Jefferson Cty. Assessor v. Siegenhagen, Tc-Md 100375c (or.tax 10-14-2011)

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 14, 2011
DocketTC-MD 100375C.
StatusPublished

This text of Jefferson Cty. Assessor v. Siegenhagen, Tc-Md 100375c (or.tax 10-14-2011) (Jefferson Cty. Assessor v. Siegenhagen, Tc-Md 100375c (or.tax 10-14-2011)) 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
Jefferson Cty. Assessor v. Siegenhagen, Tc-Md 100375c (or.tax 10-14-2011), (Or. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
Plaintiff appeals the real market value of property identified as Account 11622 for tax year 2009-10. A trial in the matter was held by telephone on January 19, 2011. Patsy J. Mault, Assessor, appeared on behalf of Plaintiff. Donald V. Reeder, Esq., of Glenn, Sites, Reeder Gassner LLP, Madras, Oregon, appeared on behalf of Defendant. Jeffrey Dart (Dart), Residential and Commercial Appraiser, testified for Plaintiff. Harold Siegenhagen (Siegenhagen), Mark Reynolds (Reynolds), Appraiser; Philipp Agrue (Agrue), Personal Investigator; and Bill Bellamy (Bellamy), Realtor, testified for Defendant.

Plaintiff's Exhibit 1 and Defendant's Exhibits 101, 102, and 103 were received without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS
The subject property is a high-quality custom built Tuscan-style home, approximately 2700 square feet in size, with two bedrooms and two bathrooms. The home was constructed in November 2008 on a one-half acre lot in Madras, Oregon. (Ptf's Ex 1-1; Def's Ex 102 at 2, 4.) The uncontroverted evidence is that Siegenhagen purchased the property in September 2007 for $167,500 and demolished the home that was on the property at that time. (Ptf's Ex 1-1.) Siegenhagen then hired a custom builder to construct the existing home at a reported cost of $781,790. (Id.) According to the testimony of Dart and Seigenhagen, the home was built in *Page 2 2008. Dart testified the home was completed in November 2008, which is approximately one month before the January 1, 2009, assessment date for the 2009-10 tax year.

The new home, which is the subject of this appeal, has a tile roof, stucco siding, a 15 foot finished would ceiling in the living room, extensive custom built-ins, some nine foot architectural-vaulted ceilings, two fireplaces, a combination of tile and wood flooring, solid core interior wooden doors, and custom wood-wrapped windows. (Ptf's Ex 1-1; Def's Ex 102 at 4, 5, 8; trial testimony.) The home sits on a bluff, and the parties agree the home has a very nice view.

The home has a three-car garage with a sealed epoxy floor that is between 1305 square feet and 1724 square feet.1 (Ptf's Ex 1-1; Def's Ex 102 at 4-5, 8.) The home's surroundings include a gated paved courtyard with a water feature and a fully enclosed stucco privacy wall with stone pillars at the electric entrance gate. (Ptf's Ex 1-1.)

The assessor valued the home at a real market value (RMV) of $653,230 and an assessed value (AV) of $327,260 as of January 1, 2009. (Ptf's Compl at 3.) Taxpayer appealed those values to the Jefferson Board of Property Tax Appeals (BOPTA), which subsequently issued an order on March 22, 2010, that reduced the RMV to $517,500 and the AV to $262,492. (Id.) Plaintiff timely appealed from that order to this court on April 2, 2010. (Ptf's Compl at 1.)

The county appraiser Dart testified that he valued the subject property using a market-based cost approach. He did not submit an appraisal or the calculations for his cost-based analysis. Dart determined that the total RMV should be $653,230, with the total improvement *Page 3 value at $585,730 and the balance attributable to the land. Dart testified that he valued the 2,671 square foot main floor area at $387,561 ($145 per square foot). Dart valued certain additional components of the home (e.g., the bathrooms, tile roof, stucco siding, fireplaces, heat pump, security system, etc.) at $45,524 for a total value of the home of $433,085. He valued the three-car garage at $109,059, and added $43,589 for certain "yard improvements."

Siegenhagen had the property appraised for financing prior to this appeal, and apparently had presented that appraisal to BOPTA. Siegenhagen testified that he could not remember the precise value estimate, but believed it was "about $800,000." The county contends that the appraiser estimated the value to be $900,000. The appraisal report that Siegenhagen presented to this court valued the subject property at $400,000 as of the January 1, 2009, assessment date. (Def's Ex 102 at 2.) That report included the results of the sales comparison approach that Siegenhagen's appraiser, Renyolds, applied in order to determine the subject property's RMV. (Id. at 5-6.) Reynolds chose not to perform a cost analysis because:

"Under the market conditions present as of the effective date of the appraisal homes are selling for less than replacement or reproduction costs due to significant over-supply. In addition, the subject home is determined to be an over-improvement and would suffer from obsolescence in which costs to construct exceed value."

(Id. at 7.)

Reynolds' sales comparison analysis included four comparable sales of residential properties located in the same city as the subject property. (Id. at 5-6.) Reynolds testified that all of his comparables were "upper-end" homes for the area. Reynolds noted that "[c]omparables #1 and #3 [have] an inferior quality of construction as compared to the subject which features a more extensive use of quality features and finishes." (Id. at 5.) Reynolds further added that "[c]omparable #2 [has] an older close date and was utilized as a comparable due to the lack of sales of similar homes in the area." (Id.) Reynolds adjusted the comparables' *Page 4 sales prices to account for those differences described above and other factors. (Id.)

Bellamy, a realtor, also testified for Defendant. He explained that differences in value exist between properties located within Madras city limits and properties beyond those limits. Properties located outside of city limits tend to sell at a higher price because they usually have larger lots. However, the subject property is located within city limits. Bellamy noted that from the real estate market's peak in 2006-07 to the January 1, 2009, assessment date, only two properties within city limits sold for over $300,000. He said that as of the trial date, only eight real estate listings in or around Madras have sales prices over $250,000, and that all of them are located outside city limits.

Agrue, Siegenhagen's personal investigator, offered photos of the subject property and other homes on the same street. Regarding the subject property's surroundings, the county claims that the subject property is "[w]ithin 1000 feet of * * * a golf resort community [that] is being developed and a state-of-the-art aquatic center [that] was built in 2007." (Ptf's Ex 1-1.) When questioned by the court, Siegenhagen testified that there is a nine-hole golf course on the "far side of town." More specificity on the matter would have been helpful. It appears to this court that, as of the assessment date, the only existing golf course was the nine-hole course on the other side of town, but that development of a new "golf resort" is underway.

II. ANALYSIS
The issue before this court is the RMV of the subject property for tax year 2009-10. ORS 308.205(1)2 defines RMV for both real and personal property as "the amount in cash that could reasonably be expected to be paid by an informed buyer to an informed seller, each acting without compulsion in an arm's-length transaction occurring as of the assessment date for the tax year." ORS 308.205(2) provides that RMV "in all cases shall be determined by methods and *Page 5

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Bluebook (online)
Jefferson Cty. Assessor v. Siegenhagen, Tc-Md 100375c (or.tax 10-14-2011), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-cty-assessor-v-siegenhagen-tc-md-100375c-ortax-10-14-2011-ortc-2011.