Providence Junction Limited Partnership v. Wallowa County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 24, 2020
DocketTC-MD 200058N
StatusUnpublished

This text of Providence Junction Limited Partnership v. Wallowa County Assessor (Providence Junction Limited Partnership v. Wallowa 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
Providence Junction Limited Partnership v. Wallowa County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

PROVIDENCE JUNCTION LIMITED ) PARTNERSHIP, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 200058N ) v. ) ) WALLOWA COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiff appealed the real market value of personal property, identified as Account

768348 (subject property), for the 2019-20 tax year. A trial was held on July 22, 2020, in the

courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court. D. Rahn Hostetter (Hostetter), an Oregon attorney,

appeared by telephone on behalf of Plaintiff and testified on behalf of Plaintiff. Alfred

Adelsberger (Adelsberger), Plaintiff’s principal, testified by telephone on behalf of Plaintiff.

Paige Sully, county counsel, appeared by video on behalf of Defendant. Ashley Christman

(Christman), an appraiser in Defendant’s office, testified by video on behalf of Defendant.

Plaintiff offered no exhibits, instead relying on Defendant’s exhibits. Defendant’s Exhibits A, B,

and D through G were received without objection. Exhibit C, a 2017-18 property tax warrant on

the subject property, was admitted over Plaintiff’s objection to its relevance.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

The subject property is equipment and other tangible assets located in a grocery store in

Joseph, Oregon. Adelsberger testified that Plaintiff purchased the grocery store in 2005. It

leased the store to Mt. Joseph Family Foods LLC and its principal Troy Berglund (Berglund),

who started operating in 2005 or 2006. Berglund owned the subject property and filed annual

returns with Defendant. (See Ex A.) The last personal property return filed with Defendant lists

DECISION TC-MD 200058N 1 112 assets 1 purchased in the years spanning 2005 through 2016. (Id. at 3-6.) The most

expensive assets by purchase cost were a mini vacuum packer for $6,380 in 2006; check stands

and scan systems for $44,110 in 2009; a produce case for $13,309 in 2013; a vertical produce

rack misting system for $8,450 in 2013; and a walk-in freezer for $10,654 in 2016. (Id.)

Adelsberger 2 owned another grocery store in La Grande, Oregon, which he leased to

Berglund through Marketplace Family Foods LLC. That grocery store was constructed in 2015

and opened in 2016. In late 2017 or early 2018, Adelsberger learned that Berglund was ceasing

operations of both grocery stores because he was behind on tax obligations and he was planning

to file for bankruptcy. Berglund essentially closed the doors and walked away, leaving the

inventory (groceries) and the subject property behind. In January 2018, Adelsberger secured the

store and winterized it to make sure the pipes did not burst; he removed produce that would rot

and left everything else intact. He was concerned about the community’s need for the grocery

store; it is the only one in town and the next nearest one is six miles away, a problem in the

winter. Adelsberger wanted to find another operator as soon as possible.

Plaintiff was a creditor in Berglund’s bankruptcy but did not receive anything. U.S. Bank

(the bank) held a security interest in the subject property and became its owner following the

bankruptcy. Starting at some point prior to March 13, 2018, Hofstetter engaged in negotiations

with the bank’s attorney, David McCallister (McCallister) to purchase the subject property along

1 Some of the 112 assets were marked off the list, presumably indicating they were retired. 2 Adelsberger testified that he has been in business for 40 years and has owned hundreds of apartments, including personal property; he owned a large restaurant in California in the 1990s; he built and operated a large indoor property for sporting events; he owned two “elderly care facilities” in the 1980s; he owns an equestrian center; and he is currently developing townhouse properties, among other ventures. Adelsberger also owned the two buildings next door to Mt. Joseph Family Foods.

DECISION TC-MD 200058N 2 with the personal property located at the La Grande grocery store. (See Ex F at 8. 3)

Following negotiations with the bank, Plaintiff purchased the subject property along with

personal property from the La Grande store on April 30, 2018. (See Exs B, D.) Plaintiff offered

$40,000 for the La Grande property with $0 allocated to the subject property and the bank

countered for $55,000. (Ex F at 10-11.) They reached an agreement for $47,500 with $1,000

allocated to the subject property. (Id. at 1, 12.) Then, after the bank learned some liens had been

terminated on the subject property, it wanted more money allocated to it, so they changed the

accounting to allocate $5,000 of the total price to the subject property. (See id. at 2, Ex D.) The

bill of sale for the subject property listed the price as $5,000. (Ex D.)

Plaintiff characterizes its purchase of the subject property as an arm’s-length sale

between experienced and knowledgeable parties reflective of real market value. (See Ex F at 2

(email from McAllister stating that the bank “is willing to entertain an offer for the sale of [the

subject property] to your client based upon the fair market value of these assets”).) Adelsberger

testified that the bank had an appraiser walk through the Joseph property after which the bank

said it was not interested in the subject property. Plaintiff allocated $5,000 of the total purchase

price to the subject property due to the bank’s accounting concerns. Adelsberger testified that

the subject property had no value; much of it existed before Berglund’s tenure, so it was 20 to 25

years old. It was functionally and economically obsolete and had reached the end of its useful

life. He kept the subject property in the building while marketing it to help the appearance, but

99 percent of the assets were ripped out by the new lessee. A newer produce case purchased by

3 Hofstetter’s email sent March 13, 2018, began by “confirm[ing] that US Bank has no interest in pursuing its security interest in what is left of the collateral” at the Joseph store. Hofstetter testified that the negotiations began by phone and then proceeded over email. The bank was going to terminate its UCC filing and then Plaintiff was going to “dispose” of the subject property “in whatever way is prudent.” (Ex F at 8.)

DECISION TC-MD 200058N 3 Berglund may have remained after the new lease. The store had a soft reopening in the summer

2018 and started remodeling immediately.

Defendant disagreed that Plaintiff’s purchase of the subject property represented a bona

fide, arm’s-length sale free from compulsion. Defendant questioned Hostetter and Adelsberger

about numerous aspects of the negotiations with the bank. On March 14, 2018, Hostetter wrote

that Plaintiff was “willing to pay $44,000 if we can get it done quickly[,]” noting that Plaintiff

“needs to get the premises cleared asap.” (Ex F at 7.) Adelsberger testified that every landlord

wants cash flow; he was in a rush with the La Grande property but less so with the Joseph

property. On April 13, 2018, Hostetter wrote that, in the absence of a deal, he and McCallister

would “need to discuss [the bank’s] immediate removal of the collateral from the premises, as

well as the costs incurred by [Plaintiff] for storage costs and delays.” (Id. at 13.) Adelsberger

testified that that was a negotiating tactic to get the deal moving along after a seven-week

negotiation on a simple and worthless asset.

Hostetter testified that he was not initially aware of any property tax issues with the

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Bluebook (online)
Providence Junction Limited Partnership v. Wallowa County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/providence-junction-limited-partnership-v-wallowa-county-assessor-ortc-2020.