O’CONNELL, C. J.
Plaintiffs appeal from a decree
of the Oregon Tax Court sustaining an order of the Oregon Department of Revenue
establishing the assessed value of plaintiffs’ real property as of January 1, 1971.
The subject property is an 85,392 square foot site between S.E. Stark and Washington Streets and 103rd and 105th Avenues in Multnomah County. The property is improved by a restaurant building and associated parldng lot. The. geographic area has changed rapidly from a low density suburban commercial area to the site of two shopping centers and numerous satellite businesses. As a consequence the value of plaintiffs’ land has risen dramatically. This appeal presents several questions of the principles to
be used in determining “true cash, value” in these circumstances.
The assessment affirmed below embodied the determination, not disputed by plaintiffs, that the highest and best use of the subject property was as raw land suitable for development of service business as satellites to the adjacent shopping centers. The assessor determined that such development would require a division of the property into smaller parcels suitable for the envisioned uses. He hypothesized a division into three parcels; two of 19,000 square feet each containing the best street frontage at either end of plaintiffs’ holding, and a residual parcel of approximately 40,000 square feet in the center. He then analyzed sales of comparable properties of these hypothetical sizes and determined that the more desirable end parcel should bring $7.00 per square foot, the opposite end parcel $6.50 per square foot, and the intermediate parcel $6.00 per square foot. Addition of these values yields the total assessed value for the land of $541,000.
To the land value thus obtained, the assessor added $24,800 as the true cash value of the improvements. Plaintiffs attack the assessment on various grounds. The principal contention is that the subject property should have been assessed as one piece and therefore it was erroneous to value the property on the basis of a hypothetical division of the property into smaller units. We find no error in making the assessment on the basis of a division of the property into several parcels. There is no reason why a large parcel should not be hypothetically subdivided for the purpose of assessment when the evidence indicates, as it does here, that such division is required to
effectuate the highest and best use of the property. Only in such a way can one realistically determine the “true cash value,”
upon which an assessment must be based.
Plaintiffs also contend that the Tax Court erred in failing to consider two transactions involving portions of the subject property. The first was the purchase by plaintiffs of 19,300 square feet of the subject property for approximately $3.70 per square foot in 1969. The second transaction was a sale of approximately one half of the subject property in November, 1972, almost two years after the assessment date, at $5.00 per square foot.
The 1969 purchase was rejected by the assessor and the Tax Court as so remote in time, considering the rapidly escalating land prices in the area, that it was not relevant to the value as of the assessment date. The 1972 sale was rejected by the Tax Court as impermissible hindsight.
The principles governing the use of dealings in the assessed property itself to show its value are well established. A sale of the property within a reasonable time of the assessment while not conclusive, is very persuasive of market value.
Whether a transaction
is so recent as to be persuasive of present value will depend upon the similarity of conditions affecting value at the time of the transaction and conditions affecting value at the time of the assessment.
The interval between the transaction in the subject property sought to be introduced and the assessment date may be so great that it can be said as a matter of law that there was a change in conditions.
However, where this determination cannot be made as a matter of law, reference must be made to the underlying conditions affecting value before such evidence can be rejected. These principles apply equally to transactions in the assessed property before and after valuation date.
In this light, the determination of the Tax Court as to the 1969 purchase is clearly correct. The evidence was conclusive that prices in the area of the subject property rose dramatically between 1969 and the assessment date because of a fundamental change in the use of the land in the area. This rapid change in a basic condition affecting value rendered the 1969 purchase sufficiently remote to warrant its rejection.
The situation is materially different with respect to the 1972 sale.
There is no indication in the record
that the conditions affecting market valne in 1972 were substantially different from those in 1971. The shift in land use appears to have been largely completed by 1971, and there is no reason shown to suspect a depression in land prices. We must, therefore, reverse and remand for reconsideration of the assessment in light of the excluded 1972 sale. Needless to say, it will be open to defendant to attempt to show any shift in underlying conditions which might render the 1972
sale price a distorted indication of the value on January 1, 1971.
The plaintiffs further assert that the Tax Court erred in assigning any value at all to the improvements. Plaintiffs’ argument is that the improvements are of value only to the present owners in their present restaurant use and that it is inconsistent to assess the land assuming one use and to assess the improvements assuming a contrary use.
Defendant replies that the expected holding period of the land before sale can be effected is six to twenty-four months, during which the restaurant is a potential source of income to offset holding expenses such as taxes. In support for its position defendant cites
Nepom v. Dept. of Rev.,
264 Or 195, 504 P2d 1039 (1972).
Nepom
does not support the valuation of improvements in this case. In
Nepom,
the property consisted of a parcel of land improved by an apartment house which produced rental income. The land’s highest and best use was for light manufacturing and it was valued on that basis.
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O’CONNELL, C. J.
Plaintiffs appeal from a decree
of the Oregon Tax Court sustaining an order of the Oregon Department of Revenue
establishing the assessed value of plaintiffs’ real property as of January 1, 1971.
The subject property is an 85,392 square foot site between S.E. Stark and Washington Streets and 103rd and 105th Avenues in Multnomah County. The property is improved by a restaurant building and associated parldng lot. The. geographic area has changed rapidly from a low density suburban commercial area to the site of two shopping centers and numerous satellite businesses. As a consequence the value of plaintiffs’ land has risen dramatically. This appeal presents several questions of the principles to
be used in determining “true cash, value” in these circumstances.
