Curry v. Umatilla County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2020
DocketTC-MD 200052N
StatusUnpublished

This text of Curry v. Umatilla County Assessor (Curry v. Umatilla 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
Curry v. Umatilla County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

WALTER LEE CURRY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 200052N ) v. ) ) UMATILLA COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiff appealed the 2019-20 real market value and maximum assessed value of

property identified as Account 117880 (subject property). A telephone trial was held on May 18,

2020. Plaintiff appeared and testified on his own behalf. Douglas R. Olsen, Umatilla County

Counsel, appeared on behalf of Defendant. Michael Verdin (Verdin), Defendant’s manufactured

home appraiser, testified on behalf of Defendant. Plaintiff did not submit exhibits, relying

instead on his Complaint and attachments. Defendant’s Exhibits A to C were received without

objection.1

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

The subject property is a 1,426-square foot manufactured home situated on a 0.13-acre

lot in Stanfield, Oregon. (See Def’s Ex A at 1.) The subject property has three bedrooms and

two bathrooms on a single floor. (Id.) Verdin determined its actual and effective age was 1978

and it was an average class 4 home. (See id.) The subject property also features a heat pump,

concrete foundation, and a patio deck. (Id.) The Umatilla Board of Property Tax Appeals

(BOPTA) affirmed Defendant’s assessment by finding a total real market value of $73,560 and a

1 Plaintiff raised an objection to the comparable sales selected by Verdin. That objection goes to the weight given to the sales rather than to the admissibility of exhibits.

DECISION TC-MD 200052N 1 maximum assessed value and assessed value of $71,950. (Compl at 2.) Plaintiff requests a real

market value for the subject property of $50,000. (Id. at 1.) Plaintiff also requests a reduction in

his assessed value consistent with the three percent limit contained in ORS 308.146. (Id. at 4.)

Alternatively, Plaintiff requests a reduction in his assessed value to be fair and consistent with

what other property owners pay. (Id. at 5.) Defendant requests that its assessment be upheld.

(Ans at 1.)

A. Plaintiff’s Evidence of Value

Plaintiff testified that he purchased the subject property along with four 25-foot lots for

$70,000 in 2013. It was originally listed for $90,000 for about four or five months. Plaintiff

then sold two of the smaller lots in 2017 through a realtor for $20,000. Plaintiff testified that

those were each arm’s-length transactions. He paid cash for the subject property; no financing

was or is available. Based on those sales, Plaintiff requests that the subject property’s 2019-20

real market value be reduced to $50,000.2 Plaintiff testified that he owns one other property in

Stanfield and six other properties in Umatilla County. Plaintiff currently rents the subject

property for $500 per month and rents another trailer “across town” to his daughter.

With respect to his three comparable sales (see Def’s Ex B), Plaintiff testified that he

purchased sale 1 from a realtor in 2014 then sold it for $57,500 in cash in September 6, 2018.

He acquired sale 2 following county foreclosure, then listed it with a realtor. (Id.) It sold on

June 29, 2018, for $36,000 in cash. (Id.) Plaintiff did not recall the details of sale 3. Verdin

reviewed Plaintiff’s comparable sales and made adjustments. Both sales 1 and 2 required

significant adjustments for size, year built, bathrooms, skirting, carports and other features. (See

2 Plaintiff reasoned that because he sold two of the lots for $20,000 the remaining value attributable to the 2013 purchase should be allocated to the subject property. The subject property is comprised of the remaining two 25 foot lots plus the manufactured home.

DECISION TC-MD 200052N 2 id.) Sale 1 had an overall gross adjustment percentage of 63 percent. (Id.) Sale 2 had an overall

gross adjustment percentage of 113 percent. (Id.) Sale 3 is located across the street from the

subject property. (Id.) It sold for $65,000 on July 30, 2019. (Id.) Verdin adjusted for size,

bedrooms, age, and a large general-purpose building for an overall gross adjustment percentage

of 24 percent. (Id.) The adjusted price was $68,648 or $52.16 per square foot. (Id.) Plaintiff’s

comparable sales were all located within .36 miles of the subject property. (Id.) Verdin testified

that Plaintiff’s first two sales were too old and small to be comparable to the subject property.

He testified that sale 3 was a good comparable. Verdin noted that sale 3, after adjustments,

indicated a real market value similar to the current roll real market value.3 (See id.)

Plaintiff testified that the land values are important, noting that the subject property’s

land value is high at $33,000 for the 2019-20 tax year, where it had been only $24,530 in the

prior tax year. (See also Compl at 9.) He wanted to know the land values of all the comparable

sales. Verdin testified that total real market value is determined without separately breaking out

land and improvements. Plaintiff testified that one of Defendant’s employees admitted the

subject property was overvalued, but Defendant rejected her recommendations. Verdin testified

that Defendant’s employee had offered to enter a stipulated agreement, but Plaintiff rejected it.

Verdin asserted that it was not an admission by Defendant that the subject property was

overvalued, but rather an attempt to settle the case without further litigation.

B. Defendant’s Evidence of Value

Verdin testified that he has been Defendant’s manufactured home appraiser for three and

one-half years and described his process for valuing homes. He testified that there are four

3 The roll real market value of the subject property is $49.09 per square foot compared with sale 3, which has a real market value of $49.03 per square foot.

DECISION TC-MD 200052N 3 classes of manufactured homes with class 7 being the highest class and 4 being the lowest.

Verdin testified that Stanfield is part of the Umatilla-McNary market area, which is where he

obtains relevant sales data and market trends. Hermiston is near Stanfield but a superior property

market. Verdin does not generally track whether sales were cash or financed but does look for

foreclosure sales. He testified that he looked for comparable sales in Stanfield, but most were

from the 1990s, therefore not similar in age to the subject property.

Verdin identified three comparable sales. (See Def’s Ex A.) Sale 1 was located ten miles

north of the subject property in a similar neighborhood and sold for $95,000 on August 31, 2018.

(Id.) Verdin adjusted sale 1 for size, age, lack of a heat pump, lack of a concrete foundation, and

a general-purpose building for an adjusted sale price of $91,152 or $63.30 per square foot. (See

id.) Sale 2 was also located 10 miles from the subject property in a similar neighborhood and

sold for $114,500 on June 27, 2018. (Id.) Verdin testified that sale 2 had an addition and was

class 5, so it required some additional adjustments, though it was similar in age and size to the

subject property. (See id.) Verdin found an adjusted sale price for sale 2 of $90,388 or $53.80

per square foot. (Id.) Sale 3 was the closest to the subject property located six miles north but in

a nicer neighborhood. (Id.) Sale 3 sold for $116,900 on November 9, 2018. (Id.) Verdin noted

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Bluebook (online)
Curry v. Umatilla County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curry-v-umatilla-county-assessor-ortc-2020.