Bend Millwork Co. v. Department of Revenue

592 P.2d 986, 285 Or. 577, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 953
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1979
DocketTC 1052, SC 25462
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 592 P.2d 986 (Bend Millwork Co. v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bend Millwork Co. v. Department of Revenue, 592 P.2d 986, 285 Or. 577, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 953 (Or. 1979).

Opinion

*579 LENT, J.

This case is concerned with fixing the true cash value of plaintiffs industrial property as of January 1, 1974, and January 1, 1975. The principal dispute centers on the effect upon value of claimed plant "layout” deficiencies. Defendant appeals from the decree of the Oregon Tax Court reversing an order of the Oregon Department of Revenue. 1 We modify but substantially affirm.

The subject property is a production millwork plant, including buildings, machinery, and equipment, located near Bend in Deschutes County. The 23-acre plant site in the Bend Industrial Park is served by a mainline right-of-way of the Burlington and Northern Railroad, as well as by a fully improved road connection to U. S. Highway 97. The plant began operation in 1965 as a custom millwork shop known as Lee Mill-work Company. It was acquired in 1969 for $589,278 by the plaintiff, a creditor, when the former company became insolvent. The plant, consisting then of one large building with machinery and equipment, was basically a specialty millwork plant manufacturing bow windows, but some time after the 1969 acquisition the plaintiff changed to manufacturing mouldings and millwork. Since 1969 other buildings and machinery have been added to the plant, the additional improvements amounting to approximately $1,827,300 through 1973. An additional $803,800 was invested in 1974. The number of workers that year was approximately the same as the year before, amounting to about 220 production and maintenance employes working on a two-shift, five-day basis.

The parties’ respective valuations of the property for the two dates are as follows:

*580 January 1, 1974

Plaintiff Defendant

Buildings and Structures................................. $ 900,500 $ 901,100

Machinery and Equipment............................... 1,333,050 1,239,000

2,233,550 $2,140,100

Functional Obsolescence.................................. - 986,370

$1,247,180

January 1, 1975

Buildings and Structures................................. $1,194,140 $1,194,140

Machinery and Equipment............................... 1,729,760 1,869,770

2,923,900 $3,063,910

Functional Obsolescence.................................. - 986,370

$1,937,530

In defendant’s post-trial memorandum to the tax court an arithmetical correction was made, reducing the $3,063,910 figure to $3,050,620. The values for the buildings and structures are the same because plaintiff accepted defendant’s values except for a $600 change for 1974 which defendant made between the department hearing and the tax court proceeding. The tax court adopted the plaintiffs valuations, except for the "functional obsolescence” value which the tax court found to be $805,200. Plaintiff had originally asserted that value, and the tax court made no mention of plaintiff’s amended value. The values found by the tax court, then, were $1,428,350 for January 1,1974, and $2,118,700 for January 1, 1975.

In an appeal from the tax court this court performs two separate appellate functions. This court sits as an "error correcting” court, in which it performs the ordinary appellate function of deciding whether the trial court committed an error of law and, if so, whether the error requires reversal. In addition to that function this court is charged with a fact finding function, for upon "appeal and review” of tax court decisions, we try the case "anew upon the record.” ORS 305.445 and 19.125(3). In considering assignments of error neither the parties nor this court have always kept the two functions as separate as may be desirable. *581 This sometimes leads to citation of an opinion of this court for what the party conceives to be a rule of law, but which is really only a finding of fact upon the evidence in the record in the cited case. In this opinion we shall try to avoid confusion of the two functions.

The legislature requires that plaintiffs property be assessed at true cash value, which "means market value as of the assessment date.” ORS 308.205. 2 The defendant does not contend that the tax court refused to apply the statute or misinterpreted it. Rather the defendant asserts that the tax court failed to fix true cash value as required by the statute because the tax court allegedly failed to follow the opinion of this court in Publishers Paper Co. v. Dept, of Rev., 270 Or 737, 530 P2d 88 (1974).

That case, as is this, was largely concerned with the effect on true cash value of "design” or "layout” deficiencies of the plant. In that case both parties agreed that it was not possible to utilize either the market data or capitalization of income approach to valuation and, therefore, agreed that the cost-summation approach had to be used. In that case both parties acknowledged that faulty layout problems caused operating costs which would not exist in the absence of that defect. Both parties agreed that this "would cause a prospective purchaser to discount the value of the plant in comparison to a plant of similar cost without such deficiencies.” (emphasis added) 270 Or at 740. It followed that both parties agreed that the layout "deficiencies would be taken into account in the market to reduce the value of the property below the sum of the costs of its parts, ""(emphasis added) 270 Or at 742. In that case we noted that both parties agreed that the cost-summation approach yielded a certain value which was termed the "ordered value.”

*582 In Publishers the parties disagreed as to whether the ordered value was to be discounted for the layout deficiencies. We said that the "defendant maintains that the ordered value * * * already reflects a discount of approximately 5% of the depreciated reproduction cost of the plant and that this allowance was sufficient.” 270 Or at 741. We found that the assessor had approached the problem by incorporating a factor for the deficiency in layout into the depreciation of each of the items, which were then summed up to yield the overall value of improvements and machinery. On the other hand, this court found that plaintiff had followed a different method for determining the effect of layout deficiency upon value.

«* * * method, based on the definition of functional obsolescence as the reduction in value due to excess operating costs produced by faulty layout, requires comparison of the operating costs of the subject property with the operating cost of a functionally similar plant lacking the deficiencies. The excess operating cost of the subject property is then capitalized and deducted from the value of the plant arrived at without reference to the deficiencies. There is complete agreement in this case

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Bluebook (online)
592 P.2d 986, 285 Or. 577, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bend-millwork-co-v-department-of-revenue-or-1979.