Starker v. Department of Revenue

6 Or. Tax 10
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 6 Or. Tax 10 (Starker 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
Starker v. Department of Revenue, 6 Or. Tax 10 (Or. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

The plaintiff appealed from the defendant’s determination of deficiencies in gift taxes due the State of Oregon, pursuant to ORS 119.250, for gifts made in the *11 calendar years 1969, 1970 and 1971 (Gift Tax File No. G-73015). The gift taxes at issue in case No. 756 are for the years 1969 and 1970; the gift taxes at issue in case No. 867 are for the year 1971.

Plaintiff is a resident of Benton County, Oregon. He has engaged in timber operations for many years. During the years 1969, 1970 and 1971, plaintiff made gifts of timber, timberlands, two lots in the City of Corvallis, and his vendor’s interest in a real estate sales contract of Corvallis property. The question presented to the court is the value of each gift on the date made. “The Oregon Tax Court has jurisdiction to determine the correct amount of the deficiency [if any], even if the amount so determined is greater or less than the amount of the deficiency as to which notice has been mailed by the director [of the Department of Revenue], and even if determined upon grounds other or different from those asserted in the notice. * * *” ORS 119.270(1).

The parties have stipulated and filed with the court, under date of June 27,1974, a list of the gifts at issue, the date of each gift, the values thereof as reported by the plaintiff on his timely filed Oregon gift tax returns, and the values as determined by defendant.

By agreement of counsel, the two cases were consolidated for trial.

With the exception of the gifts designated 1970(a) (the donor’s vendor’s interest in the contract of sale of a shopping center in Corvallis) and 1970(b) and (c) (unimproved real property in the City of Corvallis), the gifts involved timber and timberland (including immature forest growth, commonly designated “reproduction”). Only gifts 1969(h) and 1970 (n) were of timber only. The parties had adopted the land class and the forest class designation of immature or reproduction timber, as determined by the defend *12 ant, and stipulated agreement with the classification of merchantable timber and the volume thereof as determined by the defendant (as set forth in joint Exhibits 19-D, 20-E, and 21-F) for the purposes of these suits.

The true cash value of the gifts must be determined in each instance as of the date of the gift. This simply stated proposition, with respect to the timber and timberlands, actually involves a highly complex task, commonly entrusted to specialized, extensively trained, experienced appraisers of forest land and timber.

All property valuation contains aspects of personal judgment but timber valuation may well lead all other categories in this regard. Although the parties agreed to use the defendant’s land classes and timber inventory, thus eliminating the otherwise basic requirement of timber cruising, many important details were left for judgments as to which reasonable, able appraisers can differ.

As to merchantable timber, timely “comparable sales” were available and used but since every logging show involves variable conditions, the log market conversion return was utilized by the trained appraiser as a method of valuing stumpage. Judgment must be exercised as to the reliability of available price data on logs in the pond and the costs of getting the logs to the pond; i.e., the price paid for falling, limbing, bucking, yarding, loading, scaling and hauling. These figures must then be adjusted in accordance with the appraiser’s judgment to variables in the subject timber, including its size and density, the topography of the site, its accessibility, roads, and distance from market. All of these considerations involve the exercise of skilled judgment and are in addition to numerous latent questions which were eliminated by the *13 parties’ stipulations of timber inventory and classification.

The appraisal of forest land and the immature timber thereon raises other difficulties. The willing buyer of such property is considering stumpage in a more or less distant point in time, not the cutting of timber in the near future. Consequently, additional judgmatical variables are implicit in the transaction. There are fewer sales of -this type than of stumpage, increasing the appraiser’s difficulties.

An impressive array of professional timber appraisers was presented as witnesses in this suit. Messrs. Larson, Lewis, Feiss, Henze and Wakefield testified on behalf of the plaintiff. (None defended the plaintiff’s values as submitted on the gift tax returns and listed in the two complaints. None reached values as high as those pleaded by defendant.) Each of these witnesses had utilized the stipulated acreages, land classes, descriptions of species, and timber volumes, but had acted separately and independently in determining values for each parcel as to which they testified. (No one timber appraiser appraised every gift of forest land and stumpage.) With few exceptions, they had inspected, particularly for this case, each parcel of the land involved. Each of the witnesses is a veteran appraiser, with academic degrees in forestry and many years of practical experience in most *14 types of forest activity, including timber and forest land appraisal, for the federal and state governments and for private industry.

The plaintiff’s timber experts, in the regular course of their vocation, often appear to be retained by their clients to make an appraisal of specific stumpage (and, more rarely, of forest lands) for the purpose of producing a figure on which a client can reasonably rely for bidding or making an offer, with the expectation of realizing a profit. The appraiser is not required to defend his value to the client as he is expected to do as a witness in court. (With each transaction, he adds to his experience the knowledge of what actually transpired in the particular situation, and profits accordingly.) The client’s acceptance of a conclusion without detailed supporting data may explain why plaintiff’s able witnesses varied greatly in their ability to explain in court the procedures followed by them. In many instances, they gave more general answers to questions than the court, as a trier of fact, would wish.

The court has been required to choose among the witnesses and it has been most influenced by those who, through their testimony, showed the greatest insight in the processes involved and depicted most explicitly and cogently their methods and reasoning. The court has discretion, in the first instance, to pass upon the qualifications of the expert witnesses called by the parties and to weigh the credibility of their testimony. Astoria Plywood Corp. v. Dept. of Rev., 258 Or 76, 87, 481 P2d 58 (1971). An expert witness is expected to give a satisfactory explanation of the methods by which he arrived at his opinion and the basis for any formula used by him. Chicago and North Western Railway Co. v. Hillard, 502 P2d 189, 192 (Wyo 1972); American Sav. Life Ins. Co. v. State ex

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Riensche v. Department of Revenue
8 Or. Tax 304 (Oregon Tax Court, 1980)
Rosboro Lumber Co. v. Heine
8 Or. Tax 221 (Oregon Tax Court, 1979)
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8 Or. Tax 1 (Oregon Tax Court, 1979)
Swenson v. Department of Revenue
553 P.2d 351 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1976)
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6 Or. Tax 166 (Oregon Tax Court, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Or. Tax 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starker-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1975.