market sales approach. (RR at 160a,
    328a).6
    Gene Porterfield (Porterfield), the County’s Director of Assessment,
    testified regarding the method that he used to equalize the subject property with the
    neighboring Best Western hotel. (RR at 198a-202a). He stated that he looked at the
    cost approach and “learned by word of mouth” that construction of the subject
    property was $8,000,000, but he “looked at the current cost approach and felt that it
    was excessive and not an indication of value.” (Id. at 198a). He stated that “[t]here
    was no income established for the property and actually we knew we couldn’t do an
    income approach other than estimating what room rates might be and the typical costs
    and calculating an income approach to value,” and that “[o]ur income approach came
    out at about 6 million.” (Id. at 198a-199a). He testified that the only accurate
    method to establish value was through sales comparison and he used two comparable
    6
    Henkelman also testified that the valuation of the instant property using the income
    approach was $6,300,000, but that this approach and the cost approach to valuation are only
    secondary indicators of value because “[t]here are too many variables that are unknown” because
    the property had only been open a month. (RR at 177a).
    9
    sales to set the value at approximately $5,800,000. He stated that he “then backed
    that into the base year value by using the [CLR] multiplying .171 times our number”
    to reach “our assessed value or our base-year value of $3,942,440.00 and applying the
    assessment predetermined ratio of twenty-five percent provided an assessed value of
    $985,610 to equalize the assessment.” (Id.). He explained that “[t]he common level
    ratio difference between the two properties at that time equated to [an] approximately
    1.1 million dollar difference which was between the common level ratio estimates of
    values.” (Id. at 200a).
    C.
    In rejecting Westfall’s evidence of valuation, the trial court found that
    the properties used by Henkelman in his sales comparison “were more numerous and
    more appropriate” than those used by Fisher in determining valuation. (Trial Court
    9/30/14 Order at 3).7 Additionally, the trial court found:
    Mr. Fisher sought to exclude certain properties with higher
    values based upon reasoning that had little or no merit.
    First, the access to the property is certainly adequate. It has
    clear visibility and easy access from the two main highways
    in the County. Second, Pike County has many positive
    tourist attractions from sponsored events, the Delaware
    River, natural attractions including many national, state and
    local parks, waterfalls, and hiking trails, significant
    historical sights, and hunting and fishing places. The
    Hampton Inn is located at the eastern entry to Pike County
    very near to the New York and New Jersey borderlines.
    Third, even though the Hotel has limited services, certainly
    it is very close to other facilities that can provide those
    7
    The parties do not dispute the trial court’s finding that the comparable sales approach is the
    most appropriate to determine the valuation of the subject property.
    10
    services. Finally, the property in question is newly
    constructed and comparison of it to only those which sold
    many years ago creates an inaccurately low value.
    (Trial Court 9/30/14 Order at 4).
    The trial court explained that Henkelman used nine separate properties
    to calculate the sales value of the property involving sales that were within four years
    of the 2009 valuation date with four located in northeastern Pennsylvania and five
    others located in southern and central Pennsylvania, including two Hampton Inns that
    were sold in 2006 and 2008. (Trial Court 9/30/14 Order at 4). The trial court noted
    “[t]hat based upon this comparison and his actual visit” to the instant property,
    Henkelman calculated the room value for all nine sales was $67,256 per room; the
    room value of the Hampton Inn sales was $67,488; and the average of the seven most
    comparable sales was $66,520; and that the value per room of the instant property
    was $67,000 for a total sales value of $6,500,000. (Id. at 4-5). The trial court also
    noted that Porterfield used two comparable sales to set the property’s value at
    $5,763,800. (Id. at 5).
    As a result, the trial court concluded that Fisher’s testimony was
    “factually flawed because that testimony was limited to comparison with lower
    valued properties and was further reduced in value by inapplicable comparisons
    between the properties,” and that he “reduced value because of claims of inadequate
    access or lack of attractions for visitors or tourists.” (Trial Court 9/30/14 Order at 6).
    The trial court also concluded that Henkelman’s testimony was “more credible and
    11
    convincing and it is based upon a more thorough analysis of factors related to the
    valuation of the property according to the sales comparison approach.” (Id.).
    Accordingly, the trial court found: the instant property was valued as of
    September 1, 2009, at $6,500,000, with a common level ratio of 17.1 resulting in an
    assessed value for 2009 at $1,111,500; the fair market value shall remain at
    $6,500,000 for the years 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014; that the CLR shall be
    adjusted to 20.4 for 2010; 21.4 for 2011; 24.7 for 2012; 25.8 for 2013; and 23.1 for
    2014, resulting in an modified assessed valuation for each of those years. (Trial
    Court 9/30/14 Order at 7).8
    II.
