Berrey v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 110191d (or.tax 12-14-2011)

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2011
DocketTC-MD 110191D.
StatusPublished

This text of Berrey v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 110191d (or.tax 12-14-2011) (Berrey v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 110191d (or.tax 12-14-2011)) 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
Berrey v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 110191d (or.tax 12-14-2011), (Or. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
Plaintiff appeals the real market value of property identified as Account 1724408 (subject property) for tax year 2010-11. A trial was held in the Oregon Tax Court Mediation Center with Plaintiff appearing in person and Defendant appearing by telephone on October 17, 2011. Plaintiff, an Oregon real estate broker, testified on his own behalf. David Sohm (Sohm), Registered Appraiser 3, Lane County Assessment and Taxation, appeared on behalf of Defendant.

Defendant's Exhibit A was accepted after discussion of the court's exhibit exchange rule.1

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS
Sohm described the subject property as a land parcel measuring 25,133 square feet and a partially completed building. (Def's Ex A at 2, 3.) Plaintiff testified that he purchased the land in 2004, paying $450,000. He testified that the "property suffers" from (a) "restricted access," (b) "in-line sight" because it is not a "corner lot with better exposure," and (c) "shared parking" with the neighboring retail business, Dollar Tree. *Page 2

Plaintiff testified that the building's "net rentable area" is 3,040 square feet, not 3,121 square feet as measured by Sohm. (Id. at 3.) He testified that the building has been "vacant" from "March 2006" through the date of assessment, January 1, 2010. Plaintiff testified that he "marketed" the building at "$20 to $34 per square foot, triple net" and "no tenant leased the building." He testified that even though he no longer owns the building, he is the leasing agent and a "letter of intent" was recently signed with a tenant for "$18 per square foot, triple net." In response to questions, Plaintiff testified that the rent per square foot was reduced from the asking "rent of $34 per square foot in 2006 and 2007" to the "lower rate of $20 per square foot" when no one leased the building.

Plaintiff testified that he is requesting a real market value of $410,000 as of January 1, 2010. He testified that an appraisal of the subject property in August 2010 determined a real market value of $540,000. Plaintiff testified and Sohm acknowledged that a copy of that appraisal had been given to Sohm but was not offered as an exhibit. Plaintiff testified that the subject property was "foreclosed" in June 2010 and subsequently sold to a limited partnership and he is not one of the partners/owners. Even though Plaintiff testified that the August 2010 sale was an "arm's-length transaction," Sohm concluded that the sale "is a foreclosure sale 19 months after the date of value and does not reflect the highest and best use of the property." (Def's Ex 1at 1.)

Sohm testified that the subject property's highest and best use "[d]ue to the location and size, the physically possible legally permitted use of the vacant site that would produce the highest value as of January 1, 2010 is estimated to be for a commercial development" as a "fast food restaurant." (See id. at 4.) Sohm concluded in his Commercial Appeal Summary of Salient *Page 3 Facts (Summary) "that all three approaches [to value: cost, sales comparison, and income] can be reliably applied to the subject property." (Id. at 6.)

Using the cost approach, Sohm "valu[ed] the subject 25,133 square foot site * * * by direct sales comparison analysis," relying on four sales of land "zoned for similar uses and of adequate size to support a fast food restaurant." (Id. at 7, 8.) Sohm's Summary stated that the four land sales occurred in November 2006, April 2008, January 2009, and April 2009 and ranged in size from 19,720 square feet to 95,857 square feet. (Id. at 7.) Sohm testified that the price per square foot ranged from $27.52 to $34.67, and he concluded that "a price of $28 per square foot is selected for the subject property." (Seeid. at 8.) Sohm added "$1 per square foot" for site preparation cost. (Id.) Sohm's determination of the subject property's land real market value as of the assessment date was $729,000 (rounded). (Id.) Sohm acknowledged that each of the land sales "is a corner parcel." Plaintiff questioned Sohm's "trend adjustment" for the 2006 land sale, stating that the "assessor increased the subject property's land real market value 63 percent from 2004 to 2010" but only "time trended" the 2006 land sale price "one-half of one percent per month." Sohm responded stating that the county experienced "substantial appreciation" in land values from 2004 to 2006. Sohm testified that his adjustments were "qualitative" because there was not "enough data to make quantitative adjustments." Plaintiff testified that the subject property's land value is "grossly overvalued."

Sohm's Summary stated that the "building and site improvement costs were developed using the Marshall Valuation Service." (Id.) Sohm concluded a "base cost factor at January 1, 2010 of $103.13 and added a "[d]eveloper's overhead and profit * * * [of] 5 percent of total project direct and indirect costs." (Id. at 9.) He testified that three adjustments were required: physical depreciation ("3% based on a 30 year expected life"), external obsolescence *Page 4 ("approximately 25%," measuring the impact of the recession) and cost to build out the property that "was not completed at the date of value." (Id. at 9, 10.) Sohm testified that using the cost approach he determined a real market value of $919,000 (rounded). (Seeid. at 10.)

Sohm testified that in using the sales comparison approach that "[s]everal sales of fast food properties in the local market have been researched" and four sales were determined to be comparable to the subject property. (See id. at 11.) Sohm testified that those identified comparable properties ranged in sale price from $340,000 to $1,300,000 and the sale dates ranged from January 2008 to November 2010. (Id. at 15.) He testified that the properties were wood frame or concrete block and were built from 1964 to 2005. (See id.) For the two properties that he concluded were most comparable to the subject property, Sohm testified that Sale 1 "was not a franchise" property and was "located on an interior lot that was smaller than the subject" and Sale 3 "was located on a corner site in Junction City, a city that was hit hard by loss of motor coach manufacturing jobs." Sohm testified that he concluded "[b]ased on the above qualitative comparisons" that "the subject property would command a price per square foot between the indication of Sale 3 at $354 and Sale 1 at $387. * * * Overall, a price per square foot of $354 is selected for use in this analysis[,]"* * * resulting "in a value indication of $1,104,834." (See id.) Because "the building is not yet complete," Sohm adjusted the value indication for the costs to complete, computing "an as is value of * * * $921,000." (rounded). (Id. at 16)

In describing the income approach, Sohm wrote in his Summary that "[t]he income approach relies on the principle of anticipation, which holds that value is created based on an expectation of future benefits" at stabilized occupancy. (Id.) He testified that he relied on "direct capitalization * * * to value the subject property." (See id.) Sohm testified that he *Page 5 selected four "lease comparables" to determine rent per square foot. (See id.

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Bluebook (online)
Berrey v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 110191d (or.tax 12-14-2011), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berrey-v-lane-county-assessor-tc-md-110191d-ortax-12-14-2011-ortc-2011.