Mikkelson v. Department of Revenue

12 Or. Tax 111
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1991
DocketTC 3116
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Or. Tax 111 (Mikkelson 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
Mikkelson v. Department of Revenue, 12 Or. Tax 111 (Or. Super. Ct. 1991).

Opinion

CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

The subject of this appeal is a self-storage facility in Albany. The facility is situated on 3.12 acres, 1.12 acres of which is undeveloped “excess land.” The facility has seven separate buildings containing a total of 33,254 square feet. There is 30,550 square feet of net rentable area, excluding the manager’s apartment. The improvements are of average quality except for the superior brick exteriors. They are in average to good condition except, as of the assessment date, the roofs needed replacing. There are 291 rentable storage units, excluding the graveled outdoor storage area.

*112 Plaintiff appeals an assessed value of $860,000 as of January 1, 1990. Plaintiff contends in his amended complaint that the true cash value as of the assessment date was no more than $520,000.

Plaintiff and a partner constructed the improvements between 1973 and 1976. Later, a dispute arose between them and the partner offered to buy the property for $558,000. 1 Plaintiff countered by offering to buy the property himself for that price and the partner agreed.

Shortly thereafter, plaintiff began trying to sell the property. Both plaintiff and his expert witness testified that self-storage properties are not marketed like other types of real estate. They are not listed with realtors and sold in the open market. The market for established self-storage units is primarily other owners and operators. One reason for this is that financial institutions require experienced operators before they will finance a purchase. Consequently, most marketing of properties like the subject is done by word of mouth.

Plaintiff testified that a sale is now pending on the property. Plaintiff is selling the property, except one acre of land, for $497,000. The one acre has no access and is estimated by plaintiff to be worth $30,000. The sale and one acre indicates a total value for the subject of $527,000.

Plaintiffs expert witness testified that self-storage facilities sale prices are based on their actual income. He stated that buyers will use an average of the net operating income (NOI) for three years preceding the sale and divide it by an overall capitalization rate to determine the price. In his opinion, the capitalization rate for self-storage facilities in Oregon ranges from 10.5 percent to 12 percent. As an investor, if buying for himself, he would use a capitalization rate of 12 percent. He testified the subject’s average annual NOI for the three years prior to the assessment date in question was $64,600. Dividing $64,600 by 12 percent gave him an indicated value of $538,000. This witness testified that other real *113 estate appraisal methods are “irrelevant” because the market does not use those methods.

Defendant’s appraiser submitted perhaps the most professional appraisal report yet submitted to this court. With detailed reasoning and data he analyzed the subject property using the three traditional approaches to value. He gave the most weight to the income approach, since his comparable sales were not particularly good and he saw the cost approach as providing only a lower limit of value for investment property.

Defendant’s appraiser disagreed with plaintiff in a number of areas. The appraiser believed plaintiffs actual rents were too high. In his income projections, the appraiser projected lower rents with a lower vacancy rate but a higher gross income. He explained that the potential gross income thus estimated was the “best case scenario.” He also found plaintiffs management expenses were higher than market. By reducing plaintiffs expenses, the appraiser derived an annual NOI of $89,185. He divided this amount by his overall capitalization rate of 10.75 percent, resulting in a value (rounded) of $829,600. To this he added the one acre of excess land valued at $27,300, for a total value of $856,900.

The appraiser used other specific techniques within the income approach, such as the discounted cash flow. Although, the appraiser’s work was reasoned and supported by data, it raises questions in the court’s mind. For example, the equity yield rate was only one-quarter of one percent more than the overall capitalization rate and the same as the debt rate. The similarity between defendant’s overall capitalization rate and his discount rate implies very little potential for appreciation in the value of the property. Also, to have an equity yield rate the same as the debt rate implies the same level of risk, which is not consistent with reality.

The disparity in the positions of the parties raises obvious questions. How can a thorough, well-reasoned appraisal be so far off? If it is not far off, then how can we explain the price of the pending sale, even conceding that there have been changes in the market? Plaintiff purchased the property for $558,000 in 1986 and is selling it, except for one acre with an estimated value of $27,800 to $30,000, in *114 1991 for $497,000. In this case, the subject property is being purchased by plaintiffs immediate neighbor and competitor. Reasonably, this buyer could afford to pay more for the subject property than other market buyers because, as plaintiff points out, it will allow the buyer to incur less expense. The buyer can combine two separate facilities into one and eliminate duplication of managerial, advertising and other expenses. This buyer also increases the size of his facility and eliminates a direct competitor. The evidence supports plaintiffs position that the larger units have a lower expense ratio because of their economies of scale.

In appraising self-storage facilities, the appraiser should mimic the market. If plaintiffs position is correct, the appraiser should use actual net income and ascertain market value based on the factors used by buyers of existing self-storage facilities. The other traditional approaches may not be as applicable, or if applicable, as persuasive if the market does not analyze the properties in the same way. To achieve market value, the appraiser must use the data and the methods the market uses.

The court’s experience and practice of analyzing real estate value using the traditional approaches inclines it to give weight to those approaches. They provide a reasoned analysis which should make sense in the market. However, in this case, plaintiffs largely undisputed evidence as to the methods of marketing and valuing self-storage property appears valid. The biggest weakness in plaintiffs case is he submitted no market evidence, no data and no comparable sales to support his position. The only thing plaintiff submitted was a pending sale of the subject property. While an actual sale of a subject property is given great weight (see Kem v. Dept. of Rev., 267 Or 111, 514 P2d 1335 (1973)) it is greatly diminished here because the “sale” has not closed and it is almost two years after the assessment date.

Many questions can be raised about the sale and some have been raised here. The immediate and first question is whether it is an arm’s-length sale between knowledgeable parties acting without duress and meeting all the other conditions of the definition of a market transaction. Based on the evidence, the court is not persuaded that it is a market transaction.

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Related

Kem v. Department of Revenue
514 P.2d 1335 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Or. Tax 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mikkelson-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1991.