Piedmont Plaza Investors v. Department of Revenue

14 Or. Tax 440
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1998
DocketTC 4123 and TC 4124.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 Or. Tax 440 (Piedmont Plaza Investors 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
Piedmont Plaza Investors v. Department of Revenue, 14 Or. Tax 440 (Or. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

Plaintiffs appeal the 1994-95 and 1995-96 assessed values of their low-income apartment properties. The properties are operated under a Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) program. Through agreements with the owners, the government exercises significant control over the properties in exchange for the owners receiving significant benefits. Oregon law requires that these properties be assessed at their real market value, taking into consideration any effect the governmental restrictions may have on value. ORS 308.205(2)(d). 1 These cases focus on how to measure the effects of those restrictions on real market value.

Low-Income Housing Legislation

The subject properties fall under Section 236 of the National Housing Act (Public Law 90-448,12 USC 1713), one of many federal housing programs. This program, “active” between 1968 and 1973, created incentives for private citizens to provide residential properties for low-income families. Under this program, HUD accepted applicant-constructed apartment projects subject to 40-year mortgages that could not be prepaid during the first 20 years. Prepayment was restricted to insure that the properties remained in the program for at least 20 years. Because HUD insured payment of the mortgage, only a minimal down payment of 3 to 7 percent was required. In addition, HUD subsidized the monthly loan payments by paying all of the interest except *443 1 percent. Thus, the owner’s monthly payments were calculated as if the loan bore only a 1 percent interest rate. In addition to these major incentives there were builders fees, management fees, and income tax incentives.

In exchange, HUD exercises extensive control over the projects, limiting the amount of rent that can be charged, restricting the cash that the owner can withdraw, requiring reserves for replacements and repairs, and exercising management control in other ways. These restrictions continue until the initial mortgage is paid. Nevertheless, the incentives motivated a number of private parties to construct and operate Section 236 projects.

As the mortgage(s) on many Section 236 projects neared their 20-year mark, concern arose that the owners would exercise their right to prepay them, thereby removing the restrictions and, in turn, the properties from the low-income market. Fearing that this would diminish the supply of affordable housing, in 1987, Congress enacted emergency restrictions further limiting the right to prepayment. In 1990, these temporary measures were replaced by permanent restrictions in the form of the Low-Income Housing Preservation and Resident Homeownership Act (LIHPRHA or Preservation Act). 2 The basic objective of the Preservation Act was to ensure that most of the “ ‘prepayment’ inventory remain[ed] affordable to low-income households * * * while at the same time fairly compensating owners for the value of their properties.”

Although the Preservation Act imposed new conditions on the owner’s right to prepay the mortgage, the owner retained the right to continue operating the property under Section 236 restrictions until the 40-year mortgage matured. Also, an owner could sell the property on condition that the property continue to be subject to Section 236 restrictions. Inasmuch as these two alternatives contemplated an additional 20 years of governmental restrictions, no one suggests that they are economic alternatives.

To preserve low-income affordable housing, the Preservation Act provides three alternatives for owners of *444 Section 236 projects. First, the owner can prepay the mortgage. However, that alternative is available only if HUD determines that: (a) there is an adequate supply of low-income housing in the locality; (b) prepayment of the mortgage will not otherwise undermine public policy, and (c) prepayment will not materially increase economic hardship on the current tenants. The testimony indicated that most properties would be unable to meet these conditions.

In the absence of meeting the conditions for the first alternative, the Preservation Act provided two other alternatives “with incentives.” 3 One alternative extends HUD restrictions for the remaining useful life of the property in exchange for the owner receiving an 8 percent annual return on the value of the owner’s equity. The final alternative allows the owner to transfer the property to a qualified purchaser, in effect selling the owner’s equity to a purchaser that accepts HUD restrictions for the remaining useful life of the property.

The Preservation Process

The preservation process is initiated by the owner giving notice to HUD of intent to prepay, extend or transfer the owner’s interest. Based on that notice, if the owner elects to extend or transfer, then the owner and HUD each have the property appraised by an independent appraiser. Each appraisal establishes two values: (1) an extension value, which is the fair-market value of the property assuming that its highest and best use is for residential rental housing; and (2) a transfer value, which is the fair-market value of the property at its actual highest and best use.

The overview of HUD’s appraisal guidelines states:

“In the case of an owner seeking to retain a project, the basis of any incentive is an appraisal of a project’s extension preservation value, i.e., its fair market value as unsubsidized market rate multifamily rental housing reflecting all repair and conversion costs needed to achieve the net income used in the analysis.
*445 “In the case of an owner seeking to sell a project, the maximum sales price will be the project’s transfer preservation value, i.e., its fair market value at its highest and best use, reflecting all costs related to the conversion to its highest and best use.
“Thus both the extension and transfer preservation values measure the ‘as-is’ value of the property, rather than the potential value of the property fixed-up.”

If the owner’s appraised value exceeds HUD’s appraised value by more than 5 percent, or the owner refuses to accept 105 percent of HUD’s appraised value, then the owner and HUD jointly hire a third appraiser. The third appraiser’s estimate of value, assuming no errors, is binding.

The values establish the property’s overall value. When the mortgage balance is deducted, the remainder represents the value of the owner’s equity. If the owner elected to extend the program for the remaining life of the property, then the owner is entitled to an 8 percent annual return on preservation extension value equity. In addition, the owner may obtain financing for capital improvements or even withdraw part of the equity. The program also allows the owner to charge increased rents to pay for the increased dividend and loan payments.

If the owner elects to transfer the property, then he will receive the preservation transfer value less the balance of the mortgage.

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Related

Dept. of Rev. v. Butte Creek Associates I
19 Or. Tax 1 (Oregon Tax Court, 2006)
Wilsonville Heights Assoc., Ltd. v. Department of Revenue
17 Or. Tax 139 (Oregon Tax Court, 2003)
Piedmont Plaza Investors v. Department of Revenue
18 P.3d 1092 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Or. Tax 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piedmont-plaza-investors-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1998.