Karl T. & Dorothy J. Jennings Family Trust v. Lane County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 4, 2012
DocketTC-MD 120129
StatusUnpublished

This text of Karl T. & Dorothy J. Jennings Family Trust v. Lane County Assessor (Karl T. & Dorothy J. Jennings Family Trust v. Lane 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
Karl T. & Dorothy J. Jennings Family Trust v. Lane County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

KARL T. & DOROTHY J. JENNINGS ) FAMILY TRUST, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 120129 ) v. ) ) LANE COUNTY ASSESSOR , ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiff appeals the real market value of residential property identified as Account

0798973 (subject property) for the 2011-12 tax year. A trial was held on August 1, 2012, via

telephone at the Oregon Tax Court, Salem, Oregon. David E. Carmichael, Attorney at Law,

represented Plaintiff. Tony Wells (Wells), general manager at Prudential Pacific Properties,

testified on behalf of Plaintiff. Karl Jennings (Jennings), trustee, testified on behalf of Plaintiff.

Defendant‟s representative, Bryce Krehbiel (Krehbiel), testified on behalf of Plaintiff. Krehbiel,

Residential Appraiser, Lane County Assessment and Taxation, appeared on Defendant‟s behalf.

Plaintiff‟s Exhibit 1, Plaintiff‟s Rebuttal Exhibit 1, and Defendant‟s Exhibits A through L

were received without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

The subject property is a two-story, 1,762 square foot home located on 0.14 acres in

Florence, Lane County, Oregon. (Ptf‟s Ex 1 at 4.) The subject property‟s improvement is a

house built in 1979 that has a main level of 1,090 square feet and an upper level of 672 square

feet. (Id. at 4-5.) The house has three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and an attached two-car

garage. (Id. at 5.) The house has a heat pump heating system. (Id.) When the subject property

///

DECISION TC-MD 120129 1 was listed for sale in 2011, the listing stated that the “[p]roperty will be trashed out by Seller,”

and “[p]roperty sold „as is‟ without repair.” (Id.)

Plaintiff purchased the subject property from Deutsche Bank National Trust Company

(Bank) on July 6, 2011, paying $129,699. (Ptf‟s Ex 1 at 1-2; Def‟s Ex A.) Wells testified that

even though residential property in Florence, Oregon typically spends 120 to 150 days on the

market before sold, the subject property was on the market for 17 days before Plaintiff purchased

it. (Ptf‟s Ex 1 at 7.) Wells testified that the subject property was originally listed for $135,000.

Jennings testified that he gave the Bank one offer of $129,699 for the subject property. Jennings

testified that he had been buying properties his entire life and owned several rental properties in

the Florence area. Wells testified that if Jennings thought the subject property was worth more

than $129,699, he would have offered to purchase the subject property for a higher price.

Wells testified that the foreclosure market in Florence, Oregon from January to October

2011 constituted about ten percent of total listings. Wells testified that he does not believe bank

owned sales are discounted, because banks are just another seller in the market. Wells testified

that he believes Plaintiff‟s purchase of the subject property from the Bank was representative of

an arms-length transaction between two informed parties.

Wells testified that the subject property could not have sold for $180,000 in January

2011. Wells testified that due to the declining real estate market in Florence, market values

decreased around three percent from January 2011 to July 2011. Wells testified that two-story

homes, such as the subject property, do not sell for prices as high as single-story homes, because

Florence is a retirement community. Wells based his opinion on his twenty years of experience

as a real estate broker.

DECISION TC-MD 120129 2 Wells testified that at the time of purchase, the subject property suffered from deferred

maintenance. Jennings testified that the subject property had been “ruined” by the previous

owner‟s pets. (Ptf‟s Ex 1at 3.) Wells and Jennings testified that the subject property smelled

like pet odor. Jennings testified that the carpet and carpet pads needed to be replaced, the

interior and exterior walls repainted, and the heater replaced. Jennings testified that the door

frames and doors were outdated. Jennings testified that the sewer lines needed to be unplugged

and the plumbing in the kitchen and the upstairs level replaced. Jennings testified that the

subject property‟s grounds were overgrown. Jennings testified that he had to remove a wax

myrtle bush that hung over the street and a tree that hung over the subject property‟s roof.

Jennings testified that it took nines trips with a truck and trailer to clear the brush from the

subject property‟s grounds. Jennings testified that he put in 400 hours of labor and spent $6,000

on supplies and additional labor to restore the house. (Ptf‟s Rebut Ex 1 at 1-4.)

Jennings testified that the main level of the subject property includes a 240 square foot

sunroom. Jennings testified that the sunroom was once a porch that a previous owner enclosed

to form a room. Jennings testified that the sunroom is not supported by the subject property‟s

foundation. Jennings testified that the sunroom is connected to the main house by an alcove that

is adjacent to a bathroom. Jennings testified that odors from the bathroom escape to the

sunroom. Jennings testified that a person has to travel through the sunroom to get to the

backyard. Jennings testified that the sunroom has high windows and gets very hot.

Jennings testified that because 240 square feet of the subject property constitutes a

sunroom that is not supported by the foundation, the subject property‟s square footage is

DECISION TC-MD 120129 3 misrepresented as 1,762 square feet. Jennings testified that he believes the true square footage of

the subject property is 1,522 square feet.1

The subject property‟s real market value on the tax roll as of the January 1, 2011,

assessment date was $204,226. (Ptf‟s Compl at 2.) Plaintiff filed a petition to appeal the subject

property‟s real market value to the Board of Property Tax Appeals (BOPTA), which on February

6, 2011, reduced the market value to $179,724. (Id.)

At trial, Plaintiff requested a 2011-12 real market value between $129,699 and $135,000.

Plaintiff provided the sale price of a comparable property (Comparable # 1) as evidence of the

subject property‟s real market value. (Ptf‟s Ex 1 at 8-10.) Comparable # 1 is a single-story,

1,680 square foot home that sits on 0.19 acres down the street from the subject property. (Id. at

8.) The home has three bedrooms, one and a half bathrooms, wall heating units, and an attached

two-car garage. (Id. at 8-9.) Jennings testified that Comparable # 1 was “beautifully

landscaped.” Krehbiel testified that Plaintiff‟s Comparable # 1 was a bank sale and

acknowledged that Plaintiff‟s Comparable # 1 was also Defendant‟s Comparable # 4.

After being on the market for 96 days, Comparable # 1 sold for $126,458. (Ptf‟s Ex 1 at

10.) Wells testified that Comparable # 1 was originally listed for $149,900. Wells testified that

because Comparable # 1 was listed for $149,900 and sold for $126,458, Plaintiff‟s purchase of

the subject property for $129,699 was reasonable.

At trial, Defendant requested that the court sustain the BOPTA ordered real market value

of $179,724. Krehbiel testified that the subject property was bank-owned at the time Plaintiff

purchased it and as a result, Plaintiff‟s transaction was not indicative of an “arm‟s-length sale.”

Krehbiel testified that properties purchased from banks are typically purchased at a discount

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