Nudo Holdings, LLC v. Board of Review for the City of Kenosha ( 2022 )


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    2022 WI 17
    SUPREME COURT           OF    WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:              2019AP1618
    COMPLETE TITLE:        State of Wisconsin ex rel. Nudo Holdings, LLC,
    Petitioner-Appellant-Petitioner,
    v.
    Board of Review for the City of Kenosha,
    Respondent-Respondent.
    REVIEW OF DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Reported at 
    395 Wis. 2d 261
    ,
    952 N.W.2d 816
    PDC No:
    2020 WI App 78
     - Published
    OPINION FILED:         April 12, 2022
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:         November 1, 2021
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:              Circuit
    COUNTY:             Kenosha
    JUDGE:              Anthony G. Milisauskas
    JUSTICES:
    HAGEDORN, J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court, in
    which ANN WALSH BRADLEY, DALLET, and KAROFSKY, JJ., joined.
    ROGGENSACK, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ZIEGLER,
    C.J., and REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., joined.
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the petitioner-appellant-petitioner, there were briefs
    filed by Paul W. Zimmer and O’Neil, Cannon, Hollman, DeJong &
    Laing S.C., Milwaukee. There was an oral argument by Paul W.
    Zimmer.
    For the respondent-respondent, there was a brief filed by
    Robert I. DuMez, Gino M. Alia, J. Michael McTernan and Alia,
    DuMez & McTernan, S.C., Kenosha. There was an oral argument by
    J. Michael McTernan.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of the League of
    Wisconsin   Municipalities,   Wisconsin   Towns   Association   and
    Wisconsin Association of Assessing Officers by Julie M. Gay and
    Law Office of Julie M. Gay, Waukesha.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Wisconsin
    REALTORS® Association, Wisconsin Builders Association and NAIOP-
    WI by Thomas D. Larson, Madison.
    2
    
    2022 WI 17
    NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.    2019AP1618
    (L.C. No.    2018CV896)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                  :            IN SUPREME COURT
    State of Wisconsin ex rel. Nudo Holdings, LLC,
    Petitioner-Appellant-Petitioner,                              FILED
    v.                                                              APR 12, 2022
    Board of Review for the City of Kenosha,                                 Sheila T. Reiff
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Respondent-Respondent.
    HAGEDORN, J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court, in
    which ANN WALSH BRADLEY, DALLET, and KAROFSKY, JJ., joined.
    ROGGENSACK, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ZIEGLER,
    C.J., and REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., joined.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                      Affirmed.
    ¶1     BRIAN        HAGEDORN,     J.     This       is      a     property        tax
    classification case.             The property at issue was mostly raw and
    covered in underbrush, but also included several walnut and pine
    trees.       The assessor classified the property as residential.
    Before      the   board     of    review,     the   landowner         maintained        the
    property      should      be     classified    agricultural           (and     therefore
    receive a lower tax rate).             The board sustained the assessor's
    No.      2019AP1618
    classification, which the circuit court and the court of appeals
    affirmed.
    ¶2      Before us, the landowner contends the board did not
    act according to law because the current use of the property met
    the definition of agricultural, and the board's consideration of
    prospective residential use was improper.                     The landowner further
    argues     the      classification        is       not   supported      by     sufficient
    evidence.        We hold:     (1) The board acted according to law when
    it understood that the land should be classified as agricultural
    only if it is devoted primarily to agricultural use——meaning the
    property      is    chiefly   given      to    agricultural         purposes;      (2)    The
    board did not err when it considered the prospective residential
    use   of   the      property;   and      (3)       The   board's     determination         to
    sustain       the    residential         classification         was     supported         by
    sufficient evidence.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    ¶3      On    September   11,       2017,       Nudo    Holdings,      LLC    (Nudo)
    purchased an 8.9-acre parcel of wooded, unused land in the City
    of Kenosha from Kenosha County for $100,000.                         Anthony Nudo, the
    owner    of   Nudo    Holdings,      LLC,      testified      before    the       Board    of
    Review for the City of Kenosha (the Board) that he purchased the
    property      to    develop   it.        The       property   was    part    of    the    St.
    Peter's Neighborhood Plan——indicating the City saw its highest
    and best use as residential.                   Indeed, the City was aware Nudo
    planned to subdivide the property into as many as 18 residential
    lots.
    2
    No.    2019AP1618
    ¶4      At the time of purchase, the property was zoned A-2
    agricultural,         lacked       access      to    sewer    and     water     service,       and
    contained       no    habitable         structures.           It    consisted         mostly    of
    underbrush with pine and walnut trees scattered across the land.
    The trees were not planted in rows; rather, they grew at random
    on the property.
    ¶5      By    January       1,   2018——the          relevant    timeframe        for    the
    property assessment——Mr. Nudo testified that "a bit of tilling"
    was done, but when pressed for more detail, stated only "not
    much."        Trails were cut on the property to reach the "walnut
    groves" and the pine trees (described by Mr. Nudo as "Christmas
    trees").       Mr. Nudo explained to the Board that he and his wife
    walked the trails to harvest walnuts.                        Mr. Nudo gave the walnuts
    to his mother, who distributed some to her clients and "made
    some       stuff"    with    the    rest.           Mr.    Nudo    also   stated       that    the
    property was registered as a livestock premises and that                                        he
    obtained permits and licenses to cut timber and keep up to 25
    chickens on the property.                   But as of January 1, 2018, no pine
    trees were cut, nor had any chickens or other livestock been
    kept on the property.1
    ¶6      In    2018,    the       City    assessor      valued      the    property       at
    $89,800       ($10,000       per        acre)        and    classified        the      property
    residential for property tax purposes.                            The assessor testified
    Mr. Nudo also explained that he purchased 300 trees from
    1
    the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources in part to protect
    the walnut trees on his property from the wind. However, these
    trees were not planted until the spring of 2018——outside of the
    relevant timeframe.