    In this appeal,9 Westfall argues that the trial court abused its discretion
    and ignored substantial evidence by rejecting Fisher’s appraisal in its entirety and by
    8
    The trial court also explained that reference was made “to a claim alleged to be made by
    [Westfall] regarding a challenge to fair market value based upon a failure to properly equalize the
    property with the neighboring Best Western Hotel. However, no real challenge to this claim has
    been made so it is not being addressed herein.” (Trial Court 9/30/14 Order at 6).
    9
    This Court’s review in tax assessment appeals is limited to determining whether the trial
    court committed an error of law or an abuse of discretion or whether constitutional rights were
    violated. Aetna Life Insurance 
    Co., 111 A.3d at 278
    n.2 (citation omitted). As we have explained:
    An actual or market value must be determined based on competent,
    relevant evidence. In a tax assessment appeal, the trial court is the
    fact-finder and has the authority to weigh evidence and make
    credibility determinations. The trial court’s function in a tax
    assessment is not to independently value the property but to weigh the
    conflicting testimony and arrive at a valuation based on the credibility
    of witnesses. The trial court’s findings are entitled to great deference,
    and its decision will not be disturbed absent a clear error.
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    12
    adopting Henkelman’s appraisal in its entirety. Specifically, Westfall claims that the
    trial court erred in:10
    •     rejecting Fisher’s three comparables on the basis that
    they were sold “many years ago” and created an
    “inaccurately low value” because they were all sold within
    approximately three years of the date of valuation;
    •      rejecting Fisher’s testimony and report on the basis
    that he “sought to exclude certain properties with higher
    values based upon reasoning that had little or no merit” or
    his reliance on lower valued properties;
    •      rejecting Fisher’s testimony and report on the basis
    that it was “factually flawed” because his appraisal is not
    based on inaccurate or untrue facts;
    •      relying on Henkelman’s comparables because five of
    the nine were located in south and central Pennsylvania in
    areas dissimilar from rural Pike County;
    •     relying on Henkelman’s third comparable because it
    is a full-service hotel because the instant property is a
    limited-service hotel; and
    •     determining that the instant property has adequate
    access without addressing whether its lack of direct access
    through the parking lot of the adjacent Best Western would
    (continued…)
    In re Appeal of Springfield School District, 
    101 A.3d 835
    , 846 n.5 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (citations
    omitted). The trial court’s determinations of fair market and assessed values may not be disturbed
    on appeal where they are based on a credibility determination. 
    Id. at 846-47.
    10
    In the interest of clarity, we reorder the claims raised by Westfall in this appeal.
    13
    result in a lower value in relation to the other comparable
    properties.
    At the outset, given that no two properties are exactly alike, it is
    necessary to make adjustments of the sale price of the purported comparables to
    arrive at the fair market value of the property being appraised. As our Supreme Court
    has explained:
    [A]s one of the factors to be considered in determining
    market value, ‘comparables’ means properties of a similar
    nature which have been recently sold. In order to be
    comparable in this latter sense, however, the properties need
    not be identical. In reviewing sales of other properties, ‘to
    compare’ means to examine the characters or qualities of
    one or more properties for the purpose of discovering their
    resemblances or differences. The aim is to show relative
    values by bringing out characteristic qualities, whether
    similar or divergent. Thus, comparisons based on sales may
    be made according to location, age and condition of
    improvements, income and expense, use, size, type of
    construction and in numerous other ways.
    McKnight Shopping Center v. Board of Property Assessment, Appeals and Review,
    
    209 A.2d 389
    , 393 (Pa. 1965) (citation omitted). The opinion of an expert in making
    those adjustments is subject to impeachment and rebuttal, and the factors the expert
    considered and how he or she choose and adjusted the sale price of the comparables
    to the property being valued goes to the weight and credibility of the expert’s
    testimony.
    The function of the trial court in determining weight and credibility of
    that testimony, including what that expert considers is a comparable sale, will not be
    14
    set aside unless the trial court abused its discretion. In re Appeal of Springfield
    School 
    District, 101 A.3d at 846
    n.5.11
    Nevertheless, as fact-finder, “the trial court must state the
    basis and reasons for its decision.” If the trial court rejects
    an expert’s testimony for specified reasons, an appellate
    court may review the validity of those reasons. Further, if
    an expert uses an improper factor when fixing the fair
    market value of real estate, his opinion is not substantial
    evidence that can support a finding of value.
