Robinson v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 091455c (or.tax 6-10-2011)

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJune 10, 2011
DocketTC-MD 091455C.
StatusPublished

This text of Robinson v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 091455c (or.tax 6-10-2011) (Robinson v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 091455c (or.tax 6-10-2011)) 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
Robinson v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 091455c (or.tax 6-10-2011), (Or. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
This is a value appeal involving an omitted property assessment covering tax years 2003-04 through 2008-09. The parties focused on the value of the property for the 2008-09 tax year. Trial was held by telephone August 13, 2010. Plaintiff was represented by David E. Carmichael, attorney-at-law, Eugene. Defendant was represented by Marc Kardell, Assistant County Counsel for Lane County. Testifying for Plaintiff were Craig McKern (McKern), Oregon certified residential appraiser; Edward J. Leslie (Leslie), realtor; and Plaintiff Ray Robinson (Robinson). Testifying for Defendant were Connie Chapman (Chapman), department manager and appraisal supervisor; Sarah Madsen (Madsen), lead residential appraiser; and Bryce Krehbiel, residential appraiser. All of Defendant's expert witnesses are employed by Defendant.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS
The subject property includes a newer two bedroom, two bath home near Deadwood, Oregon, a rural area of Lane County some 60 miles from the city of Eugene to the east and 40 miles from the coastal town of Florence to the west. Deadwood is a very small town with limited amenities consisting primarily of a post office, a grocery market, and a gas station. Plaintiffs property is on a small dead-end road that ends just past his home. The town of Deadwood is approximately 15 miles away, and, according to Plaintiffs testimony, it takes *Page 2 about 15 minutes to drive from his house to the post office. The nearest major roadway is State Highway 36, which runs East/West from Eugene to Florence, Oregon. Plaintiffs property is north of that highway. Travel time from Plaintiffs home to Eugene is approximately one and one-half hours and approximately 40 minutes to Florence.

The home is a two-story structure with a gabled enamel steel roof, batten board siding, and a 1,224 square foot basement.1 (Def s Ex A at 2; Ptf s Ex 1 at 13, 14.) The parties disagree as to the size of the home. According to Plaintiffs appraiser McKern, the home has 1,957 square feet of gross living area. (Ptf s Ex 1 at 13, 14.) According to Defendant's records, the home has 1,812 square feet of finished living space, plus the 1,224 square foot basement. (Def s Ex A at 2; Ex L.) The home is situated on slightly more than 39 acres of nicely landscape property abutting federal forestland.2 (Ptf s Ex 1 at 13, 14.)

There are eight or nine outbuildings on the property, all but two of which were added in the year 2000 or before. (Def s Ex A at 4.) The outbuildings include a large, 1,280 square foot renovated barn with an attached utility shed approximately 1,000 square feet, and two hay cover storage areas, one nearly 900 square feet in size. (Def s Ex A at 4.)

There are several bodies of water on the property, including "Lake Kathleen," a seasonal 6 foot deep "frog bog," and a seasonal "orchard pond." (Def s Ex T at 5, 9, and 14.3) According to Plaintiff, there are "three waterfalls along [the] driveway during the winter months." (Id at 15.) The property also has a river running through it that sports salmon and other waterlife. Plaintiff was told by the Oregon Fish and Game Department that the stream is "one of the *Page 3 healthiest cutthroat trout streams in the state." (Id. at 19.) The property is home to a great deal of wildlife, including elk, bobcats, black bears and cougars, various birds, including the rare and protected spotted owl, woodchucks and crawdads, and King Salmon in the creek. (Id. at 17 through 23.)

The property also sports a small 28 passenger hobby railroad with one mile of track. The railroad is described as "18 gauge track," which Plaintiff testified meant that the tracks are 18 inches apart and allows for passenger cars wide enough for two adults to sit side-by-side. Plaintiff has three passenger cars for the railroad and can hold up to 28 people. He also has two "flatcars." The railroad includes a concrete tunnel and a bridge traversing the creek.

Plaintiff purchased the property in 1995 for an undisclosed amount of money. Plaintiff testified that the property had been for sale by "word of mouth" for "about 10 years," for an asking price of $140,000. Plaintiff testified that the property was then listed by a realtor for $125,000 and was only on the market for two days. Plaintiff was presumably the buyer at $125,000, although there is no direct evidence of that. According to Plaintiff, when he purchased the property, there was "junk everywhere." Plaintiff made considerable changes to the property after his purchase.

At the time of Plaintiff's purchase, the property had an old home that was built around the turn of the 20th century.4 After acquiring the property, Plaintiff tore down the old farmhouse and replaced it with a new home similar in size and appearance to the original farmhouse. Plaintiff testified that the replacement of the home included a new concrete foundation. The home has three covered decks, including a large deck at the rear of the house that affords a view of the river. (Ptf's Ex 1 at 7.) Attached to the house is a four bay, covered carport. On the lower *Page 4 basement level of the house, there is a 1,200 square foot garage/shop. Plaintiff also remodeled the main barn, added or renovated approximately six other outbuildings, and built the railroad.

Additionally, Plaintiff planted hundreds of trees and shrubs and added approximately 100,000 pounds of rock to preserve the creek for spawning salmon. Plaintiff did not obtain permits for any of the work done after buying the property, including the demolition of the old home and construction of the new one, the renovation of the barn, the construction of the railroad, and the rock added to the creek.

The evidence of the cost of all the work is somewhat vague and confusing. Plaintiff testified on direct examination that he rebuilt the original house at a cost of "considerably less than $300,000," excluding labor. Krehbiel testified for Defendant that part of his assignment in this case was to value the railroad. Plaintiff told him that there was roughly $200,000 into that project. There is no independent documentary evidence as to cost. At the time of trial, Plaintiff had the railroad listed for sale at a price of $120,000 if the buyer removed the track and $135,000 if Plaintiff did the work. (Def's Ex S.)

The real market value (RMV) on the assessment and tax rolls for the 2008-09 tax year, following the omitted property assessment, is $608,420, with $250,260 allocated to the land and $358,160 to the improvements. (Ptf's Compl at 5.) The omit assessment added $414,718 to the RMV. (Id.) The assessed value (AV) was increased from $29,281 to $304,234. (Id.) The RMV for tax year 2003-04 is $386,352, with $90,702 allocated to the land and $295,650 to the improvements. (Id. at 4.) The AV for the 2003-04 tax year was increased from $35,912 to $221,907. (Id.) *Page 5

II. ANALYSIS
The issue in this case is the RMV of the subject property. The tax years at issue are 2003-04 through 2008-09 because Defendant added omitted property value for all of those years. Plaintiff estimated the value as of January 1, 2008, which is the assessment date for the 2008-09 tax year. Defendant began by estimating the value as of January 1, 2003, the assessment date for the 2003-04 tax, and then trended that value forward through tax year 2008-09.

A.

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Bluebook (online)
Robinson v. Lane County Assessor, Tc-Md 091455c (or.tax 6-10-2011), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-lane-county-assessor-tc-md-091455c-ortax-6-10-2011-ortc-2011.