United Telephone Co. v. Department of Revenue

770 P.2d 43, 307 Or. 428, 1989 Ore. LEXIS 15
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1989
DocketOTC 2037, 2209; SC S33678
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 770 P.2d 43 (United Telephone Co. v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Telephone Co. v. Department of Revenue, 770 P.2d 43, 307 Or. 428, 1989 Ore. LEXIS 15 (Or. 1989).

Opinion

*430 GILLETTE, J.

This is an ad valorem tax case in which this court is required once again to address questions associated with the valuation for tax purposes of property of a public utility. Plaintiff United Telephone Company of the Northwest, Inc. (“United”), challenges tax assessments by the defendant Department of Revenue (“Department”) for the tax years 1983 and 1984, as those assessments were modified by the Oregon Tax Court. United Telephone Co. v. Dept. of Rev., 10 OTR 333 (1986). United asserts that the Tax Court decision should be modified to lower United’s tax burden for each of the two years because (1) that court and the Department failed to follow accounting precedents established by this court; (2) the Tax Court overstated United’s value because it used approaches to valuation that were not justified by the evidence; and (3) the Tax Court failed to recognize and make allowance for economic obsolescence of a portion of United’s property. In its cross-appeal, the Department challenges the Tax Court’s decision to lower United’s 1984 valuation in anticipation of certain negative consequences to United expected to result from deregulation of long distance telephone service. We modify the Tax Court judgment as follows:

1983 1984
Tax Court Valuation $122,000,000 $125,000,000
Supreme Court Valuation $122,536,000 $122,416,000

United is a public telephone company with its main offices in Hood River, Oregon. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of United Telecommunications, Inc., a large nonregulated and diversified company. United does business in Oregon and Washington. The business is integrated interstate, thus requiring that all taxable property, wherever located, first be valued before the Oregon portion, representing the taxable property located in Oregon, can be allocated. ORS 308.550(2); 308.555. The allocation is based on a formula established by the Western States Association of Tax Administrators. 1 *431 Other facts are discussed where pertinent in the body of the opinion.

I

Initially, United claims the Department erred in using, and the Tax Court erred in allowing, accounting approaches to valuation of United’s property that differ from those accepted by this court in previous ad valorem tax cases involving public utilities. United argues,

“[t]his Court once again faces a number of methodological issues it already has addressed and decided in previous utility property tax appeals. United’s appraisal complied with the precedents established by this Court; the Department and the Tax Court both refused to accord any weight to those precedents, notwithstanding that United urged that the Tax Court follow those precedents. * * * Indeed, the Tax Court nowhere even discussed the question of stare decisis.
U* * * * *
“In this case the Department and the Tax Court erroneously disregarded two very important prior decisions of this court. The first is Burlington Northern v. Dept of Rev, 291 Or 729, 635 P2d 347 (1981)[; the second is] * * * Pacific Power & Light Co v. Dept of Rev, 286 Or 529, 596 P2d 912 (1979) * * *.”

It is true, as United argues, that both cases are utility property tax cases that discuss the methodology of valuing such property, but when this court evaluates and then either accepts or rejects various theories of valuation offered by the parties, it almost always does so as a finder of fact on de novo review of the record made in the Tax Court. See Bend Millwork v. Dept. of Revenue, 285 Or 577, 581-82, 592 P2d 986 (1979); see also Publishers Paper Co. v. Dept. of Rev., 270 Or 737, 756-57, 530 P2d 88 (1974). Such decisions on the facts have no precedential value, a point best made by noting that this court accepted and relied upon an expert’s testimony in one of these cases, but rejected the very same testimony by the very same expert in the other case. This is because other testimony in each case may either bolster or undermine the *432 expert testimony in question, and this court decides each case on its own record. 2

We reject United’s effort to impeach the argument of the Department or the decision of the Tax Court by attempting to make legal precedent out of this court’s previous factual decisions in cases involving ad valorem taxation of public utilities. We turn now to United’s factual arguments arising out of the testimony in the present case.

II

As required by OAR 150-308.205-A(2), evidence was offered by United and the Department concerning all three traditional ápproaches to valuation of public utility properties: the market (or comparable sales) approach, the income (capitalized income) approach and the cost approach. Each approach in turn may be carried out by one or more techniques, depending on available information. Each valuation approach used (and each technique for utilizing that approach) has its own methodology, its own virtues and its own shortcomings.

In the material that follows, we set out our understanding of the approaches and techniques utilized by each side, together with each side’s objections to the other’s approach. We next determine which of the parties’ approaches and techniques we accept, based on our independent review of the evidence. Finally, we determine the appropriate valuation of United’s property.

*433 1. The Market (Comparable Sales) Approach to Valuation

The parties do not dispute the values under this approach. The parties agree that, strictly speaking, it is not possible to value United by using comparable sales, because large integrated public utilities like United rarely are sold. However, United’s expert appraiser, Dr. John H. Davis III, offered a substitute technique, the “stock and debt approach.” 3 We need not set out in detail Davis’s reasoning or his calculations under this theory. The Tax Court accepted them, as do we, and the Department in this court does not dispute Davis’s results. Those results were:

1983 4 1984
Stock and debt valuation $94,594,000 $98,692,000

We next examine the evidence relating to the income (capitalized income) approach.

2. The Income (Capitalized Income) Approach to Valuation

Under the income approach, the value of the company is derived by use of the accounting formula, V = I/R. The “I” in the formula is income. It is derived from an estimated income figure for the company.

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Bluebook (online)
770 P.2d 43, 307 Or. 428, 1989 Ore. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-telephone-co-v-department-of-revenue-or-1989.