    Aetna Life Insurance 
    Co., 111 A.3d at 279
    (citations omitted). In examining each of
    Westfall’s claims, given the trial court’s articulation of the basis and the reasons that
    it found for the School District, we find nothing even close to an abuse of discretion
    or an error of law.
    A.
    Westfall first claims that the trial court erred in rejecting Fisher’s three
    comparables that were sold in April 2006 and January 2008 because they were
    temporally removed from the appraisal and created an inaccurately low value.
    However, as Henkelman explained, he “was really looking for hotels that sold
    hopefully within twelve to eighteen months from the effective date of my appraisal.”
    (RR at 154a). As outlined above, Henkelman’s comparables were sold in: May
    11
    An abuse of discretion is defined as “not merely an error of judgment, but if in reaching a
    conclusion, the law is overridden or misapplied, or the judgment exercised is manifestly
    unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill will, as shown by the evidence of
    record, discretion is abused.” Appeal of Lynch Community Homes, Inc., 
    522 A.2d 716
    , 719 n. 4 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1987).
    15
    2008; February 2006; October 2008; July 2009; August 2009; January 2008; March
    2008; October 2008; and March 2013. The trial court specifically explained that only
    one of Henkelman’s nine comparable properties was sold prior to 2008, comprising
    11% of his sample, while two of Fisher’s three comparable properties sold prior to
    2008, comprising 66% of his sample, and that “[the] Court found that difference
    questionable at best, and considered it in its assessment of the relative credibility of
    each report.” (Trial Court 1/26/15 Opinion at 17).
    As this Court has explained, “[a] sale of comparable property, if not too
    remote in time, has probative value and is admissible in evidence to determine the fair
    market value of the subject property. The effect to be given temporal remoteness is
    within the discretion of the Board.” Pittsburgh Des Moines Steel Company v. Board
    of Property Assessment, Appeals and Review, 
    519 A.2d 1080
    , 1081 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1986) (emphasis in original). As a result, it was within the trial court’s discretion and
    the trial court did not err in accepting as more credible the evidence of valuation
    offered by Henkelman where the sales of seven of the nine comparable properties that
    he offered were more recent than the sale of all three of Fisher’s comparable
    properties. See 
    id. (“The trial
    court excluded the sales of 1979 and 1980 as being too
    remote, but allowed the sales for year 1982 as the most recent sales.”).
    B.
    Westfall next claims that the trial court did not give an adequate
    explanation for rejecting Fisher’s reasoning for excluding higher-valued comparables
    and including lower-valued comparables based on the subject property’s purported
    inadequate access, its limited services, and the lack of attractions for visitors or
    16
    tourists. However, as outlined in Section II.F., infra, the trial court’s finding that
    there is adequate access to the subject property is supported by substantial evidence
    and provides a basis for rejecting Fisher’s finding to the contrary. Additionally, in his
    report, Fisher notes that “[t]he subject’s location permits easy access to Interstate
    Route 84, US Route 6 and 209, along with New York Route 42 and 97. It is the point
    where Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey meet.” (RR at 382a).
    Regarding nearby services, Fisher’s report also notes that “[j]ust to the
    west of the entrance/exit ramp to I-84 there is one of the largest shopping centers in
    the county” which “consists of a K-mart, and a variety of supporting retail facilities
    and fast food restaurants” with a Home Depot store .25 miles to the east. (RR at
    382a). His report also notes that “[a]long US Route 6 and 209 is a variety of retail
    and service establishments providing ample shopping opportunities to residents and
    visitors alike.” (Id.).
    Moreover, Fisher’s report notes that “[r]ecreational facilities beyond the
    neighborhood but within easy driving distance include but are not limited to State
    Game Lands #180, Delaware State Forest, Promised Land State Park and Lake
    Wallenpaupack, the largest man-made lake in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania”
    and that “[t]he area directly north of the subject property is part of the ‘Upper
    Delaware Scenic and Recreational River’ Management program.” (RR at 382a). He
    also notes that “[d]irectly to the south of the subject property is the lands of the
    Delaware Water Gap National Recreation area” which “encompasses a 40-mile
    stretch of the middle Delaware River and 69,269 adjoining acres of land owned and
    operated by the National Park Service.” (Id. at 384a).
