When a court interprets or a locality applies a statute, the plain meaning controls as a general rule.
The Riverside Owner L.L.C. v. City of Richmond case involved the appropriate amount for a tax exemption earned by a developer under Virginia Code § 58.1-3221 and Richmond City Code § 27-83. These laws provided for a partial exemption of the real estate taxes under the City’s tax Abatement Program for Rehabilitated Real Estate. Qualifying properties earned an exemption if the “assessment” of the rehabilitated property increases by 40% after rehabilitation.
Under the facts of the case, Richmond Power Plant, LLC developed a site located on Brown’s Island, which was originally valued at $500 dollars. After significant rehabilitation and development, the mixed-use property was subsequently sold to Riverside Owner, L.L.C. Rather than use the property’s actual assessment after rehabilitation, the staff had applied its long-standing
”Chandler policy” to calculate the exemption, using only the part of the assessment due to the rehabilitation. The purpose and effect of the “Chandler policy” was to “eliminate from the final estimate of value any enhancement created by something other than rehabilitation or physical improvement.” Using this policy, the City staff assessed the rehabilitated offices after rehabilitation at $63.8 million. However, applying the ”Chandler policy,” the City staff only awarded an exemption to Riverside in the amount of $45.2 million, rather than the actual assessment of the offices.
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