Rialto Capital Advisors, LLC v. Marion County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
DocketTC-MD 190092G
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rialto Capital Advisors, LLC v. Marion County Assessor (Rialto Capital Advisors, LLC v. Marion 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
Rialto Capital Advisors, LLC v. Marion County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

RIALTO CAPITAL ADVISORS, LLC ) and RSS JPMCC2012LC19-OR SCL, LLC, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 190092G ) v. ) ) MARION COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

This case concerns the 2018–19 real market value of the Salem Center mall (exclusive of

its four anchors) and an adjacent movie theater. Plaintiffs’ trial counsel was Alex Robinson of

CKR Law Group; Defendant’s was Scott Norris, Assistant County Counsel. Plaintiffs’ witnesses

were Dana Vugteveen, the mall’s manager; Thomas Dobrowski, vice chairman in Newmark’s

Capital Markets group; and Brian Booth, MAI, executive director at Cushman & Wakefield of

Oregon. Defendant’s witness was Steven Tucker, Oregon Registered Appraiser. Plaintiffs’

Exhibits 1, 2, 3, and 5, and Defendant’s Exhibits A to G were received into evidence.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

A. Property Overview

On the assessment date, the portion of Salem Center under appeal included the

concourses, mall shops, and major tenant space within two buildings on adjacent city blocks—

Salem Center North and Salem Center South. (Ex 1 at 22.) Each building contained an anchor

department store not owned by Plaintiffs and not under appeal. (Id. at 78.) The buildings were

connected by skybridges to one another, to city-owned parking structures, and to two

freestanding anchor department stores, also not under appeal. (Id. at 14, 78.) All told, the mall

extended over ten parcels, seven of which were not owned by Plaintiffs. (Id. at 21.) The movie

DECISION TC-MD 190092G 1 of 26 theater was included in another parcel on the city block northeast of Salem Center North without

skybridge access to the mall. (Id. at 21, 78, 83.) The subject consists of the cinema lot and two

mall lots containing the North and South buildings’ non-anchor improvements. 1 (Ex A at 2.)

The parties have stipulated that the land value for all lots was $30 per square foot. (Id. at 71.)

The mall was built in the 1980s and renovated in 1994 and 2013; on the assessment date

it was in average condition. (Ex 1 at 81–85; Ex A at 43, 73.) According to the subject’s

December 2017 rent roll, the mall had 173,404 square feet of gross leasable area, excluding the

unowned department stores and the cinema. 2 (See Ex 1 at 250–51.) That figure includes 80

square feet for four ATM kiosks and 29,492 square feet for a single major tenant, Ross Dress for

Less. (Id. at 245, 250.) Although not broken out separately on the rent roll, Plaintiffs’ appraiser

(Booth) allocates 4,150 square feet of the leasable area to food court spaces. (Id. at 81.) Due to

its “performance, location, condition, and risk-profile,” the subject’s shopping center was a Class

B/B- regional mall. (Id. at 58.)

As of January 1, 2018, the anchor department store spaces were fully occupied by

JCPenney, Kohl’s, Macy’s, and Nordstrom. The mall shops had maintained a fairly consistent

occupancy rate for several years, ranging from 65 to 75 percent of gross leasable area. (Ex 1 at

138–39; Ex A at 68.) That rate was lower than elsewhere in downtown Salem, where the

average retail occupancy rate was 90 to 92 percent. (Ex A at 69.) The subject’s higher-than-

average vacancy was partly due to two spaces near the North Mall’s ground floor entrance that

had never been leased. (Id. at 75.) The mall’s manager testified that potential tenants have

1 The other mall parcel owned by Plaintiffs is not under appeal. 2 The parties’ appraisers each report a slightly different gross leasable area. Booth reports 172,854 square feet; Tucker reported a net rentable area of 172,584 square feet. (Ex 1 at 81; Ex A at 2.) The difference is immaterial.

DECISION TC-MD 190092G 2 of 26 expressed concerns about those spaces’ physical limitations; restaurant tenants prefer higher

ceilings and health care tenants prefer closer parking access.

As of January 1, 2018, the movie theater was fully occupied by Cinebarre. The theater

was built in 1988 and renovated in 2009 to a seven-screen dine-in format. (Ex A at 53.) Its

amenities include a commercial-sized kitchen, a mezzanine with a bar and common area, and

room for electronic games and pool tables. (Id.) It is of average construction quality, similar to

the mall shops. (See id. at 53, 73.) Although the rent roll lists the theater’s gross leasable area at

38,000 square feet, Defendant’s appraiser (Tucker) measured the building and found its gross

leasable area to be 40,152 square feet. (Id. at 53.) He attributed the discrepancy to the

completion of the mezzanine during the 2009 upgrade.

B. Trustee’s Sale

The subject was placed into receivership in November 2017 after its prior owners

defaulted on their $30 million loan. (Ex 1 at 22; Ex A at 12.) Nationally, the apparel and

department store sectors had been facing “disarray and contraction” for several years due to the

rise of electronic commerce and big-box retailers. (Ex 1 at 57; see also Ex A at 60–61.) As a

result, Class B regional malls faced “uncertain futures due to store closures, department store

risk, and a smaller buyer pool of ‘opportunistic’ investors due to the lack of available financing

and capital requirements.” (Ex 1 at 73.)

On January 31, 2018, Nordstrom announced it would close its anchor department store at

Salem Center in the coming months. (Ex A at 18.) Nordstrom had been consolidating its

national portfolio, and “[t]he Salem Center Nordstrom store was their smallest and reported as

their lowest performing store remaining in the portfolio at the beginning of 2018.” (Ex 1 at 21.)

///

DECISION TC-MD 190092G 3 of 26 A report on the subject appeared in the April 2018 publication Morningstar CMBS

Research Mall Monitor – What’s in Store for 2012 Mall Loans? (Ex A at 11.) That publication

reported the pending Nordstrom closure was “making it difficult” for the prior owners to

refinance their loan. (Id.) The closure of Nordstrom and its mall entrances was predicted to

impact foot traffic at the mall. (Id.; see also Ex 1 at 23.) The Morningstar report recommended

a modification of the loan and offered the following opinion: “Using a 10.6% capitalization rate,

we value the collateral at $27.0 million and estimate an LTV of 114.4%.” (Ex A at 11.)

The Nordstrom at Salem Center ceased operations and closed its doors in April 2018.

(Ex 1 at 23; Ex A at 77.)

At some point in this period, a brokerage firm “passed on the opportunity to market and

sell Salem Center (including the cinema) because they did not believe it would sell for more than

the in-place debt, and likely considerably lower.” (Ex 1 at 22–23.) In reaching that conclusion,

the firm relied on a Broker Opinion of Value prepared by Thomas Dobrowski “in 2018” that

estimated the subject’s real market value between $18.6 million and $22 million. (Id.)

On August 30, 2018, eight months after the assessment date, Plaintiffs purchased the

subject at a trustee’s sale for $27,000,000. (Ex A at 11; cf. Ex 1 at 22.) The interests purchased

were leased fee and, to the extent improvements were built on leased ground, leasehold. (Ex A

at 8.)

Defendant originally assessed the real market value of the two accounts comprising

Salem Center’s non-anchor space at $25,149,270 and the account comprising the theater at

$5,262,130. (Ex A at 2.) The Marion County Board of Property Tax Appeals sustained those

values.

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