Falls Creek H.P. Ltd. Partnership v. Oregon Department of Revenue

12 Or. Tax 55, 1991 Ore. Tax LEXIS 21
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1991
DocketTC 3011
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Or. Tax 55 (Falls Creek H.P. Ltd. Partnership v. Oregon 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
Falls Creek H.P. Ltd. Partnership v. Oregon Department of Revenue, 12 Or. Tax 55, 1991 Ore. Tax LEXIS 21 (Or. Super. Ct. 1991).

Opinion

*56 CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

Plaintiff appeals the value of a small hydroelectric plant as of January 1,1990. The property is subject to central assessment as a utility under ORS 308.515. Accordingly, the market value sought includes intangible as well as tangible property. ORS 308.510.

The plant is about 25 miles east of Sweet Home near the South Santiam River in the Cascade Mountain Range. It includes a small dam which diverts the water from Falls Creek into a penstock. The penstock is an 8,000-foot-long pipe 30 inches in diameter at the dam and tapering to 16 inches at the base. Passing through the penstock the water falls 2,300 feet in elevation before it enters the powerhouse, passes through the turbine and on out to the South Santiam River. The plant includes a generator, switch gear, controls and other ancillary equipment. The fall of over 2,300 feet in elevation spins the turbine at approximately 1,200 revolutions per minute (rpm).

Started in May, 1982, and completed in December, 1984, the project was designed to produce power to sell to Pacific Power & Light Company (PP&L). Plaintiffs contract with PP&L extends until December 31, 2019. As of the assessment date in question, the contract amount paid by PP&L to plaintiff exceeded the cost of power from Bonneville Power Administration (BPA). This differential created a valuable benefit for plaintiff. If, over time, inflation causes the cost of power from BPA to exceed plaintiffs contract price, the benefit will shift to PP&L.

The contract provides for two measures of payment. One measure is for production, starting at $.0623 per kilowatt hour in 1985 and increasing an average 2.498 percent per year thereafter. The other payment measure is for capacity. Plaintiff receives $7.10 per month for each kilowatt of demonstrated capacity. The contract also provides for other adjustments for line losses, transmission line costs and other expenses that PP&L might incur.

The plant is located on United States Forest Service land under a special use permit which expires in 2005. Although plaintiff pays a nominal use fee ($162 per year), the

*57 United States Forest Service may increase the fee substantially. 1 Plaintiffs use of the land is nonexclusive. It must share the land with other compatible uses that may be approved by the United States Forest Service, such as cattle grazing, logging, wildlife habitat and recreation.

The key to the production and value of the subject property is the water supply. Falls Creek has a drainage area of 2.9 square miles. It is a small creek with a water flow up to 200 cubic feet per second in the wintertime and as little as one cubic foot per second in the summertime. The plant cannot use more than 28.5 cubic feet per second. Consequently, much of the runoff during the peak periods cannot be used. On the other hand, sometimes during the low runoff months the plant cannot operate due to lack of water. As plaintiffs general manager pointed out, the evenness of the water flow is as important as the total amount of water.

Each party had a qualified appraiser as its expert witness. Both appraisers used the cost approach and the income approach and both gave some consideration to the direct sales comparison approach. The court will discuss the positions of the parties and its analysis of each approach.

COST APPROACH

Plaintiffs appraiser used a reproduction cost new approach. Using a 40-year life and straight-line depreciation, he determined that the cost of reproduction less physical depreciation was $3,931,684. From this amount he deducted $100,000 for functional obsolescence due to a problem with the diversion dam. He also deducted $1,600,000 for economic obsolescence because tax credits are no longer available to subsidize construction of hydroelectric projects. This gave him an indicated value for the cost approach of $2,231,684 (rounded to $2,250,000).

Defendant used plaintiffs historical costs, trended for inflation, totaling $5,046,162. Defendant’s witness used a *58 45-year life and straight-line depreciation, resulting in a reproduction cost new less depreciation of $4,506,052.

The large investment tax credits and energy tax credits afforded to small hydroelectric projects during the 1980s present significant appraisal problems. See Joseph Hydro Associates, Ltd. v. Dept. of Rev., 10 OTR 277 (1986). It is undisputed that such projects are not built without the tax credits. This raises the question of whether much weight can be given to the cost approach. The cost approach rests on the principle of substitution.

“The principle of substitution holds that people will not pay more for a property than the cost of a satisfactory substitute with equal utility assuming no unreasonable delay in obtaining the substitute property. Also, a knowledgeable owner of the property will not sell the property for less than the current cost of a substitute property.” Western States Association Of Tax Administrators Appraisal Handbook, Valuationof Utility And Railroad Property 16 (1989).

If there will be no substitution without the availability of major tax credits, how realistic is it to consider cost as a measure of value? If the basic premise of the approach is inapplicable, should the approach be given any weight?

Plaintiffs appraiser considers the absence of tax credits as economic obsolescence. That is, the projected benefits from the project have been reduced due to external causes. This results in a reduced indication of value.

One analysis is to compare the benefits to be derived from the subject property with the benefits that can be derived from a substitute property. The elimination of tax credits by the government has the effect of increasing the real cost of the project. Although an increased cost for a substitute property would normally indicate a higher value for the subject property, that is not the case here. Value is a result of the anticipated benefits to be received from property. If the benefits (income) to be received from the substitute property have not increased, then its value will be less than its cost. Thus, without some adjustment, defendant’s cost approach overstates the value of the subject property.

The court finds that plaintiffs depreciated reproduction cost of $2,250,000 is the more accurate indication of *59 value by the cost approach. However, the cost approach can be given little weight because there is no real possibility of a buyer choosing to construct a substitute property.

MARKET APPROACH

The only comparable sale proposed by either party was the Joseph Hydro plant located in Wallowa, Oregon. The court has some reservations about using this sale. Neither party had complete information about the sale, which was still pending at the time of trial.

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Related

Joseph Hydro Associates, Ltd. v. Department of Revenue
10 Or. Tax 277 (Oregon Tax Court, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Or. Tax 55, 1991 Ore. Tax LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falls-creek-hp-ltd-partnership-v-oregon-department-of-revenue-ortc-1991.