    3
    No.    2019AP1618
    before    the   Board    that    he    classified      the    property       this   way
    because, "What we see is truly a -- a fairly, if not all raw
    piece of land.      I don't see any effort, any action, any plan in
    terms of agricultural.           This is a piece of land that has some
    things growing on it."          The assessor further explained:
    There is extremely heavy underbrush on a majority of
    this parcel, and it remains there.       There is no
    evidence of livestock being allowed or able to roam
    free on the parcel.   There is no evidence of furrows
    or harvesting of anything and no evidence was
    presented in terms of how much was done. There is no
    evidence, and in fact, I believe, in one of the
    documents we got, that any Christmas trees were taken
    from this property or how many nuts were taken from
    here.
    The assessor asked Nudo for additional evidence of harvesting,
    furrows, crops, or fencing, but Mr. Nudo indicated he did not
    have any additional information to provide.
    ¶7     Nudo        timely        objected         to      the         residential
    classification,     contending        the       property    should    be    classified
    agricultural.       The Board unanimously sustained the assessor's
    classification.      Nudo petitioned for certiorari, and the circuit
    court2    ordered   the    Board      to        reconvene    and     reconsider     the
    classification in light of our decision in Ogden.3                          On remand,
    2 The Honorable Anthony G. Milisauskas of the Kenosha County
    Circuit Court presided.
    3 In particular, the circuit court instructed the Board to
    reconsider the classification in light of our conclusion "that a
    business purpose is not required in order for land to be
    classified as 'agricultural land' for property tax purposes."
    State ex rel. Peter Ogden Fam. Tr. v. Bd. of Rev., 
    2019 WI 23
    ,
    ¶46, 
    385 Wis. 2d 676
    , 
    923 N.W.2d 837
    .
    4
    No.       2019AP1618
    the    Board          reconsidered       and    again        sustained    the       assessor's
    residential classification, this time by a vote of 4 to 1.                                   Both
    the circuit court               and court of appeals             affirmed the Board's
    determination.            State ex rel. Nudo Holdings, LLC v. Bd. of Rev.
    for City of Kenosha, 
    2020 WI App 78
    , ¶1, 
    395 Wis. 2d 261
    , 
    952 N.W.2d 816
    .           We granted Nudo's petition for review.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    A.     Challenging the Classification of Real Property
    ¶8        Property assessment for taxation purposes takes place
    "as of the close of January 1 of each year."                           
    Wis. Stat. § 70.10
    (2019-20).4              This     assessment         involves     both     valuation           and
    classification of property.                    
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    .            Wisconsin law
    requires the assessor to segregate land "on the basis of use"
    into       one    of      the     following          eight     classifications:                (1)
    "Residential";            (2)     "Commercial";          (3)     "Manufacturing";              (4)
    "Agricultural";           (5)     "Undeveloped";        (6)     "Agricultural           forest";
    (7) "Productive forest land"; and (8) "Other."                                § 70.32(2)(a).
    Nudo's       petition           for     certiorari           challenges        the       Board's
    determination to sustain the residential classification.
    ¶9        An    aggrieved       property      owner     like    Nudo     may     file   an
    objection to an assessment with the municipal board of review.
    
    Wis. Stat. § 70.47
    (7).                  When the board receives an objection
    within      the       statutory       time   frame,     the    board     sets       a   hearing.
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    4
    the 2019-20 version.
    5
    No.   2019AP1618
    § 70.47(7)-(8).        At the hearing, the assessor is required to
    "provide to the board specific information about the validity of
    the valuation to which objection is made" and "provide to the
    board the information that the assessor used to determine that
    valuation."          § 70.47(8)(h).         The    assessor's         valuation    is
    entitled to a presumption of validity by the board, but "may be
    rebutted    by   a    sufficient    showing       by    the    objector     that   the
    valuation is incorrect."           § 70.47(8)(i).         If the property owner
    desires to challenge the board's decision, it may, among other
    options,    seek      certiorari      review       by     the     circuit      court.
    § 70.47(13); State ex rel. City of Waukesha v. City of Waukesha
    Bd. of Rev., 
    2021 WI 89
    , ¶17, 
    399 Wis. 2d 696
    , 
    967 N.W.2d 460
    (listing the three options for appeal).
    ¶10   This court sits in the same posture as the circuit
    court, and therefore we review the Board's determination, not
    that of the circuit court or court of appeals.                     Our review "is
    limited to whether the board's actions were:                      (1) within its
    jurisdiction; (2) according to law; (3) arbitrary, oppressive,
    or unreasonable and represented its will and not its judgment;
    and   (4)   supported     by   evidence      such       that    the    board   might
    reasonably make the order or determination in question."                        State
    ex rel. Collison v. City of Milwaukee Bd. of Rev., 
    2021 WI 48
    ,
    ¶20, 
    397 Wis. 2d 246
    , 
    960 N.W.2d 1
    .
    ¶11   Nudo asserts that the Board's determination was not
    according to law for two independent reasons and that it was not
    supported by sufficient evidence.
    6
    No.     2019AP1618
    B.   According to Law
    1.     Devoted Primarily to Agricultural Use
    ¶12    Nudo first argues that the Board did not act according
    to law because it improperly discounted the agricultural use
    present    on   the     property.          Nudo       contends   that      because      those
    activities      were    the    only      uses       the   property   was    put    to,     the
    property was devoted primarily to agricultural use.                                 That is
    not, however, what the law says.
    ¶13    Wisconsin          Stat.       § 70.32(2)(c)         provides         two      key
    definitions that assist in determining whether Nudo's land could
    be classified as agricultural.                  "'Agricultural land' means land,
    exclusive of buildings and improvements and the land necessary
    for their location and convenience, that is devoted primarily to
    agricultural         use."              § 70.32(2)(c)1g.         (emphasis          added).
    "Agricultural        use"     is    also   a    defined      term.      Its      meaning    is
    "defined by the department of revenue by rule and includes the
    growing of short rotation woody crops, including poplars and
    willows, using agronomic practices."5                     § 70.32(2)(c)1i.
