Oak Acres Mobile Homes Park, Inc. v. Department of Revenue

4 Or. Tax 340, 1971 Ore. Tax LEXIS 67
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Or. Tax 340 (Oak Acres Mobile Homes Park, Inc. 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
Oak Acres Mobile Homes Park, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 4 Or. Tax 340, 1971 Ore. Tax LEXIS 67 (Or. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

Loren D. Hicks, Judge pro tempore.

The issue in this case is the true cash value on January 1, 1969, of plaintiff’s mobile home park on Highway 212 just east of the town of Clackamas, Oregon. The Clackamas County Assessor fixed the value at $650,000. The Department of Revenue sustained the value set by the assessor. The plaintiff claims the value was $517,916. The dispute concerns the true cash value of the improvements, the parties being in agreement that the land was assessed correctly at $160,000.

Plaintiff’s park, which was completed in 1962 with additions in 1967, contains 23.72 acres of land, is surrounded by a chain-link fence and has spaces for 237 mobile homes. It has paved streets, a beauty shop, a swimming pool, utilities (including a sewage disposal plant), a community hall and other improvements. It caters to family tenants which causes its per space population and operating costs to be greater than would be found in a park for adults only.

In making its appraisal, the county appraiser considered the income approach, but primarily relied on the market data approach using a gross rent multiplier and two comparable sales. Both parties agree that the replacement cost approach is not appropriate for this appraisal.

In considering the income approach, the county appraiser started with an estimate of a “warranted gross income” of $116,260, less a vacancy allowance of $8,138 and less estimated operating expenses of $34,500. He also subtracted $878 for taxes, interest and depreciation chargeable to personal property and *342 $15,200 for taxes and interest attributable to the land, leaving a net income for the improvements of $57,544 before interest, depreciation and taxes. He then capitalized this net income at a 12% percent rate, made up of 7 percent interest, 3 percent depreciation and 2% percent property taxes (the approximate tax rate in Clackamas County). Under this income approach a valuation of $460,352 was reached for the improvements.

For the market data approach, the appraiser selected a multiplier of 5.6. He chose this factor after viewing the property, comparing the two recent sales, studying statistics on the operation and sales of mobile home parks in the area and considering the income approach. To the “warranted gross income” of $116,260 he applied the multiplier and obtained a true cash value of $651,056 which he rounded to $650,000. Allowing $160,000 for the land, he placed the value of the improvements at $490,000. The assessed value was set at this amount.

Plaintiff contends that the valuation is erroneous on the grounds that the county used an exaggerated gross rent multiplier, relied on comparables that were not really comparable and placed too much emphasis on the market data approach. Plaintiff argues that Oak Acres Mobile Homes Park is not a typical park and that therefore the market data approach is unreliable and that primary reliance should be placed on the income approach. Plaintiff also objects to the *343 income and expense amounts and the capitalization rate used by the county appraiser in his computations in the income approach.

From the preponderance of the proof made at the trial, the court finds itself in agreement with the plaintiff that defendant’s valuation is in error. It is too high. The purpose of an appraisal is to determine the true cash market value of the real estate. The market data approach is required in the assessment of property when a market and useable comparables exist. Portland Canning Co. v. Tax Com., 241 Or 109, 113, 404 P2d 236 (1965). However, use of other appraisal methods is often called for as an aid in evaluating the subject property and the comparables, and as a cross-check on the market data results or as the primary approach when evidence of a market and comparables is insufficient.

*344 The market looks to income and therefore the income approach is always helpful and appropriate in an appraisal of income-producing property, especially, as in this case, when the property being appraised is a going enterprise rather than individual assets. Also, an analysis of income is required whenever a gross rent multiplier is to be used. Intelligent selection of the multiplier requires an analysis of income of the subject property in comparison with the income of comparables and the market generally.

In his computations the county appraiser estimated the gross income of plaintiff’s park at 100 percent occupancy to be $116,260, which varied considerably from the actual gross earnings of $132,960. His estimate of $34,500 operating expense was even further from the actual amount which was $63,182. Defendant’s appraiser admitted in his testimony that if he had known of the unusually high expenses he might have set a lower value on the property. The evidence showed that the net earning ratio of plaintiff’s park, even though it is well managed, is considerably less than the average for mobile home parks in the area.

Considering the prevailing bank interest rates in 1968-69, and the fact that money invested in a mobile home park is comparatively nonliquid, requires considerable management and bears a degree of risk, the 7 percent interest rate used by the county appears to be too low. Furthermore, the depreciation rate of 3 percent (33 1/3 years) seems unrealistic. *345 In choosing a depreciation rate for a mobile home park, consideration must be given to physical wear from nse and from passage of time; functional obsolescence from continuing improvements in design; and economic depreciation caused by the ever-changing attitudes of the public, changes in characteristics of the neighborhood and other factors affecting demand for a particular mobile home park. Thirty-three and a third years is too long a prediction for plaintiff’s park. For purposes of depreciation for income tax accounting, the Internal Revenue Service has adopted 20 years as a guideline for the life of land improvements such as paved surfaces, sewers, fences, and landscaping. On January 1, 1969, plaintiff’s park was seven years old, and there was evidence that some of the homesite “pads” already were showing signs of breakdown.

In using the gross rent multiplier approach, the county appraiser relied to a great extent upon the practice in the trade of selling a trailer park by an amount equal to its gross income times a multiplier. There was evidence that the average gross rent multiplier for sales of mobile home parks in and around Clackamas County is 5.5. The two comparable sales used by the county appraiser indicated a gross rent multiplier of about 6.5. The plaintiff’s expert witness on the other hand advocated a multiplier of only 4 for the plaintiff’s property. However, plaintiff offered no evidence as a basis for using that particular multiplier. In fact, from the record it is not possible to determine what figure might properly be chosen as a multiplier. The evidence was meager as to whether the gross income figure used in connection with multi *346

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Related

Multnomah County v. Department of Revenue
4 Or. Tax 383 (Oregon Tax Court, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Or. Tax 340, 1971 Ore. Tax LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oak-acres-mobile-homes-park-inc-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1971.