Buckles v. Deschutes County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 2015
DocketTC-MD 150133D
StatusUnpublished

This text of Buckles v. Deschutes County Assessor (Buckles 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
Buckles v. Deschutes County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

JILL BUCKLES, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 150133D ) v. ) ) DESCHUTES COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION

This Final Decision incorporates without change the court’s Decision, entered

September 9, 2015. The court did not receive a statement of costs and disbursements within

14 days after its Decision was entered. See TCR-MD 16 C(1).

Plaintiff appeals the real market value of property identified as Account 185491 (subject

property) for the 2014-15 tax year. A trial was held in the Oregon Tax Mediation Center on

July 21, 2015, in Salem, Oregon. Plaintiff appeared and testified on her own behalf. Todd

Straughan (Straughan) appeared and testified on behalf of Defendant. Plaintiff’s Exhibits 1

through 6 and Defendant’s Exhibits A through D were received without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Plaintiff appealed the order of the Deschutes County Board of Property Tax Appeals

(BOPTA) upholding the subject property’s tax roll real market value. (Ptf’s Compl at 2.)

Plaintiff filed her Complaint on March 25, 2015, requesting a real market value of $45,000 for

the subject property. (Id. at 1.)

The parties agreed that the subject property was an undivided one-fifth interest in the

condominium known as 19717 Southwest Mt. Bachelor Drive, Unit 321, Bend, Oregon (subject

condominium), located in River Ridge at the Mount Bachelor Village resort (River Ridge) in

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 150133D 1 Bend. (Ptf’s Ltr at 1, July 8, 2015; Def’s Ex A at 1.) The parties agreed that the subject

condominium was 1,194 square feet, with 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, and a carport. (Ptf’s Ex 4 at

1; see Def’s Ex A at 1.)

Plaintiff testified that she was “shocked” when she received her tax statement stating a

real market value that was “three times what she had paid for the property.” The BOPTA order

stated that the real market value of her one-fifth interest was $77,570 and the real market value

of the whole unit was $387,750 for the 2014-15 tax year. (Ptf’s Compl at 2.) Plaintiff testified

that she would “accept” a real market value of $74,880 for her one-fifth interest in the subject

condominium, which was the same real market value assessed to two other condominiums in the

River Ridge development: The “Talarico unit” and the “Runyan unit.” 1 Plaintiff testified that

the Runyan and Talarico units were “cookie cutter” to the subject condominium.

Plaintiff testified that she listed her one-fifth interest in the subject condominium for sale

and that it had “been on the market for approximately 820 days at a list price of $59,500 and then

$49,500.” (Cf. Ptf’s Ex 4 at 1.) Plaintiff testified that all the River Ridge condominiums with

multiple owners had higher tax roll real market values than similar wholly-owned

condominiums, except the Talarico and Runyan properties, which had adjudicated real market

values. (See also Ptf’s Ex 5 at 1.)

Plaintiff testified that her one-fifth interest in the subject condominium came “with

certain restrictions,” stating that one “can’t get financing on a one-fifth interest.” Plaintiff

testified that her one-fifth interest entitled her to “10 weeks of occupancy per year.” She testified

that “it’s divided up into fifty weeks, with two weeks maintenance time, and some of those ten

1 The properties to which Plaintiff referred were the subjects of two prior cases before the Magistrate Division of the Oregon Tax Court: Talarico v. Deschutes Cty. Assessor (Talarico), 17 OTR-MD 37 (2001), and Runyan v. Deschutes Co.(Runyan), TC-MD 030112B (2004).

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 150133D 2 weeks are consecutive and some are rotating * * * so there can be a variation in the pricing in the

unit depending on the appeal of the weeks that are owned.” Plaintiff testified that “the expenses,

the management fees and the homeowner association dues are higher for a one-fifth interest

because the management, which is the resort company, requires that a unit be cleaned after each

owner’s use.” Plaintiff testified that “the dues for a wholly-owned [unit] is about $470 a month.

The dues for a one-fifth interest is about $309 per month, which is about $1,545 [for a 100

percent interest] a month.” Plaintiff testified that “decisions on updating, replacing, and any

improvements have to be unanimous, so control is a big issue.” Plaintiff testified that she

“believes all these things affect” the subject property’s real market value.

Plaintiff testified that her purchase prices of five separate one-fifth interests in a

neighboring unit (unit 320) totaled $224,000. (See also Ptf’s Ltr at 2, July 8, 2015.) Plaintiff

submitted as evidence an appraisal of condominium unit 320. (Ptf’s Ex 4a.) Plaintiff testified

that the subject condominium and unit 320 are “cookie cutter.” Plaintiff testified that the

appraisal report prepared for unit 320 stated a real market value of $375,000 as of April 27,

2015. (Ptf’s Ex 4a at 3.)

Straughan testified that he was “a registered appraiser and a fee appraiser.” Straughan

testified that the subject condominium is “exactly like” unit 320, and that he did not think the

“appraisal report [provided by Plaintiff] was way off the mark.” Straughan testified that he “had

a couple issues with the appraisal [report], mainly with the $50,000 adjustment,” but that the

subject condominium’s tax roll real market value of “$387,750 still seems within reason.”

Straughan testified that “he did not know if the sale prices [for the comparable sales in the

appraisal report] included personal property.” He testified that the county has a difficult time

obtaining data regarding the value of personal property in real property sales, and that usually

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 150133D 3 personal property has little or no value to the purchaser. Straughan testified that he did not view

the Runyan and Talarico units. He testified that he “was able to go in to unit 509 * * * [and] it

looked very similar” to the subject condominium. Straughan testified that he attributed the

differences in real market value among the units in the River Ridge development to their

proximity to the river. Straughan submitted a map with his exhibits showing the location of the

river and its proximity to various units. (See Def’s Ex B at 1.)

II. ANALYSIS

Plaintiff is appealing the real market value of her one-fifth undivided interest in the

subject condominium. ORS 308.205(1) provides the definition of real market value in the

context of property valuation and assessment:2

“Real market value of all property, real and personal, means the amount in cash that could reasonably be expected to be paid by an informed buyer to an informed seller, each acting without compulsion in an arm’s-length transaction occurring as of the assessment date for the tax year.”

“Real market value is the standard used throughout the ad valorem statutes, except for special

assessments.” Richardson v. Clackamas Co., TC-MD 020869D, WL 21263620 at *2 (Mar 26,

2003). The assessment date for the 2014-15 tax year was January 1, 2014. See ORS 308.007;

ORS 308.210.

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Talarico v. Deschutes County Assessor
17 Or. Tax 37 (Oregon Tax Court, 2001)
Feves v. Department of Revenue
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Lewis v. Department of Revenue
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Buckles v. Deschutes County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckles-v-deschutes-county-assessor-ortc-2015.