Riensche v. Department of Revenue

8 Or. Tax 304
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Or. Tax 304 (Riensche 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
Riensche v. Department of Revenue, 8 Or. Tax 304 (Or. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

This is an inheritance tax case. Karl Jack Riensche died on April 7,1974, leaving 3,253.51 acres of unimproved real property, located in specific tax lots in Secs. 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 21, 22 and 28 inT 17 S, R 6 W, WM and in Sec. 1, T 17 S, R 7 W, WM, in Lane County, Oregon. ORS 118.150(1) specifies that the value of property for inheritance tax purposes is its true cash value as of the date of death of the decedent. See OAR 150-118.150G). 1

The subject property consists of unimproved land, much of which was logged some 25-35 years ago. At present, most of the merchantable timber is second-growth Douglas fir, ranging from 25 to 40 years old. These stands are generally well stocked but "clumpy.” Fifty to 70-year old low-grade Douglas fir residuals are scattered throughout the property. (PI Ex 2, ltr; Def Ex A, 5.) The court viewed the site.

*[306] The dispute over the value of this property is a long one. An inheritance tax return for the decedent was filed with the defendant in January 1975, reporting a total value for bare land, reproduction timber and merchantable timber of $286,791. The Department of Revenue’s Audit Division, after reviewing the return, notified the decedent’s personal representative, in July 1975, that the value should be $1,339,015. Throughout 1976, the parties engaged in futile attempts to reconcile these unusually disparate alleged values, without satisfaction (although the department did lower its initial estimate to $1,127,000). (Tr 4.) During this time, the plaintiff turned to Mr. Ronald O. Gibson, a consulting forester doing business as Professional Timber Management, Veneta, Oregon, for expert aid in valuation. Mr. Gibson had particular familiarity with the property. Beginning in 1973, representing McFarland Lumber Company, of Eugene, he had contacted Mr. Karl Jack Riensche and "traveled most of his property * * * in the early part of ’73 * * * with the idea of writing him a management plan and possibly doing some of the logging, too.” (Tr 36.)

The decedent’s estate initially employed Mr. Gibson to "conduct an intensive walk-through analysis and cruise and complete that [cruise] in the fall of 1976.” (Tr 37.) At that time he estimated the volume of merchantable timber (12 inches dbh and larger) to be 1,740,000 board feet. (Tr 38.) Copies of Gibson’s cruise and appraisal were given to the Audit Division, Department of Revenue, in December 1976. Thereafter, on February 10, 1977, the Audit Division issued its notice of proposed inheritance tax deficiency and a hearing was set before the department for June 20, 1977. This hearing was postponed to permit a department appraiser, Mr. Schmidt, to prepare a new appraisal of the property. Mr. Schmidt proposed, and the Deputy Director of the Department of Revenue found, that the highest and best use of the 3,253.51 acres was development into parcels of 80 to 100 acres to be used for rural homesites or timber production, or both, and *[307] that its true cash value on the date of death was $1,906,000. These conclusions were set out in the Deputy Director’s Opinion and Order No. IH 77-13, dated January 5, 1978. The personal representative appealed therefrom by filing a complaint in this court on March 6, 1978.

Mr. Jack F. Gartz, a property appraiser in the Timber Section of the Department of Revenue, was then instructed by the department to make an independent reappraisal of the subject property in preparation for the trial in this court, set for September 1, 1978. However, when plaintiff learned that Mr. Gartz would testify to a volume of merchantable timber on the subject property of some 8,000,000 board feet, grossly exceeding Mr. Gibson’s estimate, trial was postponed while the counsel for the respective parties sought to ascertain the factors which led to the startling difference. 2 No satisfaction being obtained, plaintiff, in the late fall of 1978, contracted with Mr. Gibson to make a thorough reappraisal of the subject property for purposes of this trial, using a prism cruise. 3 (Tr 38 *[308] et seq.; see PI Ex 2.) Based on this reappraisal, plaintiff determined that the merchantable timber (12-inch dbh and larger) to be 1,979,000 board feet, as of the date of death, with a true cash value of $114,718 which, with the addition of the value determined for the forest land and reproduction thereon of $377,310, gave a total value of $492,028 (approximately $151 per acre).

The study and exchange of information by appraisers and counsel did result in a stipulation, filed October 3, 1979, that the " 'highest and best use’ for the subject property involved in this case is for timber production and the sale thereof in the timber market” (not for the development of rural homesites as held in the opinion and order from which this appeal is taken).

Mr. Gartz, as expert appraiser for the defendant, found 8,900,000 board feet of merchantable timber, valued at $783,200, and forest land and reproduction timber (3,180 acres at $300 per acre) valued at $954,000, for a total of $1,737,200 as of the date of decedent’s death (Def Ex A, 25). His definition of "merchantable,” also, was a tree 12-inch dbh and larger that would be utilized down to five-inch top diameter, diameter inside bark. This minimum size is considered by both appraisers to be a "small log.” (Tr 261-263.)

It can be inferred that the plaintiff and Mr. Gibson were fortified in Gibson’s conclusion of the comparatively low volume in the Gibson 1978 cruise (as compared to the Gartz cruise) because they were aware of a less intensive cruise of the subject property made by Steven A. Goeller, Senior Appraiser at Weyerhaeuser Company’s Springfield, Oregon, plant in May 1974, the month following decedent’s death. Mr. Goeller, an expert timber cruiser, was plaintiff’s first witness in this suit. He testified that, on behalf of Weyer-haeuser’s "Tree Farm Family Program,” he had offered the plaintiff an inventory cruise of the subject property. This was to provide the owner "* * * a tool to help manage their property * * (Tr 13.) Mr. Goel- *[309] ler and an assistant began with study of the latest aerial photographs, typed out the entire property according to species, site, age and stocking, went into the field and adjusted these findings by examination of each type, and cruised the merchantable types, using center strips and 192 full-circle prism plots. The standard for merchantable timber was a minimum log of 16 feet in length with a four-inch top (including trees down to six inches dbh). Mr. Goeller found 4,977,540 board feet of "merch,” using a minimum log smaller than the standard used by Gibson and Gartz. (Tr 10-16.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marchel v. Department of Revenue
9 Or. Tax 317 (Oregon Tax Court, 1983)
Stevens v. Department of Revenue
9 Or. Tax 141 (Oregon Tax Court, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Or. Tax 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riensche-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1980.