Carter v. Marion County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2014
DocketTC-MD 130198C
StatusUnpublished

This text of Carter v. Marion County Assessor (Carter v. Marion 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
Carter v. Marion County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

DANIEL R. CARTER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 130198C ) v. ) ) MARION COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION

I. INTRODUCTION

The court entered its Decision in the above-entitled matter on January 3, 2014. The court

did not receive a request for an award of costs and disbursements (TCR-MD 19) within 14 days

after its Decision was entered. The court’s Final Decision incorporates its Decision without

change.

Plaintiff timely appealed from orders of the Marion County Board of Property Tax

Appeals (Board) sustaining the real market values on the assessment and tax rolls of 21

residential duplexes for the 2012-13 tax year.1

Trial was held in the courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court on October 9, 2013. Plaintiff

was represented by W. Scott Phinney, Prime Property Tax Negotiation. Defendant was

represented by Scott A. Norris, Assistant County Counsel, Marion County. Testifying for

Plaintiff were Mona St. Clair (St. Clair), a real estate associate working as an independent

contractor with Keller Williams Realty, Portland, Oregon, and Rick M. Bean (Bean), Broker,

1 The parties list the duplex account numbers in different orders in their respective exhibits (Ptf’s Ex 1 at 98, 100; Def’s Ex A at 2), but they agree on the 21 property tax account numbers. They are as follows: R92567, R92565, R92571, R92572, R92573, R92574, R92575, R92570, R92558, R92557, R92555, R92569, R92568, R92566, R92564, R92563, R92562, R92561, R92560, R92559, R92556. (Id.) The first 11 account numbers are all 1584 square foot duplexes (total area for both units within the duplex), and the final 10 accounts are 2,032 square feet in size. (Id.)

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130198C 1 Rose City Commercial Real Estate. The court heard brief testimony about the witnesses’

professional credentials, and reviewed more comprehensive information about the witnesses

submitted by Plaintiff. The court concludes that St. Clair is knowledgeable in real estate matters,

including valuation, and that Bean qualifies as an expert in that area.2

Testifying for Defendant were Robb Witters (Witters), Senior Appraiser, Marion County

Assessor’s Office, and Nathaniel Combs (Combs), Senior Commercial Property Appraiser,

Marion County Assessor’s Office. The court also heard testimony about Defendant’s witnesses’

professional credentials, and reviewed more comprehensive information submitted by Defendant

regarding Witters, and concludes that both Witters and Combs are qualified experts in property

valuation techniques and methodologies.3

Turning to the documentary evidence offered at trial, Plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 and 3 were

admitted without objection. Defendant’s Exhibits A through D were admitted at trial, Exhibits

A, B and D being admitted over Plaintiff’s objections.

2 St. Clair testified that she is a realtor specializing in residential property, and is an independent contractor with Keller Williams Realty. Bean testified briefly to his credentials, noting that he was a real estate broker with multistate experience in real estate sales, that he also has a “blog,” and will soon have a “radio show.” Plaintiff submitted a form of resume as part of its Exhibit 1 that more fully describes Bean’s real estate experience, including the fact that he has “29 years [of] business experience [and] five years in investment real estate.” (Ptf’s Ex 1 at 136.) Bean’s resume describes him as a specialist in “on-site and electronic market research [in Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico],” and lists five real estate associations/certifications Bean has obtained, plus 30 hours of classroom training on the income approach to valuation. (Id.) 3 Defendant submitted a document that amounts to either a resume or curriculum vitae. (Def’s Ex A at 17.) That document indicates that Witters is a Senior Appraiser in the Residential Section of the Assessor’s office, with an associate of arts degree from Chemeketa Community College in 2011 and “[o]ver 150 hours of appraisal classes to obtain and maintain [his] appraisal license and certification.” (Id.) That document further indicates that Witters was involved in nine continuing education classes presented by the Oregon Department of Revenue between June 2008 and August 2012, and that his appraisal experience began in 2004, with Witters working as an Appraiser Assistant between 2004 and 2006, followed by experienced as a licensed appraiser from 2006 through 2008, and a certified appraiser from 2008 to present. (Id.) Witters assumed his present role as senior residential property appraiser in 2009. (Id.) It appears from Plaintiff’s cross-examination of Witters that Witters was a private appraiser from 2004 to 2008, and left the private industry for the public sector in 2008 because of the economic downturn in the real estate market. There is less information on Combs’ professional experience. Combs, who was called by Defendant as a rebuttal witness, did testify under oath that he was a Senior Commercial Appraiser with the Assessor’s office, where he has worked for the past five years, and that he has been in his current position for about seven months.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130198C 2 II. STATEMENT OF FACTS

A. Property overview

This appeal involves the real market value (RMV) of 21 individual duplexes properties,

each located on their own tax lot, in the Stonecreek Subdivision in Northeast Salem near McKay

High School. (Ptf’s Ex 1 at 1-3; Def’s Ex A at i, 1, 9.) All 21 duplexes were built in 1979 and

are held under common ownership. (Ptf’s Ex 1 at 21; Def’s Ex A at 16.) They are all in the

same neighborhood and are essentially contiguous to one another. Seventeen of the 21

properties are located on Phipps Circle, which forms a looped neighborhood off Phipps Street;

the other four duplexes are located on Phipps Street, directly across from the Phipps Circle

looped neighborhood block where the 17 subject duplexes are located. (Def’s Ex A at 9.) The

properties are all zoned RD (duplex residential). (Id. at 1; Ptf’s Ex 1 at 23.4) Although there was

some initial reluctance by Defendant’s witnesses to acknowledge the poor quality of the

neighborhood where the subject properties are located, both sides ultimately agreed that the

subject duplexes are in a “bad” neighborhood, a factor emphasized considerably more by

Plaintiff than Defendant. Plaintiff presented considerable persuasive evidence on the quality of

the area where the properties are located, both through the testimony of St. Clair and certain

supporting documentary evidence included in Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 related to various violent and

non-violent crime statistics, including auto theft, sexual assault and illegal drug arrests.

St. Clair testified that the area where the subject duplexes are located suffers from a high

crime rate and is comprised of individuals in the lower socioeconomic class. St. Clair testified

that while the quality of many of the subject units was “fine,” in her professional opinion

location in this case is the most dominant factor affecting value and the high crime rate

4 Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, apparently authored primarily by Bean, indicates that the “current zoning of the property is RM2,” but being corrected at trial, Bean testified that the zoning was in fact RD.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130198C 3 negatively impacts the properties’ values. Bean agreed that the area was a “bad” neighborhood

with an “active crack house” located nearby to the south of the subject. Plaintiff also included

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Bluebook (online)
Carter v. Marion County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-marion-county-assessor-ortc-2014.