    ¶14    Following the statutory instruction to promulgate a
    rule, the Department of Revenue defines "agricultural use" as
    "any of the following":
    (a)   Activities  included in   subsector  111  Crop
    Production, set forth in the North American Industry
    Classification System (NAICS), United States, 1997,
    5 The statute also defines "Agronomic practices"; it "means
    agricultural practices generally associated with field crop
    production, including soil management, cultivation, and row
    cropping." 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)1k.
    7
    No.     2019AP1618
    published by the executive office of the president,
    U.S. office of management and budget.
    (b) Activities included in subsector 112 Animal
    Production, set forth in the North American Industry
    Classification System, United States, 1997, published
    by the executive office of the president, U.S. office
    of management and budget.
    (c) Growing Christmas trees or ginseng.
    Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.05(1)(a)-(c) (July 2018).6
    ¶15          The     administrative       code          goes    on    to   explain           what
    assessors must look for when determining if land is                                          devoted
    primarily           to     agricultural        use:        "Land       devoted    primarily          to
    agricultural               use    shall    typically           bear    physical      evidence        of
    agricultural use, such as furrows, crops, fencing or livestock,
    appropriate to the production season."                                Wis. Admin. Code § Tax
    18.06(1).            In addition, "Land devoted primarily to agricultural
    use"       in       this    chapter       of   the       tax    code     "means      land      in    an
    agricultural use for the production season of the prior year,
    and not in a use that is incompatible with agricultural use on
    January         1    of     the   assessment     year."           Wis.      Admin.      Code    § Tax
    18.05(4).
    ¶16          Another       statute,      
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (1),          requires
    assessors            to    comply     with     the       Wisconsin       Property       Assessment
    Agricultural use also includes unimproved land subject to
    6
    or enrolled in certain state or federal easements or programs.
    Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.05(1)(d).
    All subsequent references to the Wis. Admin. Code ch. Tax
    18 are to the July 2018 register date.
    8
    No.    2019AP1618
    Manual   (WPAM)   when   assessing   property.7      The    WPAM   in   turn
    provides further instructions on how to determine when land is
    devoted primarily to agricultural use.       In one particularly apt
    example, it provides:
    Since walnut trees do not produce walnuts until 10
    years of age and maximum production does not occur
    until 20 to 30 years of age, there may be instances
    where agricultural use is questionable. If a stand of
    walnut trees is in its early stages of development and
    not producing walnuts, the assessor should evaluate if
    the number of walnut trees is sufficient enough such
    that   it   represents    the  land's    primary   use.
    Additionally, the assessor should determine if there
    is adherence to the walnut industry standards.      The
    following questions should assist an assessor in
    determining   adherence    to  the    walnut   industry
    standards. Please note: This should not be construed
    as an all-inclusive list.
       What is the number of walnut trees per acre?
       Are there other types of trees intermixed with
    the walnut trees? And to what extent?
       What is the spacing between the trees?
       Were the trees thinned?
       Are   the   soil   types    conducive     to     walnut
    production?
       Are the site characteristics conducive to walnut
    production?
    7  "Real property shall be valued by the assessor in the
    manner   specified   in   the   Wisconsin  property   assessment
    manual . . . ."   
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (1); see also State ex rel.
    Collison v. City of Milwaukee Bd. of Rev., 
    2021 WI 48
    , ¶29, 
    397 Wis. 2d 246
    , 
    960 N.W.2d 1
    .
    9
    No.    2019AP1618
           Have measures been taken to ensure proper tree
    growth, which can include tree pruning, weed
    control, animal control, etc.?
           If the trees are producing              walnuts,    are     the
    walnuts being harvested?
    1 Wisconsin Property Assessment Manual (WPAM) 14-19 (2017).8
    ¶17          Returning    to     the   principal    statutory    question,      in
    order     for      land   to   be     classified     agricultural,    and    therefore
    receive       a    potentially      sizable    tax    break,9   the   land    must   be
    "devoted          primarily      to     agricultural      use."        
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)1g.; Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.06(1).                      Admittedly,
    some of the activity on Nudo's property could be described as
    agricultural.          Walnut farming is included in subsector 111 Crop
    Production set forth in the NAICS 1997 publication as one kind
    of "agricultural use."10                Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.05(1)(a).
    8 All subsequent references to the WPAM are to the 2017
    publication, https://www.revenue.wi.gov/documents/wpam17.pdf.
    9 The general rule is that taxation must be uniform. Wis.
    Const. art. VIII, § 1. However, "Taxation of agricultural land
    and undeveloped land, both as defined by law, need not be
    uniform with the taxation of each other nor with the taxation of
    other real property."    Id.   Thus, certain classifications of
    property change the valuation otherwise assigned to the property
    under 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (1).     Agricultural land is "assessed
    according to the income that could be generated from its rental
    for agricultural use."   § 70.32(2r).   Agricultural forest land
    and undeveloped land are "assessed at 50 percent of its full
    value." § 70.32(4). Land classified residential is afforded no
    discount; it is assessed at its full value determined under
    § 70.32(1).
    10The NAICS is reproduced in full in the WPAM.                         See 1 WPAM
    14-A-20.
    10
    No.    2019AP1618
    And    "[g]rowing        Christmas         trees"         can     also         constitute
    "agricultural use."        § Tax 18.05(1)(c).11
    ¶18    However, some agricultural use——even if it is the only
    "use" the land is put to——does not mean the land is "devoted
    primarily to agricultural use."                 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)1g.;
    Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.06(1).                 "[D]evoted primarily" is the
    key phrase here.        Being "devoted" to something means to be given
    over to and committed to that thing.12                     And "primarily" means
    chiefly     or    mainly.13      As   a     matter        of    plain     English,      an
    agricultural      classification      is       only   proper      if     the    land   is
    chiefly given over to agricultural use.
    ¶19    This understanding is reflected in the administrative
    rules and the WPAM.           The administrative rules explain that land
    devoted     primarily    to    agricultural         use   often    leaves       physical
    marks——"furrows,        crops,   fencing       or     livestock"——on           the   land.
    Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.06(1).                The land should bear witness
    to its use in the prior production season, in whatever form that
    evidence is demonstrated.             Wis. Admin. Code §§ Tax 18.05(4),
    18.06(1).        And as the WPAM's specific instructions on walnut
    As previously noted, Nudo obtained a license to keep up
    11
    to 25 chickens, but as of January 1, 2018, no chickens were kept
    on the property.   Therefore, Nudo was not engaging in activity
    included in subsector 112 Animal Production set forth in the
    NAICS. See Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.05(1)(b).
    American Heritage Dictionary 512 (3d ed. 1992) ("1. To
    12
    give or apply (one's time, attention, or self) entirely to a
    particular activity, pursuit, cause, or person. 2. To set apart
    for a specific purpose or use: land devoted to mining.").
    13   Id. at 1438 ("Chiefly; mainly.").
    11
    No.   2019AP1618
    trees demonstrate, the existence of some walnut trees is not
    enough.      The WPAM tells the assessor to go further and "evaluate
    if the number of walnut trees is sufficient enough such that it
    represents the land's primary use," and determine "if there is
    adherence to the walnut industry standards."                 1 WPAM 14-19.       So
    minimal harvesting of walnuts, even in the absence of other
    activity, generally will not by itself establish that land is
    devoted primarily to agricultural use.                If it did, even an empty
    and otherwise unused piece of property with a solitary wild
    raspberry bush harvested once a year would fit the bill.
    ¶20     Here, the Board correctly understood that whether the
    property was "devoted primarily to agricultural use" looks to
    whether the land is            chiefly given over to agricultural use.
    Just    because     the     sole    productive     activities,    however   small,
    could be described as agricultural does not mean the land's main
    use was agricultural.              The Board's determination in this regard
    was according to law.
    2.    Prospective Residential Use
    ¶21     Nudo next argues that the Board did not act according
    to   law     by   considering        prospective    residential    use    when   it
    sustained the assessor's residential classification.                     In Nudo's
    view,    the      residential       classification    violated    the    statutory
    directive that property must be classified "on the basis of use"
    because the land neither was nor imminently would be used for
    housing.       See 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(a).             Nudo's interpretation
    is incorrect.
    12
    No.    2019AP1618
    ¶22    "Residential"        property    under    the    law   "includes    any
    parcel or part of a parcel of untilled land that is not suitable
    for the production of row crops, on which a dwelling or other
    form    of    human   abode   is     located    and    which    is   not    otherwise
    classified under this subsection."                
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)3.
    (emphasis added).         It is certainly true that no dwelling or
    human abode was on the property at the time of the assessment.
    But notably, this definition is inclusive, not comprehensive.
    This is in contrast to the statutory definitions of every other
    classification,       each    of    which     begin    with    the   word    "means,"
    rather than "includes."14            Taking this distinction to mean what
    it says, the "residential" classification includes, but is not
    14   The definitions in 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c) begin:
    1d.    "Agricultural forest land" means . . . .
    1g.    "Agricultural land" means . . . .
    1i.    "Agricultural use" means . . . .
    1k.    "Agronomic practices" means . . . .
    1m.    "Other," . . . means . . . .
    2.    "Productive forest land" means . . . .
    3.    "Residential" includes . . . .
    4.    "Undeveloped land" means . . . .
    (Emphasis added.)
    13
    No.    2019AP1618
    limited to, land that currently has on it a "dwelling or other
    form of human abode."15         § 70.32(2)(c)3.
    ¶23   Statutory        history    confirms         the      import     of     this
    distinction.16       The definition of "residential" was created in
    1986 and has remained unchanged since then.                      Compare 1985 Wis.
    Act 153, § 12 with 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)3.                     The same act that
    created      the     definition        of        "residential"        also        defined
    "agricultural,"       "productive      forest        land,"     and   "swampland       or
    wasteland."        1985 Wis. Act 153, § 12.             While the definitions of
    "productive forest land" and "swampland or wasteland" began with
    "means," "agricultural" was defined as, "includes any body of
    water on private premises that is used as a part of a private
    fish hatchery licensed under s. 29.52."                       Id. (emphasis added).
    The   definition      of    "agricultural"        was   later     repealed    and    the
    definition     of     "agricultural          land"      was     created      to    read,
    "'Agricultural       land'    means    land,      exclusive      of   buildings       and
    improvements, that is devoted primarily to agricultural use, as
    defined by rule."           1995 Wis. Act 27, § 3362F (emphasis added).
    This change in language from "includes" to "means" confirms the
    legislature's        word    choices    here         reflect     a    difference       in
    "When the legislature uses different terms in the same
    15
    act, we generally do not afford them the same meaning." State
    ex rel. DNR v. Wis. Ct. of App., 
    2018 WI 25
    , ¶28, 
    380 Wis. 2d 354
    , 
    909 N.W.2d 114
    .
    An inquiry into statutory history is part and parcel of a
    16
    plain meaning analysis. Fabick v. Evers, 
    2021 WI 28
    , ¶30 n.12,
    
    396 Wis. 2d 231
    , 
    956 N.W.2d 856
    .
    14
    No.    2019AP1618
    statutory meaning.              This is no mere accident of legislative
    drafting.
    ¶24       Therefore, by use of the word "includes," 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)3.         contemplates       that        land    other    than    the   type
    described       in     § 70.32(2)(c)3.        could      still    be    classified      as
    residential.           Residential      "use"    is     not,    under    any   statutory
    language, limited to property with habitable homes currently or
    imminently on the property.               This begs the question of what else
    might fall within a residential classification.
    ¶25       Fortunately,        we    are      not     left    without       additional
    direction.       The WPAM——guidance that is required by law to be
    given     and    followed       (
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (1))——tells        us   the
    residential classification "includes vacant land in cities and
    villages where          the most likely use would be for residential
    development."          1 WPAM 7-14.       And when assessors are determining
    whether       vacant     land    should     be    classified       residential,       the
    assessor is instructed to consider the following:
       Are the actions of the owner(s) consistent with
    an intent for residential use?
