Corn v. Department of Revenue

7 Or. Tax 407
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedApril 3, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Or. Tax 407 (Corn v. Department of Revenue) 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
Corn v. Department of Revenue, 7 Or. Tax 407 (Or. Super. Ct. 1978).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

The plaintiff, Don Com, appealed from the defendant’s Order No. VL 77-198, dated May 26, 1977, respecting the January 1, 1976, true cash value of a one-half acre lot near Bend, Oregon. The lot, identified in the county assessor’s records as Assessor’s Account No. 17 12 17C 901, was placed on the 1976-1977 tax roll by the assessor at $9,580. Upon appeals by plaintiff, this value was affirmed by the Deschutes County Board of Equalization and the Department of Revenue. At the trial, the plaintiff contended that the value of the lot did not exceed $4,000. The issue presented to this court is whether the lot should be valued as a buildable lot, as maintained by the county assessor, or as an unbuildable lot, as maintained by plaintiff.

The court viewed the subject property, the southern boundary of which runs to the center of the Deschutes River. The lot is extremely rocky, with a steep cliff which drops approximately 100 feet to the river. On the northern end of the lot, there is a narrow draw about 20 feet wide. The lot rises from this draw approximately 30 feet to a bluff overlooking the river. The major portion of this bluff is fractured lava rock, with numerous fissures and crevices. A tubular cave *409 penetrates under the bluff from the cliff wall for a distance of some 20 to 30 feet. From the bluff overlooking the river, there is an excellent view of the Deschutes River, both upstream and downstream, as well as a view of the Cascade Mountains.

Plaintiff, who also owns Tax Lot 1000, which borders the subject property on the north and east, purchased the subject property from Clarence H. White on December 13,1974, after extensive negotiations. The contract of sale stated a price of $4,000 and provided for a $50 down payment and ten annual payments of $400 ($50 to principal and $350 to interest), with the remaining principal balance due with the tenth annual payment. At the time he purchased the lot, plaintiff understood that it was unbuildable.

Plaintiff purchased the subject property in order to use its narrow draw for a sewage drain field for his house, which, at the time, was under construction east of the subject on Tax Lot 1000. Plaintiff had originally planned on locating the drain field on Tax Lot 1000. However, plaintiff’s domestic waterline ran through the only suitable location for a drain field on Tax Lot 1000 and the county would not allow a drain field in the same area as the domestic waterline. The county approved the draw as a drain field site and, presently, there is a drain field in the draw which serves plaintiff’s house on Tax Lot 1000. There is no other suitable location for a drain field on the subject property.

The subject property also has domestic water supply problems. Unlike Tax Lot 1000, the subject property has no right to irrigation water, which could be treated and used for domestic purposes. It is questionable whether or not a well could be drilled on the subject property, since the county will not allow a well within 100 feet of a septic system. Even if a well were possible, it would be a very expensive undertaking. The well would likely have to be at least 600 feet deep *410 and would have to be drilled through solid rock at a cost of about $20 a foot.

Plaintiff testified that access to the lot presents another obstacle to development. The lot is landlocked, in the sense that it does not border on any public road. If the lot were to be sold for development, the purchaser would have to acquire an access easement, either from plaintiff or another adjacent landowner. The need to acquire such an easement would reduce the lot’s appeal and value in comparison to other lots for which such an easement would not be required. However, plaintiff indicated that the acquisition of such an easement would not be the end of the access problems.

Any possible access route to a potential building site on the subject property is obstructed by substantial rock outcroppings. A vehicular access route across the rock outcroppings would be impossible without extensive blasting and excavation work. Mr. Kenneth Glantz, the Deschutes County Building Administrator, in charge of the county Building Department, testified as to the cost of such an effort. Mr. Glantz has over 40 years of experience in the construction industry and has had considerable experience in estimating the cost of excavation work, including blasting. He testified that the cost of blasting access to the subject property would be $7,000 to $10,000. This estimate did not include the cost of acquiring an easement across adjoining property.

Mr. Glantz also testified regarding the subject property’s potential for development. Mr. Glantz personally inspected the subject property prior to April 1977, and testified that he felt the lot is virtually impossible to build upon. Mr. Glantz candidly stated that, without question, present construction technology would enable a substantial structure to be constructed on the subject lot, but the cost would be prohibitively expensive. He testified that, since buildings cannot be constructed over a drain field, the only *411 possible building site on the subject property is the fractured rock bluff overlooking the river. Mr. Glantz seemed more concerned with the constant crumbling of the rock, which would cause a foundation to shift and crack, than with the ability of the bluff to support the weight of a structure. Although it would be possible to stabilize the bluff by pumping concrete into all the fissures and crevices, Mr. Glantz stated that such a process would be very expensive. He felt such a task would be undertaken by a contractor only on a cost-plus basis, but his best guess as to the cost of filling the fissures with concrete was $50,000 to $100,000. It was Mr. Glantz’s opinion that the subject property could presently be developed only with the expenditure of great sums of money and that it is not economically feasible to develop the subject property at the present time.

The defendant’s witness, Mr. Raymond Bennett, the county assessor, presented an appraisal based upon the sale of five properties which he felt were comparable to the subject property. Mr. Bennett identified his appraisal as a review appraisal and indicated that the original January 1, 1976, appraisal had been done by Mr. Darwin Clark, who has since retired from the county assessor’s staff. He stated that he had inspected the subject property, had researched the comparable sales, and had spoken with an architect.

The county sanitarian had advised Mr. Bennett that the drain field on the subject property was adequate and that two additional fields could be located on Mr. Corn’s other lot, Tax Lot 1000 (apparently in contradiction of the county’s requirement respecting proximity of drain fields and domestic water lines). Therefore, Mr. Bennett concluded that the subject property had no sewage disposal problems. On the basis of his conversation with an architect, who had neither viewed the property nor seen pictures of it, Mr. Bennett concluded that the lot was buildable. With these two conclusions in mind, Mr. Bennett valued the subject property as of January 1, 1976, at *412 $10,200, with an allocation of $9,000 to the land and $1,200 to the drain field.

Mr.

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Related

Neupert v. Department of Revenue
13 Or. Tax 407 (Oregon Tax Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Or. Tax 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1978.