The assessment affirmed below embodied the determination, not disputed by plaintiffs, that the highest and best use of the subject property was as raw land suitable for development of service business as satellites to the adjacent shopping centers. The assessor determined that such development would require a division of the property into smaller parcels suitable for the envisioned uses. He hypothesized a division into three parcels; two of 19,000 square feet each containing the best street frontage at either end of plaintiffs’ holding, and a residual parcel of approximately 40,000 square feet in the center. He then analyzed sales of comparable properties of these hypothetical sizes and determined that the more desirable end parcel should bring $7.00 per square foot, the opposite end parcel $6.50 per square foot, and the intermediate parcel $6.00 per square foot. Addition of these values yields the total assessed value for the land of $541,000.
To the land value thus obtained, the assessor added $24,800 as the true cash value of the improvements. Plaintiffs attack the assessment on various grounds. The principal contention is that the subject property should have been assessed as one piece and therefore it was erroneous to value the property on the basis of a hypothetical division of the property into smaller units. We find no error in making the assessment on the basis of a division of the property into several parcels. There is no reason why a large parcel should not be hypothetically subdivided for the purpose of assessment when the evidence indicates, as it does here, that such division is required to
effectuate the highest and best use of the property. Only in such a way can one realistically determine the “true cash value,”
upon which an assessment must be based.
Plaintiffs also contend that the Tax Court erred in failing to consider two transactions involving portions of the subject property. The first was the purchase by plaintiffs of 19,300 square feet of the subject property for approximately $3.70 per square foot in 1969. The second transaction was a sale of approximately one half of the subject property in November, 1972, almost two years after the assessment date, at $5.00 per square foot.
The 1969 purchase was rejected by the assessor and the Tax Court as so remote in time, considering the rapidly escalating land prices in the area, that it was not relevant to the value as of the assessment date. The 1972 sale was rejected by the Tax Court as impermissible hindsight.
The principles governing the use of dealings in the assessed property itself to show its value are well established. A sale of the property within a reasonable time of the assessment while not conclusive, is very persuasive of market value.
Whether a transaction
is so recent as to be persuasive of present value will depend upon the similarity of conditions affecting value at the time of the transaction and conditions affecting value at the time of the assessment.
The interval between the transaction in the subject property sought to be introduced and the assessment date may be so great that it can be said as a matter of law that there was a change in conditions.
However, where this determination cannot be made as a matter of law, reference must be made to the underlying conditions affecting value before such evidence can be rejected. These principles apply equally to transactions in the assessed property before and after valuation date.
In this light, the determination of the Tax Court as to the 1969 purchase is clearly correct. The evidence was conclusive that prices in the area of the subject property rose dramatically between 1969 and the assessment date because of a fundamental change in the use of the land in the area. This rapid change in a basic condition affecting value rendered the 1969 purchase sufficiently remote to warrant its rejection.
The situation is materially different with respect to the 1972 sale.
There is no indication in the record
that the conditions affecting market valne in 1972 were substantially different from those in 1971. The shift in land use appears to have been largely completed by 1971, and there is no reason shown to suspect a depression in land prices. We must, therefore, reverse and remand for reconsideration of the assessment in light of the excluded 1972 sale. Needless to say, it will be open to defendant to attempt to show any shift in underlying conditions which might render the 1972
sale price a distorted indication of the value on January 1, 1971.
The plaintiffs further assert that the Tax Court erred in assigning any value at all to the improvements. Plaintiffs’ argument is that the improvements are of value only to the present owners in their present restaurant use and that it is inconsistent to assess the land assuming one use and to assess the improvements assuming a contrary use.
Defendant replies that the expected holding period of the land before sale can be effected is six to twenty-four months, during which the restaurant is a potential source of income to offset holding expenses such as taxes. In support for its position defendant cites
Nepom v. Dept. of Rev.,
264 Or 195, 504 P2d 1039 (1972).
Nepom
does not support the valuation of improvements in this case. In
Nepom,
the property consisted of a parcel of land improved by an apartment house which produced rental income. The land’s highest and best use was for light manufacturing and it was valued on that basis. Although the apartment house use was inconsistent with the highest and best use, the Department of Revenue proved that a buyer would pay a premium for the land equal to the capitalized value of the additional stream of income which the apartments would produce during the transition to highest and best use.
In the present case, defendant’s expert witness did not evaluate the improvements on the basis of
capitalizing the income.
The assessor expressed the opinion that the improvements would have some value to plaintiffs until the property was sold. But there was no evidence that the presence of the improvements on the property would prompt a purchaser to pay a premium over the value of the land without improvements. The figure of $24,800 represents the replacement cost of the improvements, assuming a two-year life on the assumption that this measured the value to plaintiffs during the expected holding period. This is exactly the sort of inconsistent position disallowed in
Portland Golf Club v. State Tax Comm.,
255 Or 284, 465 P2d 883 (1970). The value to plaintiffs is irrelevant to the question of the market value which is to be determined by reference to the factors which govern the amount a willing buyer would pay on the assessment date.
It being admitted that the improvements
would have no effect on that amount, their assessment can not stand.
Reversed and remanded.