       Is the size of the parcel typical of residential
    or developing residential parcels in the area?
       Is the parcel zoned residential or is residential
    zoning likely to be allowed?
       Is the parcel located in a residential plat,
    subdivision, CSM  or  near other  residential
    development?
       Does the parcel's topography or physical features
    allow for residential use?
    15
    No.      2019AP1618
        Is the parcel located in an urban or rapidly
    changing to urban area, as contrasted with a
    location    distant  from  much    residential
    activity[?]
        Are there any other factors affecting the parcel
    which   would   indicate    residential use   is
    reasonably likely or imminent[?]
    Id. at 12-1.
    ¶26       As these required considerations make clear, future
    planned residential development is a permissible basis on which
    to   rest        a   residential     classification.         Just    as    by    statute
    residential use includes land where a human abode is currently
    located         (
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)3.),      so    too    the       statutory
    command         to   follow    the   WPAM   (§ 70.32(1))     means    a   residential
    classification also "includes vacant land in cities and villages
    where the most likely use would be for residential development"
    and land where "residential use is reasonably likely."                            1 WPAM
    7-14 (emphasis added); id. at 12-1.                 Accordingly, when the law
    says    property        must    be   classified   "on   the    basis      of    use"   on
    January 1 of the assessment year, land has a current residential
    "use" not only if human dwellings are present, but also if they
    are reasonably likely or planned.17                 The Board therefore acted
    The dissent is premised on the faulty and unsupported
    17
    assumption that land planned for future residential development
    cannot constitute current residential "use" for property tax
    purposes. But the dissent points to no statutory language that
    limits   a   residential  classification  in   this  way,   and
    conspicuously avoids giving any effect to the legislature's
    choice to use "includes" and not "means" in its definition of a
    residential classification. Resting on this error, the dissent
    fashions a conflict between the statutes and the WPAM that does
    not exist.
    16
    No.    2019AP1618
    according to law when it considered the prospective residential
    use of Nudo's property.
    C.     Supported by Sufficient Evidence
    ¶27    Finally,       Nudo    asserts         the    Board's       determination            to
    sustain     the    residential       classification              was   not      supported        by
    sufficient        evidence.         On    certiorari           review,     the        test      "for
    sufficiency of the evidence is the substantial-evidence test."
    Stacy v. Ashland Cnty. Dept. of Public Welfare, 
    39 Wis. 2d 595
    ,
    602, 
    159 N.W.2d 630
     (1968).                Perhaps misnamed in view of modern
    parlance,     the    substantial          evidence        test    is     not    a     high      bar.
    "Substantial evidence is evidence of such convincing power that
    reasonable persons could reach the same decision as the board."
    Clark v. Waupaca Cnty. Bd. of Adjustment, 
    186 Wis. 2d 300
    , 304,
    
    519 N.W.2d 782
             (Ct.   App.      1994).          In     light    of     our      "highly
    deferential"        approach       "to    the       board's      findings,       we       may   not
    substitute our view of the evidence for that of the board."                                     
    Id.
    ¶28    The    evidence       here     comfortably           meets    this        standard.
    The Board heard evidence from both Mr. Nudo and the assessor.
    Combined, this testimony established that the 8.9-acre property
    consisted mostly of underbrush.                      It was essentially vacant and
    raw with several walnut and pine trees scattered throughout.
    Nudo purchased the property to develop it into residential lots.
    And   the    property        was     in    a    neighborhood             plan       for    future
    development in the City of Kenosha.                       The evidence reflects that
    any agricultural uses were minor and isolated, not the primary
    use   of    the    land.        Taken     together,        reasonable          persons       could
    17
    No.   2019AP1618
    certainly reach the same decision as the Board.                     The Board's
    determination      to     sustain    the    residential    classification    was
    supported by sufficient evidence.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    ¶29     Nudo    challenges       the    Board's   classification    of   the
    property as residential.            We conclude the Board acted according
    to law when it looked for more than some minimal agricultural
    use in evaluating whether the property was devoted primarily to
    agricultural       use,    and    when     it    considered   the   prospective
    residential development of the property.                  Finally, the Board's
    determination      to     sustain    the    residential    classification    was
    supported by sufficient evidence.               For these reasons, we affirm.
    By the Court.——The decision of the court of appeals is
    affirmed.
    18
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    ¶30    PATIENCE      DRAKE    ROGGENSACK,        J.     (dissenting).            The
    majority opinion errs because it fails to recognize and analyze
    the connection between the relevant statutes and the relevant
    administrative       rule    and    how   their       connection     bears       on    the
    question of whether Nudo Holdings, LLC's property qualified for
    an agricultural classification on January 1, 2018.                             Because I
    conclude that an understanding of this connection shows that the
    Board of Review incorrectly applied the law, which error the
    majority affirms, I respectfully dissent.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    ¶31    Nudo Holdings, LLC purchased the subject property on
    September 11, 2017, when it was zoned agricultural.                        On January
    1,   2018,   Kenosha       reclassified        the    land    as   residential         for
    assessment appraisal purposes, on which Nudo was taxed.
    ¶32    Nudo objected to the reclassification and asked for a
    hearing before the Kenosha Board of Review, claiming that the
    assessor did not act according to law.                        At the hearing, he
    explained     that    on     January      1,    2018,1       the   date    for        which
    classification       was    determined,        he    had    continued     to    use    the
    property agriculturally.            He explained that there had been no
    residential use of the property; it contained no access to sewer
    or water service and no habitable structures.                            There was no
    evidence presented that the property was "not suitable" for the
    production of row crops.
    1Property is valued as of January 1 of each calendar year.
    
    Wis. Stat. § 70.10
     ("The assessor shall assess all real and
    personal property as of the close of January 1 of each year.").
    1
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    ¶33    The records from hearings before the Board of Review
    show that in 2017 Nudo ordered 300 pine trees to plant as wind-
    breaks to protect 120 walnut trees.                     It shows that walnuts were
    harvested in December of 2017; that Nudo had a timber cutting
    notice approved on December 4, 2017; that permission to harvest
    Christmas trees was obtained in 2017; that the state registered
    livestock approval for the property on December 8, 2017.