    17
    As a result, the trial court’s explanation in Finding of Fact 20 for
    rejecting Fisher’s reasoning as to why he excluded properties with higher values and
    relied on lower-valued properties as comparables to the instant property is adequate
    and supported by the record. (See Trial Court 1/26/15 Opinion at 17) (“This Court
    respectfully submits that the record therefore supports Finding of Fact 20, and that to
    the extent [Westfall]’s own expert’s report included a reference to Pike County’s
    recreational and service offerings, and Mr. Fisher reiterated it on cross-examination
    as recorded in the Transcript, without record of objection from [Westfall], it has
    waived its right to object on appeal.”).
    C.
    Westfall next claims that the trial court erred in rejecting Fisher’s
    testimony and report on the basis that it was “factually flawed” because his appraisal
    is not based on inaccurate or untrue facts. However, as the trial court explained, it
    “found several imperfections or weaknesses which it considered to detract from the
    whole and hinder the effectiveness of Mr. Fisher’s assessment,” and that “the flaws
    this Court identified, when viewed in context of the evidence in the record at hand,
    were fatal to [Westfall] to the extent that, in this Court’s opinion, Mr. Henkelman’s
    assessment was superior.” (Trial Court 1/26/15 Opinion at 19). Specifically, the trial
    court analyzed the differing valuations of Fisher and Henkelman for the common
    comparable property, the 82-room Quality Inn & Suites in Mount Pocono Borough,
    explaining:
    The $841,000 difference between the experts’
    valuations of the Quality Inn property is non-trivial, and this
    Court therefore afforded it great weight among the factors
    considered in making out determinations. Mr. Henkelman’s
    18
    inclusion of explicitly stated [FF&E] deductions stood in
    stark contrast to the absence thereof in Mr. Fisher’s report.
    The latter included no specific FF&E values and lacked
    even an explanation of how the FF&E adjustment
    contributed to the 35 percent overall negative adjustment
    Mr. Fisher applied to the Quality Inn. This distinction
    between the reports made Mr. Henkelman’s more
    appropriate, in this Court’s determination, than Mr.
    Fisher’s.
    (Id. at 12). The foregoing provides a specific basis upon which the trial court could
    find that Fisher’s testimony and report were “factually flawed” and upon which
    generally attribute greater credibility to Henkelman’s testimony and report.
    D.
    Westfall next claims that the trial court erred in relying on Henkelman’s
    comparables because five of the nine were located in south and central Pennsylvania
    in areas dissimilar from rural Pike County. However, as Henkelman explained in his
    report, “[t]here is a general lack of mid-level limited service hotel property sales in
    the subject’s area due to the limited number of hotel properties,” and that “[t]here are
    more limited-service hotel sales available for comparison outside of the immediate
    area in similar type locations.” (RR at 300a).12
    12
    See also Henkelman’s testimony at the trial court hearing (RR at 148a, 154a) (“Well, you
    know I’ve now gone out of the area a little bit. I’ve been looking for other locations that have
    similar – I wouldn’t say similar, but other recreational pursuits, family hotels, people on the road
    near an interstate. [The fourth comparable] sold the month before I did my appraisal, so it is really
    concurrent with what’s happening and it really helps show that there are buyers and sellers selling
    hotels at the time of the effective date of our Hampton Inn.”); (“I was really looking for hotels that
    sold hopefully within twelve to eighteen months from the effective date of my appraisal. [The
    seventh comparable] sold in March of 2008, it is a more modest hotel, it’s on a good location near
    the I-83 and turnpike.”).
    19
    As outlined above, in finding comparable property sales, “one of the
    factors to be considered in determining market value, ‘comparables’ means properties
    of a similar nature which have been recently sold,” McKnight Shopping 
    Center, 209 A.2d at 393
    , and that temporal remoteness affects the probative value and
    admissibility of evidence of the fair market value of a property. Pittsburgh Des
    Moines Steel 
    Company, 519 A.2d at 1081
    . In the absence of any record objection to
    Henkelman’s report or his testimony regarding his fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth or
    ninth comparable, there is no reason to disturb the trial court’s determination that
    “Mr. Henkelman’s comparables were well-described and adjusted, and in sufficient
    proximity, both geographically and substantively, to the subject Property.” (Trial
    Court 1/26/15 Opinion at 13).         Moreover, this challenge to Henkelman’s
    methodology in obtaining comparable properties goes to the weight of this evidence
    and not to its competence. See, e.g., Parkview Court Associates v. Delaware County
    Board of Assessment Appeals, 
    959 A.2d 515
    , 521 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008) (holding that
    an argument challenging an expert’s methodology “essentially seeks a new credibility
    finding … which is inappropriate on appeal.”).
