Feves v. Department of Revenue

4 Or. Tax 302
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by690 cases

This text of 4 Or. Tax 302 (Feves 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
Feves v. Department of Revenue, 4 Or. Tax 302 (Or. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

Plaintiff, as trustee, is one of the taxpayers on account of improved real property described as 2N 32 02CC, Tax Lot 3800 in Pendleton, Oregon. The land can be described as containing four contiguous 50 by *303 50 foot units, arranged in an “L shape,” with 50-foot frontages on two streets. It is the site of a building, known as the “Byers Avenue Medical Clinic,” a single-story, concrete block structure, built in 1952 (containing approximately 2,700 square feet) and enlarged in 1966 (to total 3,800 square feet), and an asphalt-topped parking lot. The taxpayer appeals from the Department of Revenue’s Order No. VL 70-54, dated February 13, 1970, confirming the determination of the Assessor of Umatilla County and the Umatilla County Board of Equalization that, on January 1, 1969, the subject property had a true cash value of $62,000, of which $17,500 was attributable to the land and $44,500 to the improvements. The plaintiff asserts that the fair market value of the improvements was $26,000 and agrees to the value of $17,500 placed upon the land.

At the trial, Mr. William Scharn, an independent real estate appraiser, testified for the plaintiff and Mr. Donald Fonda, Chief Appraiser, Umatilla County Assessor’s Office, testified on behalf of the defendant. Both men qualified as expert witnesses. They agreed that comparable sales were unavailable for purposes of ascertaining the value of the improvements of the subject property by using the market data approach to valuation. (See Portland Canning Co. v. Tax Com., 241 Or 109, 404 P2d 236 (1965).) They had no difficulty in obtaining sales of comparable land and were able to agree upon $17,500 as the value of the land alone.

Each appraiser used both the cost approach and the income approach to determine the value of the improvements but particularly stressed the income approach. This latter method is standard as a substitute for the market data approach where sales are *304 lacking and the property is designed for the production of income. See Friedman, Encyclopedia of Real Estate Appraising 36 (Rev & Enlarged Ed 1968):

“The Income Approach to real estate evaluation is a method of estimating value, based on factual data with respect to the income yield of the property. It is a method of estimating the present worth of the benefits to be reaped from the property in the future. The method is also known as the ‘capitalization approach’ because the income derived from the property, generally net annual income, is reduced to an indication of value by a mathematical process or computation known as ‘capitalization.’
“Income consists of recurrent periodic benefits or ‘returns’ arising through ownership and resulting from a capital investment in real estate. The major investment properties consist of multifamily apartment houses and office buildings. The Income Approach is most frequently and most effectively used in estimating the value of such properties. * * *”

In the treatise of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers, The Appraisal of Beal Estate 267- 268 (5th ed, 1967),'the principal problem in utilizing the income approach is clearly illustrated:

“The selection of the over-all capitalization of interest yield rates is one of the most important tasks of the appraiser. Rates should be selected with utmost care, on the basis of market experience. A variation in the rate can produce a wide variation in estimating the magnitude of the value, as the following simple illustration demonstrates:
Net Income $500
Value at 7% $7,143
Value at 8% $6,250
Percent Decreased Value 12.5
Percent Increased Value 14.3
“At the above interest rates, a decrease in the rate of 1% makes an increase of 14.3% in the *305 value estimate. An increase in the rate of 1% makes a decrease of 12.5% in the value estimate.
“Generally the rate to use in an appraisal problem is the rate which investors in that type or class of property require as a condition for purchasing. The rate which such investors require varies from time to time depending upon economic conditions. Accordingly, the appraiser must carefully consider competitive market conditions, because they influence the opinions and actions of investors.”

In the present case, the plaintiff’s expert witness capitalized at eight percent and found a true cash value for the improvements of $26,000. The plaintiff’s final conclusion of value based on the cost approach was a total of $44,850, indicating $27,350 ascribable to the improvements. The defendant’s appraiser capitalized at seven percent and, having obtained an estimate of total value of $68,790 by the income approach, and an estimate of $66,150 by the cost approach, and deducting $17,500 for the land, he “arrived at an estimate somewhere between those two of $50,000 on the improvements * *

In addition to the rate of capitalization, already mentioned, different treatment of other factors gave rise to the substantial disparity in the appraised values found. The plaintiff gave a 40-year life to the budding, the defendant 60 years; the plaintiff found a reasonable rental value among similar properties to be $1.80 per square foot, the defendant $2.55 per square foot; the plaintiff deducted $1,715 of expenses from gross income to give a net income of $4,783 per year, for capitalization purposes, and the defendant allowed $1,407 of expenses to arrive at a net income of $8,283 per year. Other differences, of less significance, could be cited. In their search for “compar *306 ables” on wlricb to base studies of local values, tbe parties considered the same buildings but differed greatly on degrees of comparability of these buildings.

Plaintiff’s income approach (corrected to overcome small arithmetical errors) was based upon the rental income of the improvement’s 3,800 square feet at $1.80 per square foot, for a gross of $6,840. From this was deducted expenses for management, real estate taxes, insurance and the reserve for replacements in the sum of $1,715, leaving a net income of $5,125.

Plaintiff developed an eight percent capitalization rate, using the component rate method, on the basis of a “safe rate” of 4.5 percent to which was added 1.25 percent because of the additional hazard of the investment as against a safe rate, 1.25 percent for the nonliqnidity of the investment and one percent for the cost of management. With an agreed land value of $17,500, capitalized at eight percent, the income of the land would be $1,400, leaving income attributable to improvements of $3,725.

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4 Or. Tax 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feves-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1971.