Swanek v. Dept. of Rev.

25 Or. Tax 116
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 22, 2022
DocketTC 5423
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Or. Tax 116 (Swanek v. Dept. of Rev.) 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
Swanek v. Dept. of Rev., 25 Or. Tax 116 (Or. Super. Ct. 2022).

Opinion

116 July 22, 2022 No. 6

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT REGULAR DIVISION

Cathy J. SWANEK, Plaintiff, v. DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, State of Oregon, Defendant, and LANE COUNTY ASSESSOR Defendant-Intervenor, (TC 5423) In this property tax case, Plaintiff sought a reduction in the real market value (RMV) of her properties due to periodic shooting occurring on neighboring federal land. Plaintiff separately asked the court to create a new class of special assessment. The Lane County Assessor (assessor) presented an appraisal con- cluding that Plaintiff’s property was worth more than the current RMV on the tax rolls. Taxpayers seeking a value reduction below the RMV on the tax roll bear the burden of proof and therefore must provide competent evidence, such as appraisal reports and testimony by licensed professionals. ORS 305.427. The court concluded that the assessor carried her burden of proving a value nigher than that shown on the roll, and that Plaintiff did not carry her burden of proving any reduction. The court also concluded that only the legislature is authorized to create a new class of property for assessment purposes. The court therefore held ordered that the RMV on the roll be increased to value the assessor proved at trial.

Trial was held February 1, 2022, in the courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court, Salem. Cathy J. Swanek argued the cause pro se. Sebastian Tapia, Lane County Counsel, Eugene, argued the cause for Defendant-Intervenor Lane County Assessor. Decision rendered July 22, 2022. ROBERT T. MANICKE, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION On appeal from the Magistrate Division, Plaintiff brings this property tax matter concerning her two contig- uous parcels of property in rural Lane County, identified as Accounts 1205754 (Lot 1202) and 1446879 (Lot 1203). Cite as 25 OTR 116 (2022) 117

Defendant Department of Revenue (department) initially was the sole defendant by operation of ORS 305.501(1). The Lane County Assessor (assessor) intervened as a defendant early in the case, and the department tendered defense to the assessor and did not participate in trial. Plaintiff’s complaint is generally styled as an appeal of the property tax assessment of the property for tax year 2019-20. Plaintiff asks the court to reduce the property’s real market value to account for frequent target shooting on neighboring land owned by the federal government which, among other things, resulted in the shooting and wounding of her son on her property in 2019. However, Plaintiff seeks relief beyond a reduction in real market value. Plaintiff also asks the court to consider her property for any applicable exemption or special assessment programs for which the frequent target shooting could make her property eligible, including “act of God” relief. Finally, she asks the court to exercise its equitable powers, either to simply reduce the value of her property or to create a new class of special assessment that she describes as a “residence safety zone.” The assessor asks the court to increase the real market value, from the amount determined by the Board of Property Tax Appeals order from which Plaintiff appealed, to an amount conforming to the evidence presented at trial. II. FACTS Lot 1202 is a 4.6-acre parcel that is improved by a residence. The residence is 3,540 square feet and includes four bedrooms and four and a half bathrooms and has an attached three-car garage. Lot 1203 is a 37.18-acre parcel improved by a 2,407-square-foot residence, which consists of two bedrooms, one and a half bathrooms, with an attached garage and unfinished storage space.1 The lots share a four-acre pond that is fed by Bear Creek. Both parcels are bounded by a federal Bureau of Land Management (BLM) access road to the north. Lot 1203 is bounded by federally owned and managed land to the west and private timber land to the south. Lot 1202 is zoned for rural residential use. 1 Plaintiff apparently disputes this characterization, stating that “[a]ppraiser claims Lot 1203 has 8 garages worth $15,000 each. * * * [T]he building has always been listed as an agriculture building. We have never used it for cars.” 118 Swanek v. Dept. of Rev.

Lot 1203 is zoned for Impacted Forest Land and is steeply sloped and forested. For Lot 1202, the Assessor initially determined a real market value of $1,001,755, that was subsequently reduced to $800,000 by the Lane County Board of Property Tax Appeals (BOPTA); its maximum assessed value is $429,828. For Lot 1203, the Assessor initially determined a real market value of $1,072,497, that was subsequently reduced to $847,264 by the BOPTA; its maximum assessed value is $331,425. Plaintiff appeals from a Magistrate Division decision sus- taining the values determined by the BOPTA. A. Plaintiff’s Evidence At trial, Plaintiff testified that her use of the prop- erty is significantly curtailed by the shooting that occurs on the neighboring BLM-managed land to the west. She testi- fied that her son was shot and almost killed by a stray bullet originating from the BLM land in July 2019. In support of her testimony, Plaintiff submitted a police report document- ing the shooting of her son. The police report states that “[o]n 7-29-2019 I was advised that Swanek had been struck by a bullet while working on his families [sic] property off Lake Forest Drive on 07-27-19 at about 1700 hours.” The report goes on to describe the officer’s observations including seeing an area near a spur road with spent shell casings and broken bottles with no backstop or other barrier to prevent bullets from traveling to the valley below. Plaintiff testified that at times the shooting is loud enough for her to hear the bullets hitting metal nearby. Plaintiff submitted numerous letters she had written to BLM officials and elected local and federal representatives attempting to address the shooting onto the property and proposing that a “Residence Safety Zone” be established around private residences abutting BLM land. Plaintiff also submitted BLM and Oregon Target Shooting regulations, which she testified are inadequate and are not being appro- priately enforced. Plaintiff asserted that she cannot use the property to produce income because of the liability resulting from the shooting onto the land.2 2 Plaintiff testified that she had to shut down her horse stabling operation due to the shooting and that she was unable to proceed with her plans to establish Cite as 25 OTR 116 (2022) 119

Plaintiff identified other conditions affecting the value of the property: noise and garbage caused by traffic on the access road to the north, damage caused by beavers that chew through pipes and electrical lines on the property, and issues with flooding and erosion. Plaintiff stated that she has spent $23,000 dredging and hauling silt build-up from the pond on the property to prevent flooding. Plaintiff tes- tified that the dredging operation must be performed once a decade at her expense. Plaintiff asserted that the prop- erty lacks a well; as a result, she spent $11,000 to develop a spring that runs dry in the summer, and she incurred the additional expense of tanking in potable water. Plaintiff identified other conditions typical on rural property such as issues with cell service, electricity outages, and snow. Plaintiff did not submit an appraisal report or ask the court to find any specific value. She testified that she could not find a real estate appraiser who would prepare an appraisal with a negative adjustment for the recur- ring target shooting problem. In her post-trial brief, she expressed frustration that “Lane County refused to provide an appraiser able to consider and value our two issues.” B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Or. Tax 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanek-v-dept-of-rev-ortc-2022.