Bay Area Athletic Club v. Coos County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 23, 2018
DocketTC-MD 170159N
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bay Area Athletic Club v. Coos County Assessor (Bay Area Athletic Club v. Coos County Assessor) 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
Bay Area Athletic Club v. Coos County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

BAY AREA ATHLETIC CLUB ) and MARK MCPEEK, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 170159N ) v. ) ) COOS COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION1

Plaintiff appealed the assessment of property identified as Account 1884900 (subject

property) and Account 7887 for the “1985-2017” tax years. (See Compl.) By Orders entered

September 6, 2017, and October 11, 2017, the court dismissed Plaintiff’s appeal of Account 7887

for all tax years and of the subject property for the 1985-86 through 2015-16 tax years. Those

Orders are hereby incorporated into this Decision.

A telephone trial was held on December 14, 2017, concerning the real market value of

the subject property for the 2016-17 tax year. Mark McPeek (McPeek), shareholder of Bay Area

Athletic Club, appeared and testified on behalf of Plaintiffs. Nathaniel Johnson, Assistant

County Counsel, appeared on behalf of Defendant. Roy Metzger (Metzger), licensed appraiser,

testified on behalf of Defendant. Plaintiff submitted no exhibits. Defendant submitted Exhibits

A and B. At the start of trial, McPeek stated that he did not receive Defendant’s Exhibits.

However, Defendant filed a Certificate of Service with its Exhibits certifying that Exhibits were

mailed to Plaintiffs on November 30, 2017. McPeek confirmed that the mailing address was

correct. The court admitted Defendant’s Exhibits.

1 This Final Decision incorporates without change the court’s Decision, entered March 5, 2018. The court did not receive a statement of costs and disbursements within 14 days after its Decision was entered. See Tax Court Rule–Magistrate Division (TCR–MD) 16 C(1).

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 170159N 1 At the conclusion of trial, Defendant renewed its motion for attorney fees in the amount

of $712.50, associated with Defendant’s motion to compel, as a sanction for Plaintiffs’

withholding of discoverable information from Defendant. (Def’s Mot to Compel Ptfs’ Discovery

at 4-5, Nov. 21, 2017.) McPeek requested an opportunity to respond to Defendant’s motion for

attorney fees. Even though Plaintiffs did not timely file a response to Defendant’s motion for

attorney fees, the court permitted Plaintiffs to file a written response following trial. As of the

date of this Decision, the court has not received Plaintiffs’ written response.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

McPeek testified that the subject property is a health club built in 1979 with a swimming

pool that was added in 1983, so it is approximately 38 years old. The building is “concrete tilt-

up” and the pool is in a metal frame structure with fiberglass siding, which is an inexpensive

enclosure. Plaintiffs recently added a “membrane roof.” Metzger testified that the subject

property has deferred maintenance. The subject property is 20,247 square feet and situated on a

1.06-acre lot with an additional 0.77-acre lot adjoining. (See Def’s Ex A at 5.)

McPeek testified that Plaintiffs paid $960,000 for the subject property in 1984, but only

half was for the “property” (i.e., the real estate) and the rest was for the business.2 He testified

that, when purchasing a health club, some of the value is due to existing memberships, which is

distinct from the value of the real estate. McPeek testified that it is “totally inappropriate” to

base the subject property’s real market value on its business value.

McPeek testified that the subject property is located in the “Empire District” of Coos

Bay, which is a “high crime area” with a significant population of homeless and drug-addicted

individuals. He testified that Coos County is “impoverished” and “tremendously poor”; it suffers

2 Defendant’s records identified the sale date as January 1, 1988. (Def’s Ex A at 5.) Metzger was unable to explain the discrepancy between McPeek’s testimony and Defendant’s records.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 170159N 2 from the highest unemployment rate in the United States. McPeek testified that the economic

conditions were better when he purchased the subject property in 1984; Coos County was a rich

timber county with 17 lumber mills and a significant commercial fishing industry. He testified

that he used to have at least 100 club members from the commercial fishing industry and

“hundreds” from the timber industry. Metzger testified that he disagreed with McPeek about the

number of lumber mills operating in the county and listed at least eight.

McPeek testified that the membership base is “everything” for a health club. He testified

that, as of the date of trial, he had only one member from the timber industry and one from the

commercial fishing industry. McPeek testified that Plaintiffs’ membership has also suffered due

to competition from the community college gym. He testified that the college gym does not have

to pay its staff because they are students and does not have to pay for utilities because it receives

taxpayer funds. McPeek testified that the subject property’s membership was only 45 to 50

percent of what it was 10 years ago.

McPeek testified that his business used to be successful: “many years ago” his average

annual income from the club was $200,000, and in one year it was $300,000. He testified that he

suffers from significant health problems that interfere with his management of the club, which

has not been profitable for 9 or 10 years. McPeek testified that he has incurred significant losses

in the past few years, “many hundreds of thousands of dollars.” He testified that he does not

know if someone without his health problems could achieve annual income of $200,000 again,

given the local economy and competition with the college gym.

Approximately one year before the trial date, Plaintiffs listed the subject property, as well

as the additional unimproved lot not at issue here, for $2.5 million. (See Def’s Ex A at 6.)

McPeek testified that he asked more than what the subject property was worth so he could

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 170159N 3 discount it later. He “discounts” the subject property when people call him. McPeek testified

that the realtor would list the subject property at whatever price he wanted. He did not have an

appraisal or a certified market analysis. McPeek testified that Plaintiffs had received no offers,

but clarified that he received offers from two employees to purchase the subject property on

contract, but found those offers to lack credibility: one, because the employee was 18 years old,

and the other, because he concluded the employee (a club manager) was stealing from the club.

In a letter McPeek filed in the Coos County Circuit Court in an unrelated matter, he

discussed his efforts to sell the subject property, writing “I kept hoping I would recover health

and be able to perform the needed work to restore BAAC’s financial losses. (30 years BAAC

produced $200,000 to $300,000 profit every year). I know these last few years losses could be

reversed if I was again healthy.” (Def’s Ex B at 3.) He continued, “I expect a sale of BAAC in

the next several months.” (Id.) When asked about that statement, McPeek testified that he was

“desperate to sell” the subject property.

McPeek testified that Plaintiffs’ tax burden is significantly more (300 to 400 percent)

than all of the other commercial properties within a one-mile radius. He listed those properties,

including a market, a property owned by the Grande Ronde tribe, a cable company, a car

dealership, a shopping center, and two marinas.

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Bay Area Athletic Club v. Coos County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bay-area-athletic-club-v-coos-county-assessor-ortc-2018.