Business Services Industry
Assessment appeal method targeted for repeal by city
Real Estate Weekly, May 6, 1998 by Lois Weiss
City officials have been lobbying since last fall to have the item repealed, telling business leaders it could cost the city a billion dollars in property tax revenue each year.
If so, it is an admission that a pattern of unequal assessment has existed and will continue to exist, despite state law requiring all properties in New York City to be reassessed each year, and the city is worried the simple sales studies will help taxpayers prove their open year cases in court.
Richard Schwartz, tax counsel and director of government and fiscal affairs for the Business Council of New York State, said "A taxpayer should have the fundamental right of challenging overassessment and inequality, and you cannot do that without the ability to do a sales ratio. I don't know any taxpayer that would want to support repeal."
Experts say that even in today's fast-rising market, with sales figures that are so obviously out of whack with assessments, such a sales study will prove inequality.
"The values have gone up so rapidly over the last few years that the assessments have not kept up with the values, so the city is creating a new inequality because they are refusing to admit the assessments are below 45 percent," explained Paul Korngold, a tax certiorari attorney with Tuchman Katz Schwartz Gellis & Korngold.
Currently, the parties end up stipulated to the city's stated 45 percent assessment ratio. The city has protested and fought the state Bureau of Real Property Services in court when the rate has not come out in its favor.
"The owner settles at 45 percent and the only affirmative statement that the ratio is 35 percent is coming from the state, and that ratio is litigated by the city, and held in abeyance, so you are left with the city's statement it's 45 percent," explained William K. Block, an attorney and former Deputy Commissioner of Finance who is now is private practice.
Under the law, another method of proving inequality is by the selected parcels method, which Korngold says is "exceptionally expensive and too difficult," so that it is never used.
The sales study has been allowed in the past and was removed by legislation in 1986 for larger properties. Small Claims Assessment Review proceedings for small homeowners always permit the use of a state residential ratio and comparable sales.
Some experts believe the real overall equalization ratio for New York City could be proven as being closer to 25 or 30 percent using such a sales study.
If, at a settlement discussion, the city's income and capitalization guidelines were combined with a 45 percent equalization rate, that might give the owner an assessment of $1.2 million. But if the real equalization rate is 25 percent, the owner might be entitled to an assessment reduction down to $800,000.
Block used as an example a property the city has assessed at $100,000, and sells for $300,000, which becomes a ratio of 33 percent and not 45 percent. Going back two or three years, the property might have sold for $200,000 and was also assessed for $100,000, so that ratio was equal to 50 percent.
"The rising market actually serves to lower the ratio," Block explained.
If the values start going up and an owner has to protest his assessment, and the city is using a 45 percent rate combined with the city guidelines, the owner will not receive the appropriate reduction that would be forthcoming if the real equalization rate was used.
A memo obtained by REW from Corporation Counsel staff to Robert Harding, the Director of the Mayor's Office of Legislative Affairs, requests the repeal, claiming among other things that the sales that occur each year are not a "valid statistical sample." It compares the Chrysler Building sale to that of a warehouse property, and explains that sales prices for the properties that do sell should be adjusted to reflect unusual factors motivating sales. It goes on to state, "unadjusted prices alone... are not an accurate measure of value,"
But later, the memo notes that in a rising market, "every owner of income-producing property may be able to prove their assessment is unequal using a sales-based ratio." And in a falling market, it says in a footnote, the owners would be expected to ignore high sales ratios in favor of lower State rates.
"If the taxpayers knew the true rate, everyone would come running in and ask for a reduction," explained Korngold. "They are essentially trying to prevent taxpayers from proving their case because they are saying evidence of sales is not good evidence."
Steven Spinola, president of the Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY), says he is not convinced allowing the city to eliminate the sales study is so bad. REBNY was to be meeting with city officials to discuss the issue further.
Other sources say REBNY is so concerned over any delay in reducing the commercial rent and occupancy tax and the unincorporated business taxes that they could be willing to trade off on those issues.
Block says the city has "decimated" its assessment staff and needs to add personnel, including audit staffers where reviews of protests are backed up at the Corporation Counsel for more than two years.
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