Lowe's Home Improvement, Inc. v. Multnomah County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 12, 2023
DocketTC-MD 210216R
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lowe's Home Improvement, Inc. v. Multnomah County Assessor (Lowe's Home Improvement, Inc. v. Multnomah 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
Lowe's Home Improvement, Inc. v. Multnomah County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

LOWE’S HOME IMPROVEMENT, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 210216R ) v. ) ) MULTNOMAH COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiff appealed a Real Property Order from the Multnomah County Board of Property

Tax Appeals (BOPTA), mailed March 25, 2021, that reduced Plaintiff’s real market value from

$17,941,520 to $15,670,000 for the 2020-21 tax year. Plaintiff is seeking a lower value than was

determined by BOPTA. A remote video trial was held on June 6 and 7, 2022. Benjamin Blair,

an attorney with Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP, appeared on behalf of Plaintiff. Jeff

Buono (Buono), Senior Valuation Services Director, Colliers International Valuation & Advisory

Services, testified on behalf of Plaintiff. Carlos Rasch, Assistant County Counsel, appeared on

behalf of Defendant. Aaron Head (Head) and Steve Tucker (Tucker), county appraisers, testified

on behalf of Defendant. Plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 and 2 and Defendant’s Exhibit A were received

into evidence without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

The subject property is a 7.98-acre site with a 135,008-square-foot improvement built in

2005 specifically for and operating under a long-term lease as a Lowe’s Home Improvement

Warehouse. The subject property is located in Delta Park near Interstate 5 in North Portland,

approximately two miles south of Vancouver, Washington. The building structure is a typical

“big box” home improvement warehouse in good condition with no observable physical

DECISION TC-MD 210216R 1 obsolescence. The structure has a concrete masonry exterior with few interior walls and an

outside covered garden area. The site includes 440 parking spaces.

A. Plaintiff’s Evidence

Buono testified that he is an MAI1 certified general real estate appraiser with

approximately 20 years of experience and a senior valuation director with Colliers International.

Buono prepared a retrospective, fee-simple appraisal of the subject property’s value as of

January 1, 2020. The subject property is located within the Portland, Vancouver, and Hillsboro

Metropolitan vicinities; a large, densely populated metropolitan service area containing over half

the state’s population with income levels higher than national or state medians. The subject

property’s proximity to southern Washington boosts the location’s desirability because

consumers can save money by crossing the border into Oregon and pay no retail sales tax.

Buono found the subject’s location had recovered from the 2009 recession, unemployment was

low, and the “Portland [Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)’s] private-section grown indicates a

broad-based and healthy continued growth.” (Ex 1 at 18.) Overall, Buono found the subject’s

market area had low vacancy rates and a positive economic environment. He found no physical

problems with the subject property, and Plaintiff had no plans to vacate the location.

Buono began by analyzing the subject property’s highest and best use. Although the

subject property is currently under a long-term lease, he evaluated the fee simple interest for the

property as if it was a vacant space. (Id. at 2.) Buono divided his analysis into an “as vacant

analysis” where the highest and best use is retail or commercial development and “as improved

analysis” where the highest and best use is its existing use as a “retail property.” (Id. at 35.)

///

1 Member of the Appraisal Institute (MAI).

DECISION TC-MD 210216R 2 Buono rejected alternative treatments of the property such as “demolition, expansion, renovation,

or conversion.” (Id.)

Buono considered three approaches to value – the cost, sales comparison, and the income

approaches. He rejected the cost approach based on the age and accrued depreciation of the

subject property.

1. Plaintiff’s income approach

Buono utilized the direct capitalization method in which comparable leases are

considered; analyzing the income potential, subtracting hypothetical expenses such as vacancy

and operating expenses, and capitalizing the resulting net operating income at a market supported

rate to arrive at a value. The analysis applied a three percent upward adjustment from the oldest

comparable sale through the assessment date. He could not find many “big box” stores and none

of the comparables were “build to suit” like the subject property. Although many “big box”

stores involve sale-leasebacks, none of the comparables selected involved that type of

transaction. Buono did not select properties with national credit tenants because, in his view,

those properties skew the market.

Buono selected six lease comparables. Comparable 1 is a 2018 lease of a 96,296-square-

foot Asian supermarket, known as Shun Fat Market, in SE Portland, for $9.72 per square foot.

Buono testified that the building was converted from a closed Fred Meyer and had sub-tenants,

but the landlord did not pay for tenant improvements. Comparable 2 is a January 2020 lease of a

47,451-square-foot store, known as Parkrose Hardware, in West Linn, for $8.25 per square foot.

Comparable 3 is a November 2019 lease of a 106,238-square-foot home decor store, known as

At Home, in Kennewick, Washington, for $7.00 per square foot. Comparable 4 is a 2019 lease

of an 86,502-square-foot At Home store, in Spokane, Washington, for $9.48 per square foot.

DECISION TC-MD 210216R 3 Comparable 5 is a December 2018 lease of an 85,160-square-foot At Home store, in Puyallup,

Washington, for $10.36 per square foot. Comparable 6 is a November 2019 lease of a 34,389-

square-foot store, known as Wilco, in Lake Oswego, for $9.50 per square foot. Buono

quantitively adjusted upward for market conditions to $10.11 for Comparable 1, to $7.07 for

Comparable 3, $9.67 for Comparable 4, and $9.50 for Comparable 5. Buono qualitatively

adjusted for property attributes finding Comparable 1 as a good indicator of value, Comparables

2, 3, 4 and 6 as low indicator of value, and Comparable 5 as a slightly high indicator of value as

to the subject property. Buono’s size adjustments were predicated on the subject property

hypothetically being 67,504 square feet (half of the subject’s actual size) because, in his view,

the smaller comparables would have higher rents per square foot (i.e. economies of scale).

Buono concluded from the lease comparables a lease rate of $10.25 per square foot equating to a

gross rent forecast of $1,383,832 per year.

Plaintiff’s expense analysis assumed a triple-net lease, where the tenant pays for virtually

all property and tax expenses. Buono further applied a “market 5% slippage” to expense

reimbursements. (Ex 1 at 42.) Buono assumed real estate taxes in the amount of $259,931,

property insurance in the amount of $47,253, common-area maintenance in the amount of

$202,512, management fees in the amount of $54,721, and reserves in the amount of $20,251,

totaling $584,667.

Buono used three techniques to develop a capitalization rate: comparable sales, investor

surveys, and a “band of investment” technique. (Id. at 44-46.) Buono selected 15 comparables

to determine the appropriate capitalization rate, finding a low of 6 percent and a high of 8.05

percent, and concluding a rate of 7.25 percent for this technique. Buono’s investor surveys

provided capitalization rates of 4.5 to 10 percent, with an average of 6.22 percent. Buono’s band

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Lowe's Home Improvement, Inc. v. Multnomah County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowes-home-improvement-inc-v-multnomah-county-assessor-ortc-2023.