Leawood, Kan. – May 6, 2025: Greg Musil, a shareholder with Rouse Frets White Goss Gentile Rhodes, P.C., recently secured a victory on behalf of a national outdoor retail company at the Kansas Board of Tax Appeals (BOTA).
The firm represented the client’s property in Kansas City, Kansas and challenged the County’s appraised value, asserting the County’s valuation was significantly above fair market value for property tax purposes. Following a two-day trial and post-trial briefing, BOTA issued an opinion that significantly decreased appraised valuation, resulting in lower tax liability for the company.
About Greg Musil: Greg is an experienced trial lawyer who has successfully resolved business and commercial disputes for clients since 1987. In addition to a litigation and dispute resolution practice, Greg’s experience on the City Council of Kansas’ second largest city, and in politics and public service generally, has led to a successful practice in land use, zoning, real estate development, and property tax appeals.
About the Firm’s Litigation Practice Group: The firm’s litigation attorneys have more than 250 years of combined trial and appellate court experience, including business-to-business cases, individual and business cases, simple two-party disputes, and complex class action cases. The Litigation practice group has collective experience in more than 40 states and in eight federal circuits, including more than 500 bench and jury trials.
About the firm:
Rouse Frets White Goss Gentile Rhodes offers highly skilled lawyers in many practice areas with vast real world experience. Our clients benefit from blue-ribbon talent unencumbered by mega firm business models.
Choice of an attorney is an important decision and should not be based solely upon a website or advertisements. In reviewing achievements by the law firm or its attorneys, remember that past results afford no guarantee of future results; each matter is different and must be judged on its own merits. Although our lawyers may practice in subject areas, neither the Supreme Court of Missouri nor The Missouri Bar reviews or approves certifying organizations or specialty designations for Missouri licensed attorneys.