Oettmeier v. United States

708 F. Supp. 1307, 64 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5895, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2691, 1989 WL 23303
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 16, 1989
DocketCiv. A. 87-49-VAL(WDO)
StatusPublished

This text of 708 F. Supp. 1307 (Oettmeier v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oettmeier v. United States, 708 F. Supp. 1307, 64 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5895, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2691, 1989 WL 23303 (M.D. Ga. 1989).

Opinion

OWENS, Chief Judge:

In this non-jury civil action the Estate of Russell L. Carter sues for a refund of $229,063.35 estate taxes paid under protest on 3,309.46 acres of leased timberland owned by the deceased and situated in Echols County, Georgia and Columbia County, Florida. Taxpayer contends the estate’s expert’s fair market value 1 of $1,075,574.50 should be found by this court to be the fair market value on February 10, 1981, the date of Mr. Carter’s death, and the Internal Revenue Service contends to the contrary.

The court’s task is to determine factually “the amount at which [this] property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell and both having reasonable knowledge of the relevant facts____” Black’s Law Dictionary, 5th Ed. p. 537; see also Treas. Reg. Section 20.2031-l(b).

The Relevant Undisputed Facts

Russell L. Carter died February 10,1981, owning 3,309.46 acres of timberland situated on the Georgia/Florida border and subject to a sixty-six-year timber lease dated January 20, 1956, between Mr. Carter and Owens-Illinois, Inc., 2 as supplemented by agreements dated September 1, 1977, and June 6, 1980.

Under the timber lease as supplemented:

(a) Owens-Illinois, Inc. received complete and exclusive use and control of the subject property, with the exception that Russell L. Carter retained the personal right to hunt and fish on the land.

*1308 (b) During the term of the lease, Owens-Illinois is obligated to purchase from Russell L. Carter one cord of wood for each acre of land and to pay Russell L. Carter on January 20 of each year, a minimum payment of $2.69 per cord of timber harvested, subject, however, to upward or downward adjustments in this amount based upon increases or decreases in the Producer Price Index (previously known as the Wholesale Price Index for all commodities). Even if the land does not produce one cord of wood per acre per year, Owens-Illinois is still obligated to pay for one cord per acre per year. Owens-Illinois pays all ad valorem taxes.

(c) Required upward adjustments resulted in the 1981 payment being made at the rate of $9.12 per acre. That January 20 payment totalling $30,182.00 had been received by Mr. Carter before he died.

(d) Forty annual payments (1982 plus 39 more) remained to be paid as of Mr. Carter’s death.

(e) On the expiration of the term of the contract, the subject property will revert to Russell C. Carter’s heirs or assigns.

(f) Owens-Illinois is obligated during the last five years of the contract not to cut and remove timber to such an extent as will reduce the standing and growing merchantable timber to less than fifty percent (50%) of the merchantable timber which was on the lands at the inception of the lease. Nevertheless, the contract provides:

[I]n the event of damage to timber by fire, windstorm or other casualty, [Owens-Illinois] may cut and remove such damaged timber, notwithstanding that the quantity of standing and growing timber upon said lands may thereby be reduced below the aforesaid permitted percentage of timber now upon said lands. In the event that at any time during the last five (5) years of the term of this contract the quantity of merchantable timber shall become, from any cause whatsoever, less than fifty (50%) per cent of the quantity of such timber now on said lands (to be computed as herein-above provided), [Owens-Illinois] shall thereupon cease cutting and removing said timber from said lands, except and only to the extent required by good forestry practices, until there shall be standing and growing upon said lands in excess of fifty (50%) per cent of the quantity of such merchantable timber now thereon. The quantity of merchantable timber which may be cut and removed pursuant to the aforesaid provisions shall be decreased or increased in the event the area of the lands subject to this contract shall be decreased or increased.

(g)If the owner desires to sell the timberland, he must first offer it to Owens-Illinois at the price and upon the terms he is willing to sell to others; Owens-Illinois has three months within which to buy at the offered price and terms.

The heirs of Russell L. Carter have not attempted to sell this property and this lease and indicate they presently have no intention of doing so.

Findings of Fact

Taxpayer and the government acknowledge there is no particular formula or approach that is generally used by willing buyers and sellers or that the court as fact-finder must use in arriving at the fair market value of this leased timberland. They further acknowledge that like a jury, the court may arrive at fair market value using any approach satisfactory to the court, including but not limited to the principal ingredient that all jurors and judges use in finding facts — COMMON SENSE!

Taxpayer’s counsel relies upon Saunders v. United States, 48 AFTR 81-6279, in which the taxpayer and the government stipulated to the mathematical formula to be used to calculate fair market value. Since there is no such stipulation of the parties in this case, Saunders does not apply.

Taxpayer relies upon the written appraisal of W.E. Bishop, a realtor, appraiser and consultant from Lake City, Florida, in which Mr. Bishop, using a 22% rate of return for capitalizing the future lease payments, concludes that the present value of the future lease payments is $129,665.31 *1309 and the reversionary value of the timberland at the end of the lease (present cash value) is $285.94, a total of $129,951.25. (Joint Exhibit 4). Mr. Bishop, due to illness, did not testify.

Taxpayer further relies upon the written apppraisal (Joint Exhibit 5) and testimony of William R. Sizemore, a practicing appraiser and forester from Tallassee, Alabama, whose qualifications are set forth in Plaintiffs Exhibit 3. Mr. Sizemore is of the opinion that because of the lessee’s right of first refusal, no investor other than the lessee would evaluate and bid upon the property. Further, Mr. Sizemore stated:

“It is my opinion that Owens-Illinois itself would have been the most probable buyer of the interests of the lessor in the Russell Carter estate property as of 1981. Owens-Illinois is not only the most probable purchaser but is likely to be the only potential purchaser. For this reason, the appraisal process must focus on the amount that Owens-Illinois would pay for the lessor’s interest. Inasmuch as the rate of increase in timber values has been significantly more than the increase in the Producer Price Index, Owens-Illinois had in 1981, and continues to have, a positive leasehold interest. Thus Owens-Illinois, as the possessor of a very favorable lease 41 years away from expiration, itself would have required a rate of return equal to or more than the rate that could be obtained from the purchase of similar unencumbered timberlands in the general area.

“The first step, then, is to identify the rate of return that would be expected by Owens-Illinois.

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Related

§ 51-12-13
Georgia § 51-12-13

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Bluebook (online)
708 F. Supp. 1307, 64 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5895, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2691, 1989 WL 23303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oettmeier-v-united-states-gamd-1989.