Legal Alert

Court Rejects Philadelphia's Method of Assessing Condominium Properties

July 18, 2019

In Philadelphia, real estate taxes are based on assessed values set by the Office of Property Assessment (OPA). The OPA sets a land value and improvement value for each property. Since 2003, the City has given owners of new residential property a 10-year tax abatement on the improvements. The abatement was put in place to encourage new construction, and by any measure, much development has occurred since then.

A condominium unit owner owns the unit outright, plus an undivided percentage interest in the land along with every other unit owner. In 2017, the OPA, without notice, changed its valuation methods for land beneath high-rise condominium buildings. Rather than valuing the land itself and assessing each unit owner for his or her share, the OPA allocated a fixed percentage of the total value of the unit to land. In high-rise condos receiving tax abatements, this made the land values artificially high and implied land values higher than, for example, are found on Central Park South in New York City. Almost 300 homeowners, living in three separate high-rise condo buildings, appealed their assessments.

In her opinion of July 16, 2019, Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas President Judge Idee C. Fox ruled in favor of the homeowners and against the City. She found that the homeowners’ methodology of valuing the land using the comparable sales approach “is the most common method to value land under professional appraisal standards.” She found that the homeowners’ expert, Reaves C. Lukens, III, provided the court with a “credible and reliable opinion of the value of the land” at issue. By contrast, the court ruled that the methodology of the City’s expert was “novel and not generally accepted among the community of professional real estate appraisers.” 

The court's ruling means that the City must value land based on recognized approaches of valuation.

The homeowners were represented by Matthew A. White, Philip B. Korb, and Matthew Vahey of Ballard Spahr LLP. Ballard Spahr attorneys regularly represent clients in tax appeals and litigation.


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