    ¶34    Nudo owned the property for only 3.5 months before it
    was   reclassified      as    residential.          Of     those     3.5     months,    two
    months,     November    and    December,         were    winter      months    when    most
    agricultural activities in Wisconsin are quiescent.
    ¶35    The Board of Review affirmed the assessor's decision;
    the circuit court and the court of appeals affirmed as well.
    The   majority    opinion,         once    again,   affirms.          All     missed   how
    important January 1, 2018, is to a competent analysis of the
    case before us,         except for the thoughtful discussion in the
    court of appeals dissent.2
    II.     DISCUSSION
    A.    Standard of Review
    ¶36    This case is before us on certiorari review of the
    decision     of   the   Board      of     Review.        
    Wis. Stat. § 59.694
    (10).
    Accordingly we       review whether:             (1) the Board remained within
    its jurisdiction; (2) the Board acted according to law; (3) the
    Board's     action   was     arbitrary,      oppressive         or   unreasonable       and
    represented its will and not its judgment; (4) the Board could
    2State ex rel. Nudo Holdings, LLC v. Bd. of Rev. for City
    of Kenosha, 
    2020 WI App 78
    , ¶38, 
    395 Wis. 2d 261
    , 
    952 N.W.2d 816
    (Reilly, J. dissenting).
    2
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    reasonably       make    its       determination           based        on     the       evidence
    presented.       FAS, LLC v. Town of Bass Lake, 
    2007 WI 73
    , ¶8, 
    301 Wis. 2d 321
    , 
    733 N.W.2d 287
    .
    ¶37       Although       an   assessor's         valuation      is        entitled      to   a
    presumption       of     correctness,              
    Wis. Stat. § 70.49
    (2),            the
    classification of property underlying this assessment appraisal
    derives from statutory and administrative rule interpretation.
    Therefore,       classification          is    a     question      of    law        wherein      we
    independently          review          the     assessor's          interpretation               and
    application      of    relevant        statutes      and   administrative               rules    to
    determine classification.               Regency W. Apartments, LLC v. City of
    Racine, 
    2016 WI 99
    , ¶22, 
    372 Wis. 2d 282
    , 
    888 N.W.2d 611
    .
    B.   Statutory and Administrative Rule Interpretation
    ¶38       Determining         whether       Nudo's      property           was      lawfully
    classified as residential requires us to interpret and apply
    several statutes.            We interpret statutes to determine what they
    mean so they may be given their proper effect upon the facts
    presented.       State ex rel. Kalal v. Cir. Ct. for Dane Cnty., 
    2004 WI 58
    , ¶44, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .                            We begin with the
    statutory language, which we give its common, ordinary accepted
    meaning unless it involves technical or specially-defined words
    or phrases to which we give defined meanings.                           Id., ¶45.
    ¶39       Statutes should be read to give reasonable effect to
    every    word    so     that      no    word    or     phrase      becomes          surplusage.
    Warehouse II, LLC v. DOT, 
    2006 WI 62
    , ¶16, 
    291 Wis. 2d 80
    , 
    715 N.W.2d 213
    .        When     statutory       terms      are   capable            of   differing
    reasonable interpretations they are ambiguous.                          Id., ¶17.
    3
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    ¶40    This    decision     also    involves       the    interpretation      and
    application of an administrative rule.                  Generally, we use the
    same rules of construction and interpretation for administrative
    rules as we do with statutes.                   Voces De La Frontera, LLC v.
    Clarke, 
    2017 WI 16
    , ¶13, 
    373 Wis. 2d 348
    , 
    891 N.W.2d 803
    .
    1.    Wisconsin Stat. § 70.32
    ¶41    Correctly interpreting and applying 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    is critical to this controversy.                Section 70.32(2)(a)1. requires
    the assessor to classify land on the basis of use, separate from
    improvements.      It provides:
    (a) The    assessor  shall   segregate  into the
    following classes on the basis of use and set down
    separately in proper columns the values of the land,
    exclusive of improvements, and, except for subds. 5.,
    5m., and 6., the improvements in each class:
    1.     Residential.
    2.     Commercial.
    3.     Manufacturing.
    4.     Agricultural.
    5.     Undeveloped.
    5m. Agricultural forest.
    6.     Productive forest land.
    7.     Other.
    § 70.32(2).       Of   the   statutory          classifications     provided,     the
    parties   have    focused     only     on       residential   and      agricultural.
    Therefore, I will as well.
    ¶42    In the matter before us, classifications are based on
    the use to which the land is placed as of January first of the
    4
    No.   2019AP1618.pdr
    taxation year.        
    Wis. Stat. §§ 70.10
    , 70.32(2)(a) and Wis. Admin.
    Code § Tax 18.05(4).          The assessor classified Nudo's property as
    residential.
    ¶43     Residential land is defined by statute.                 It "includes
    any parcel or part of a parcel of untilled land that is not
    suitable for the production of row crops, on which a dwelling or
    other form of human abode is located and which is not otherwise
    classified under this subsection."                
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)3.
    ¶44     "Not suitable" is not a specially defined phrase, and
    "suitable" is not a specially defined term.                      Therefore we use
    common, acceptable definitions, as can be found in a dictionary.
    Tele-Port, Inc. v. Ameritech Mobile Commc'ns, Inc., 
    2001 WI 261
    ,
    ¶17,     
    248 Wis. 2d 846
    ,     
    637 N.W.2d 782
    .     Webster     defines
    "suitable" as "adapted to a use or purpose" and its antonym as
    "unsuitable."        Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary, 1165 (1974).
    Webster         defines      "unsuitable"          as     "not       fitting"      or
    "inappropriate."          Id., 1283.
