Bauman v. Department of Revenue

6 Or. Tax 426, 1976 Ore. Tax LEXIS 42
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMay 26, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 6 Or. Tax 426 (Bauman v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bauman v. Department of Revenue, 6 Or. Tax 426, 1976 Ore. Tax LEXIS 42 (Or. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

The plaintiffs appealed from defendant’s Order No. VL 75-302, dated June 4, 1975. The issue before the court is the true cash value as of January 1, 1974 (the assessment date for the property tax year 1974-1975), of a 388-unit apartment complex located in Washington County, Oregon, known as the Rock Creek Apartments, Assessor’s Account Nos. 42700-0111 and 42700-0190 (the latter previously designated as Account No. 41825-1905 by the Washington County Department of Assessment and Taxation). The total site included 19.23 acres.

The defendant’s order affirms the value of the improvements on the assessment roll, $3,801,000, and defendant’s answer prays that this be sustained. The plaintiffs’ complaint prays that the true cash value *428 of the complex’s improvements as shown on the assessment roll be reduced to $2,219,700. At the trial, defendant changed its approach to value, substituting cost as more reliable than income, and asserted a value for the improvements of $4,405,700. (The parties agreed that the value of the land only was $263,300.)

The improvements consist chiefly of an apartment complex which was completed after the assessment date. It was built in four phases: Phase I, completed in 1971, and Phase II, completed in mid-1972, consisted of 153 apartment units and a large recreation center. In April 1973, construction of the 235 apartment units comprising Phases III and IV was begun, the seven similar apartment buildings comprising these latter two phases being started seriatim, at intervals of 30 or 40 days..

Although physically expanding, the Rock Creek Apartments were in serious economic straits on the assessment date. For the preceding year, there had been a 31 per cent vacancy rate and the owners were at least $225,000 delinquent in their mortgage payments.

In valuing the complex, the parties’ expert witnesses adverted to each of the three accepted methods of valuation. Unhappily, because of the special circumstances involved, the market data, the income, and the cost approaches were not capable of yielding a truly satisfactory result. The plaintiffs and defendant were in agreement that the only way to value Phases III and IV was through the cost approach because they were still under construction on the assessment date. However, the plaintiffs rested their case *429 as to Phases I and II on the income approach (as had the assessor), while the defendant finally relied on the cost approach.

An initial problem that must be resolved by the court in applying the cost approach is to determine, as best it can, the percent completion of Phases III and IV on the assessment date. Both parties have applied the percent completed on the assessment date to the total cost of these parts of the project, and their differences must be resolved. The plaintiffs used a 60 percent completion figure, while the defendant, basing its figure on the testimony before its hearing officer, used a 75 percent completion figure.

Mr. Robert Bauman, part owner of the Rock Creek Apartments and the developer who had prime responsibility for construction of the subject property, provided the only evidence measuring the portion of the project completed as of January 1, 1974. His testimony was based on on-site inspections that occurred continuously throughout the construction period. He testified that the project was 50 to 60 percent complete on the assessment date. On cross-examination, he was asked as to the percentage of completion of each of the seven buildings comprising Phases III and IV. (The defendant’s contention was that, since each of the buildings was roughly equal in value, an average of the percent completed for all seven buildings could be employed.) The average percent complete, calculated by the court from the testimony, turned out to be approximately 80 percent. However, Mr. Bauman, while under the pressure of cross-examination, derived these percent complete figures by estimating the date when each building was started and completed. He remedied this weakness by later testifying more specifically as to the beginning and ending dates of construction of each building. Assuming uniform additions to cost during the entire construction *430 period, as did Mr. Bauman, the court has calculated that the project was approximately 60 percent complete on January 1, 1974. Mr. Bauman also testified that, by the end of the year 1973, the contractors had received $1,455,300 of a draw totaling approximately $2,455,300, indicating that 59 percent of the project had been completed on the assessment date. The court therefore finds, that, on the assessment date, Phases III and IV were 60 percent complete.

Plaintiffs’ Cost Approach. As their expert witness using the cost approach, the plaintiffs called Mr. Boy M. Howard. He has had 25 years’ experience as an appraiser and a real estate consultant and operates his own company, Beal Estate Data Services. For Phases I and II, he used a cost figure of $2,538,160. He depreciated Phase I by 5 percent and Phase II by 2y2 percent as applicable to the two years and one year of depreciation attributable to each phase, respectively. The deduction of the $98,160 depreciation charge produced a cost value for Phases I and II of $2,440,000. The total anticipated cost of Phases III and IV (as testified to by Mr. Bauman) was $2,425,500. Since Phases III and IV were 60 percent complete, their indicated value was $1,455,300. Mr. Howard’s total estimate of value for the improvements was $3,895,300, which is the sum of $2,440,000 and $1,455,300.

The court is critical of Mr. Howard’s $98,160 depreciation charge, based on a 40-year life of the buildings, talcing 2% percent per year depreciation to each unit. An appraiser may not properly deduct depreciation based on a simple estimate of the life of the building. This is not an income tax question where *431 there is a right to recover a capital expenditure through depreciation of a wasting asset. In property valuation, accounting depreciation “should be used by appraisers with great caution.” Encyclopedia of Real Estate Appraising 77, n 1 (Friedman ed, rev & enlarged ed 1968). Deductible depreciation must be based on a physical examination of the property (accompanied, if indicated, by consideration of economic and functional depreciation) and there is no indication in the record that this was done. Id. In addition, the cost of buildings constructed one and two years ago has now increased, but there was no attempt by the witness to trend these costs to the assessment date, offsetting some or all of the depreciation taken. For this reason, the court finds that the $98,160 depreciation deduction cannot be allowed. Plaintiffs’ cost approach for only the improvements would therefore be the sum' of $1,455,300 and $2,538,160, which is $3,993,460.

Plaintiffs’ Mixed Income and Cost Approach. Although the plaintiffs used a cost approach as to Phases III and IV, their case was principally based on employing an income approach as to Phases I and II. They argued that the income approach was a better approach to value because it better reflected market realities.

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6 Or. Tax 426, 1976 Ore. Tax LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauman-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1976.