Bennett Family Trust v. Deschutes County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2012
DocketTC-MD 120096C
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bennett Family Trust v. Deschutes County Assessor (Bennett Family Trust v. Deschutes 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
Bennett Family Trust v. Deschutes County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

BENNETT FAMILY TRUST, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 120096C ) v. ) ) DESCHUTES COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiff appeals the real market value (RMV) of property identified as Account 143031

(subject property) for the 2011-12 tax year. Trial was held at the Oregon Tax Court on

October 10, 2012. H. Robert H. Bennett, licensed real estate broker (Bennett), appeared and

testified on behalf of Plaintiff. Sharra Tisiot, commercial appraiser (Tisiot), appeared and

testified on behalf of Defendant.

Plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 through 9 and Defendant’s Exhibits A through H were admitted

without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

The subject property is a 5.14 acre lot in Sisters, Oregon, known as “Sisters Mobile

Home Park.” (Def’s Ex C at 4.) Tisiot testified that the property is improved with three

apartment units, an office, a laundry facility, and paved asphalt spaces with underground utilities

and sewer connections. Bennett testified that the subject property has the space and the electrical

capacity to host seven mobile homes and 31 recreational vehicles.

Bennett testified that the subject property generates income through rentals as follows:

seven on-site mobile homes are leased annually, three apartments are rented by the month, a few

RV spaces are rented “full time,” and the remainder are available by the day or by the week to

DECISION TC-MD 120096C 1 transients, “catch as catch can.” Bennett testified that 60 percent of the subject property’s

income comes from the mobile home and apartment rentals. Among the property’s larger

expenses are utilities, maintenance, insurance, and management fees. (See Ptf’s Ex 7 at 3.)

The property’s listing history may be partially reconstructed from exhibits and testimony.

Bennett presented an excerpt from a prior appraisal of the subject property showing that it had

been listed for $1,709,000 in January 2009, and that its asking price had been considerably

reduced over time. (Ptf’s Ex 5D.) That asking price was set at $990,000 in May 2010. (Id.)

Tisiot testified that the subject property’s listing price of $990,000 expired on September 30,

2010. Umpqua Bank acquired the subject property by deed in lieu of foreclosure in January

2011. (Def’s Ex G at 1-7.) Tisiot testified that the bank listed the subject property at $749,000

until the time of Plaintiff’s purchase in mid-2011. Bennett testified that the bank negotiated with

a potential buyer in March 2011 who rejected the bank’s counteroffer to sell the subject property

for $625,000.

On June 18, 2011, Umpqua Bank accepted Plaintiff’s offer to purchase the subject along

with an additional parcel, and seven mobile homes, for a total consideration of $500,000. (Ptf’s

Exs 1, 1A, 2; Def’s Ex G at 11-12.) The sale was concluded on August 30, 2011. (Id.) Plaintiff

purchased the property with other investors. Bennett testified that the additional parcel provides

secondary access to the highway for the subject property. The 2011-12 tax roll RMV of the

additional parcel was $143,360, although the stated consideration for the deed by which the bank

acquired it was $21,000. (Ptf’s Ex 3 at 2; Def’s Ex G at 8-10.) The sum of the 2011-12 tax roll

RMVs of the seven mobile homes is $74,330. (See Ptf’s Ex 3 at 3-8.)

Bennett provided income calculations according to which he concluded that the property

was worth $495,500 at the time he purchased it in August 2011. (Ptf’s Ex 6 at 3.) In those

DECISION TC-MD 120096C 2 calculations Bennett projected “total income” of $131,320 and expenses of $94,650 (including

$8,250 in property taxes). (Id.) Bennett deducted the latter from the former to reach a net “cash”

of $36,670. (Id.) Bennett testified that those figures were based on profit and loss statements

provided by the previous owner. (See id. at 1; Ptf’s Ex 7 at 1.) Bennett further testified that

actual net operating income (NOI) for 2009 was $23,687 and for the 12 month period between

September 2011 through August 2012 was $22,825. (Ptf’s Exs 6 at 1b; Ex 7 at 4.) Bennett

divided his “cash” figure by a capitalization rate of 7.4 percent to reach his projected RMV of

$495,500. (Ptf’s Ex 6 at 3.) Plaintiff did not provide market data to establish Bennett’s chosen

capitalization rate.

Tisiot testified that typical expenses for “mobile home and RV parks” were in the range

of 40 percent, whereas the subject property’s reported expenses were significantly higher.1

Bennett testified that the subject property’s dual purpose as an RV park as well as a mobile home

park increased staff and utilities expenses. Plaintiff did not provide market data to establish what

expense ratio is typical among similar properties. Tisiot supported her testimony with

unadjusted data from a third party appraisal in a table labeled “Income/Expense Data for Mobile

Home Parks (Confidential Sources).” (Def’s Ex C at 49.)

Defendant submitted into evidence an appraisal commissioned by Umpqua Bank and

dated August 31, 2010 (the Bratton appraisal). (Def’s Ex C.) That appraisal, prepared by

Scott D. Thomas and Dana L. Bratton, found that the subject property was in a transition phase,

that its value as of August 24, 2010, was $830,000, and projected that it would have a value of

$890,000 upon reaching stabilization by August 31, 2012. (Id. at 3.) The authors opined that the

subject property required a 12 month marketing period to yield full value, and that if it were

1 After removing property taxes from Plaintiff’s projected expenses, the expense ratio is 66 percent.

DECISION TC-MD 120096C 3 marketed for sale within six months its “disposition value” would be $665,000. (Id. at 3,12, 65.)

Bennett testified that the Bratton appraisal contained inaccuracies that skewed its assessment of

the subject property; in particular, that it failed to account for limitations in the subject property’s

use caused by the existing electrical service and the electrical requirements of mobile homes.

Bennett testified that those limitations, not accounted for in the Bratton appraisal, caused an

over-estimate of income in that report. Neither author of the Bratton appraisal testified.

Defendant submitted printouts from LoopNet containing sales data for comparable

properties. (Def’s Ex D.) Two of the comparables are in Deschutes County, one in Bend and

one in La Pine. (Id. at 1-4.) The remaining properties are in distant communities in western and

southern Oregon, including Albany, Eagle Point, White City, and Klamath Falls. (Id. at 5-18.)

The La Pine comparable reportedly contains 14 “spaces” and two “site built” buildings, and sold

in November 2010 for $320,000, or $20,000 per site. (Id. at 1.) The printout of the Bend

comparable states that it contains six spaces, including “three homes one a manufactured home[]

& 1 manufactured home.” (Id. at 3.) The Bend property reportedly sold for $334,500 in

December 2010, or $55,750 per space. (Id.) Tisiot claimed familiarity with the properties, but

was unable to recall any details about them other than what was contained in the printouts.

Bennett questioned the comparability of “site built” homes at the La Pine property, and the

absence of recreational vehicle spaces at the Bend property.

By order dated February 17, 2012, the Deschutes County Board of Property Tax Appeals

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