    ¶45     Employing     those     common     definitions,       there   was   no
    testimony at the Board of Review hearings that Nudo's property
    was "not fitting" or "inappropriate" for the production of row
    crops.         The   assessor   said       only   that   it    was   largely    brush
    covered.       He said nothing about the lack of suitability for the
    production of row crops.             Nudo said that he had cut paths in the
    brush to access the walnut and Christmas trees and that he had
    ordered 300 trees to plant as wind-breaks for the walnut trees.
    ¶46     It was undisputed that no dwelling or other building
    sufficient for human occupancy existed on the property.                            In
    5
    No.   2019AP1618.pdr
    addition,         Nudo    testified     that       there   was    no    sewer    or    water
    service on the property, which would be necessary to begin to
    make it suitable for home construction.
    ¶47        So what use had been made of Nudo's property that
    supports          its    classification      as     residential        when    
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(a) requires that classification be based on use and,
    in the dispute before us, use as of January 1, 2018?                            
    Wis. Stat. § 70.10
    ; Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.05(4).                        The majority opinion
    asserts that the Wisconsin Property Assessment Manual (WPAM),
    which assessors are required to consult via § 70.32(1), permits
    classifications based on possible prospective uses.3                              However,
    the majority opinion goes further than that.                           It concludes that
    "Nudo's       interpretation       is     incorrect"        when       he     claims   that
    classifications must be "on the basis of use."4
    ¶48        While I of course agree that WPAM says what it says,
    when       WPAM    conflicts    with     a     statute,     the    statute       controls.
    Metro. Holding Co. v. Bd. of Rev., 
    173 Wis. 2d 626
    , 632-33, 
    495 N.W.2d 314
     (1993).             Here, there is an administrative rule, as
    well as a statute, that drives the decision on classification
    and the correct date for determining it, which is January 1,
    2018 as I explain below.
    ¶49        The majority reasons that because the definition of
    "residential" begins with the word, "includes," rather than the
    word, "means," "the 'residential' classification includes, but
    is not limited to, land that currently has on it a 'dwelling or
    3   Majority op., ¶¶16, 25, 26.
    4   Id., ¶21.
    6
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    other     form    of     human     abode.'"5       The      majority      concludes      its
    reasoning with "by the use of the word 'includes,' 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)3.          contemplates      that      land    other       than     the   type
    described        in     § 70.32(c)3.       could      still        be    classified       as
    residential."6
    ¶50    In addition, just as the majority's reasoning negates
    the statutory requirement for a structure that could be used as
    a human abode, it also ignores the statutory requirement that
    residentially           classified     land     is       "not      suitable       for    the
    production of row crops."             
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (c)3.                  Setting land
    outside of the residential classification if it could be used
    for the production of row crops certainly meant something to the
    legislature that drafted § 70.32(2)(c)3.
    ¶51    Furthermore, ignoring a criterion for land that cannot
    be   classified        as    residential    makes     the       statutory       requirement
    about row crops mere surplusage, contrary to the rules by which
    we   construct         statutes.      Warehouse      II,     
    291 Wis. 2d 80
    ,   ¶16.
    Nevertheless,          the    majority     opinion       does      not        mention   that
    limitation        on    residential      classifications,           possibly        because
    there was no evidence presented to the Board of Review that
    Nudo's land was not suitable for the production of row crops.
    ¶52    The date for classifying Nudo's property was January
    1, 2018.         
    Wis. Stat. § 70.10
    .            As of that date, there was no
    testimony that anyone had ever lived on Nudo's land; there was
    no testimony that the land was not suitable for row crops.                                It
    5   Id., ¶22.
    6   Id., ¶24.
    7
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    appears     the        assessor       chose       residential         classification,
    notwithstanding Nudo's land's failure to satisfy the statutory
    requirements of 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)3., believing that all
    this could occur in the future because WPAM permitted future
    uses.     However,      the   assessor's        selection       ignores          January   1,
    2018, in regard to that date's relevance when considering a
    dispute involving a claimed agricultural classification.
    ¶53     Let    us      begin      by      looking      at    the         agricultural
    classification and whether the law and the testimony support it.
    Agricultural land is defined by statute and by administrative
    rule.     They work together to inform our understanding of the
    parameters of the agricultural classification in this dispute.
    ¶54     Wisconsin         Stat.        § 70.32(2)(c)1g.           provides           that
    "Agricultural     land"       is    land    "that     is   devoted          primarily      to
    agricultural use."         Section 70.32(2)(c)li. defines "Agricultural
    use" as that use that is "defined by the department of revenue
    by rule."
    2.    Wisconsin Admin. Code § Tax 18.05
    ¶55     Wisconsin Admin. Code § Tax 18.05 combines with the
    statutory   directives,        as    it    contains     important       Department         of
    Internal Revenue definitions.              It provides in relevant part:
    (1) "Agricultural                 use"     means       any         of     the
    following:
    (a) Activities included in subsector 111 Crop
    Production, set forth in the North American Industry
    Classification System (NAICS) . . . .
    (b) . . . .
    (c)   Growing Christmas trees or ginseng.
    8
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    . . . .
    (4) "Land devoted primarily to agricultural use"
    means land in an agricultural use for the production
    season of the prior year, and not in a use that is
    incompatible with agricultural use on January 1 of the
    assessment year.
    § Tax 18.05.
    ¶56      I follow the requirements of Wis. Admin. Code § Tax
    18.05, which are directed by 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)li., to
    determine         whether       Nudo's       land    was   "devoted         primarily     to
    agricultural        use."        The     majority     opinion     makes       up   its   own
    definition of "devoted primarily to agricultural use" instead of
    interpreting § 70.32(2)(c)li and § Tax 18.05 as required by the
    rules      of     statutory      interpretation.7           Section          Tax   18.05(4)
    provides        that       we   determine      whether     the    land       was   in    "an
    agricultural use" in the prior season and whether its use on
    January 1 was "incompatible with agricultural use."
    ¶57      "Incompatible"         is      not    a    defined       term      in    the
    administrative rule.             Because we generally apply the same rules
    of construction to interpreting administrative rules as we apply
    to     statutes,       I    consult      a    dictionary    for    a     plain     meaning
    definition of incompatible.                   Voces De La Frontera, 
    373 Wis. 2d 348
    ,       ¶13.        "Incompatible"          is    defined      as     "incapable       of
    association        because       incongruous,        discordant,       or     disagreeing;
    unsuitable for use together because of undesirable chemical or
    physiological effects."                  Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary,
    581.