    E.
    Westfall next claims that the trial court erred in relying on Henkelman’ s
    third comparable because it is a full-service hotel because the instant property is a
    limited-service hotel.   However, as the trial court explained, “the law does not
    proscribe the allowance of a full-service hotel as a comparable sale relative to a
    limited service hotel, and there is substantial evidence to support this Court’s
    determination that Mr. Henkelman’s unchallenged knowledge of the full-service hotel
    in question enabled him to make accurate adjustments to its valuation relative to the
    20
    subject Property.” (Trial Court 1/26/15 Opinion at 14). Indeed, as Henkelman
    explained, he had extensive knowledge about that property because he has previously
    appraised portions of it and he specifically made “a substantial negative adjustment
    for this FULL service hotel compared to the subject LIMITED service facility.” (RR
    at 146a, 326a) (emphasis in original).
    Moreover, the trial court explained that, “[i]n any event, the absence of
    the full-service hotel would not alter this Court’s ultimate determination of the
    subject Property’s valuation.” (Trial Court 1/26/15 Opinion at 13). As a result, any
    purported error in this regard is harmless and not a basis upon which to reverse the
    trial court’s valuation. See, e.g., Bellevue-Stratford Co. v. City of Philadelphia, 
    77 A.2d 604
    , 606 (Pa. 1951) (“The error charged to the trial judge in receiving evidence
    of profit or a lack of it from the conduct of the hotel business on the premises, was
    harmless in any event. As stated by the court in banc: ‘[The trial judge’s] reasons
    for arriving at the value stated in his adjudication did not include any reference
    whatever to income or earning power.’ (Emphasis supplied.)”).
    F.
    Finally, Westfall claims that the trial court erred in determining that the
    instant property has adequate access without addressing whether its lack of direct
    access through the parking lot of the adjacent Best Western Hotel would result in a
    lower value in relation to the other comparable properties. However, as Henkelman’s
    report stated, “[t]he access is not direct, however, it is if guests travel through the
    adjacent Best Western Hotel parking lot;” that “[t]here is another less direct access to
    21
    Westfall Town Drive;” and that “once the hotel is seen from the interstate, patrons
    will find a way to the property.” (RR at 278a). As he explained in his testimony:
    I’m not sure [that the access to the hotel adversely
    affects its value]. It would if this were maybe a retail
    location where you need people to come right off the street
    to go, but as a hotel, you made reservations where you are
    looking for a hotel, so once you come off the exit, you see it
    there, you know there’s some way to get to it, I don’t think
    that I would agree for a hotel that it’s very important
    because you can get there a couple of different ways.
    (Id. at 192a).
    As a result, the trial court’s findings that “the access to the Property is
    certainly adequate” and “[i]t has clear visibility and easy access from the two main
    highways in the County,” (Trial Court 9/30/14 Order at 4), are amply supported by
    substantial evidence. Moreover, the trial court noted that it did not deny that there
    was no direct highway access or that the most direct access was through the
    neighboring hotel’s parking lot, explaining that “[w]hether or not one characteristic or
    another affects the relative value of a comparable to the subject Property is not
    dispositive of its inclusion in a sales comparison analysis” and that is why both Fisher
    and Henkelman “included adjustments in their sales comparison analyses, meant to
    equalize the comparables with the subject Property.” (Trial Court 1/26/15 Opinion at
    15).
    22
    Accordingly, the trial court’s order is affirmed.13
    ___________________________________
    DAN PELLEGRINI, President Judge
    13
    To the extent that Westfall also raises an equalization claim in its appellate brief, as noted
    by the Board and the School District, this claim has been waived for purposes of appeal. Pa. R.A.P.
    302(a), 1925(b)(4), 2116(a).
    23
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Westfall Hospitality Holding, LLC,   :
    Appellant         :
    :
    v.                       : No. 1865 C.D. 2014
    :
    Pike County Board of Assessment      :
    Appeals                              :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 6th day of January, 2016, the order of the Pike County
    Court of Common Pleas dated September 30, 2014, at No. 499-CV-2010, is affirmed.
    ___________________________________
    DAN PELLEGRINI, President Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1865 C.D. 2014

Judges: Pellegrini, President Judge

Filed Date: 1/6/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/6/2016