But the council’s 2020 move — backed by the Valuer-General — received pushback from local grower Tim Tietjen of The Bushmere Trust, who was supported by NZ Kiwifruit Growers Incorporated.
Tietjen took exception to his small orchard’s capital value increasing from $1.65m to $4.1m and brought the matter to the Land Valuation Tribunal on behalf of all gold growers in the region.
In February 2022, the tribunal ruled in favour of Tietjen and declared the licences should not be seen as an improvement to the land.
The celebrations were short-lived for growers, as the High Court overturned that decision in August 2022.
The council successfully argued the tribunal’s decision was a double standard because it required the value of all plant variety licences to be deducted from property values without deducting the value of the vines.
In November 2022, the High Court granted The Bushmere Trust an opportunity to take its case to the Court of Appeal.
The principal issue was whether SunGold kiwifruit grown under licence affected the capital value of the land.
A hearing was held in May and the Court of Appeal’s dismissal decision was released yesterday. The court said that in the event of Bushmere selling up, the orchard could be expected to fetch a price that reflected the value of its golden kiwifruit vines.
”An orchard that is planted in SunGold vines sells for a materially higher price than an orchard planted in other vines,” the judgement read.
”While the licence is personal property, the price that Bushmere would expect to obtain if it were to sell its orchard would reflect, amongst other matters, the fact that the kiwifruit vines grown by Bushmere are SunGold.”
Speaking to Local Democracy Reporting, Tietjen said the decision had come as a shock and he was “very disappointed”.
Most growers were facing either a two or three-fold increase to their rates, he said, and kiwifruit growers were doing it tough.
”The economic landscape was a lot different to when this was first brought in.
”Kiwifruit [growers] had probably three or four of the best years we’d ever had. Since the decision, we’ve had two pretty horror seasons.”
The Bushmere Trust owns a 5.86-hectare block about 10 kilometres from Gisborne, of which 3.11ha is used for golden kiwifruit.
Its rates jumped from around $4400 for 2020-2021 to about $8220 for 2021-2022, Tietjen said.
The $4.1m revaluation it received in 2020 would have been about $2.8m had it been updated under existing frameworks.
Around 50 local growers could be affected by the outcome of the rating saga and there are implications for those growing the variety outside of the region.
Gisborne District Council was the first local government entity to bring in the new rating approach.
Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.