    7   Id., ¶¶23, 24.
    9
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    ¶58     Wisconsin        Admin.          Code      § Tax      18.05(4)         expressly
    confirms    that    "January       1    of     the    assessment     year,"          not    some
    future year, is the controlling date when evaluating a claimed
    agricultural       classification.                   Notwithstanding           this        clear
    directive, the majority opinion is based on future use, not on
    January 1, 2018.8          The majority opinion simply finds the plain
    words of § Tax 18.05(4) inconvenient, so it ignores them.
    ¶59     Furthermore,       
    Wis. Stat. § 70.10
         connects         with      the
    administrative       rule     to       confirm       the   date    on     which       claimed
    agricultural classifications must be made.                         The classification
    decision was an integral component of the assessment accepted by
    the Board of Review; therefore, recognizing and understanding
    this connection is critical to evaluating whether the Board of
    Review's decision followed the law.
    ¶60     Statutory       classification            directives     provide         a     level
    playing    field     for    citizens         and     municipalities           because       they
    provide    the      process        that      both      parties      are       to      use    in
    classification disputes.               When this court does not follow the
    required    date    of     classification            set   by   statute        and    instead
    affirms a classification decision at a date contrary to the
    dates set out in 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 70.109
     and 70.32(2)(c)li10 and
    contrary    to     Wis.    Admin.       Code      § Tax    18.05(4),11         the    court's
    8    Id., ¶¶2, 24, 25, 26, 29.
    9  "The assessor shall assess all real and personal property
    as of the close of January 1 of each year." 
    Wis. Stat. § 70.10
    .
    10 "'Agricultural use' means agricultural use as defined by
    the department of revenue by rule . . . ."          
    Wis. Stat. § 70.32
    (2)(c)li.
    10
    No.   2019AP1618.pdr
    decision harms both the citizen and the municipality because its
    decision changes the process the legislature created to resolve
    classification disputes.
    ¶61   Nudo's    land       was    owned    by     Kenosha      County       when     he
    purchased it on September 11, 2017.                    There were walnut trees and
    Christmas     trees    growing      on    it    then.      Growing       walnuts       is   a
    subsector     111    Crop    Production,         set    forth    in   the     NAICS,      and
    therefore      an    agricultural         use.          Wis.    Admin.        Code     § Tax
    18.05(1)(a).        Growing Christmas trees is also an agricultural
    use.    § Tax 18.05(1)(c).
    ¶62    Walnut    trees      do    not     bear     fruit       until     they      are
    approximately 10 years of age.                  WPAM at 14-19.          Nudo testified
    that he harvested walnuts in 2017, so the trees were mature and
    bearing fruit in the production season prior to his purchase.
    ¶63   Nudo also ordered 300 trees to plant as wind-breaks to
    protect      the    walnut    trees;      he     obtained       permits       to     harvest
    Christmas trees and to raise livestock.                    There was no testimony
    that anything about his use of the property on January 1, 2018,
    was incompatible with the agricultural use that occurred the
    prior production season.
    ¶64   Instead,       the   uncontradicted         testimony      showed        Nudo's
    use of the land was similar to the agricultural use to which it
    was placed in the prior production season.                      He cut paths to more
    "'Land devoted primarily to agricultural use' means land
    11
    in an agricultural use for the production season of the prior
    year, and not in a use that is incompatible with agricultural
    use on January 1 of the assessment year."      Wis. Admin. Code
    § Tax 18.05(4).
    11
    No.    2019AP1618.pdr
    easily get to the walnut trees, ordered trees to plant as wind-
    breaks for the walnuts, obtained permits to raise cattle and
    obtained needed approvals to cut Christmas trees.                         There was no
    testimony      that      any      of    these    uses      was    incompatible        with
    agricultural use of the land.
    ¶65     Wisconsin        Stat.     §§ 70.10,      70.32(2)(c)li.        and     Wis.
    Admin.     Code     § Tax      18.05(4)    connect      to    require      the   claimed
    agricultural use be evaluated as of January 1, 2018.                          The Board
    of   Review       relied    on    some    potential     future      use    due   to    the
    recommendation        of    the    assessor.         The     assessor     relied      on   a
    statement from WPAM.               However, for this dispute, employing a
    future use conflicts with both statutes and the administrative
    code.      Failing to follow what they direct and relying on WPAM is
    an error of law.           Metro. Holding Co., 
    173 Wis. 2d at 632-33
    .
    ¶66     The majority errs in the same way when it relies on
    WPAM's      guidance       that    an     assessor      can      look     forward     into
    prospective use when classifying property.12                       When property for
    which agricultural classification is claimed, January 1 of the
    assessment year must be the classification date in order to
    comply with Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 18.05(4), 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 70.10
    and 70.32(2)(c)1i.           Ignoring January 1 as the dispositive date,
    is in conflict with both the administrative code and statutes.
    As   we    long    ago     explained,     when   WPAM      and   statutes     conflict,
    statutes control.           
    Id.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    12   Majority op., ¶¶25, 26.
    12
    No.       2019AP1618.pdr
    ¶67    The    majority        opinion       errs    because        it     fails     to
    recognize      and     analyze      the    connection       between        the     relevant
    statutes      and    the    relevant      administrative       rule       and     how    that
    connection bears on the question of whether Nudo Holdings, LLC's
    property qualified for an agricultural classification on January
    1,    2018.     Because      I     conclude    that   an    understanding          of    this
    connection shows that the Board of Review incorrectly applied
    the    law,    which       error    the   majority        affirms,    I     respectfully
    dissent.
    ¶68    I am authorized to state that Chief Justice ANNETTE
    KINGSLAND ZIEGLER and Justice REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY join this
    dissent.
    13
    No.   2019AP1618.pdr
    1