Williams v. State Tax Commission

1 Or. Tax 265
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedApril 24, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Or. Tax 265 (Williams v. State Tax Commission) 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
Williams v. State Tax Commission, 1 Or. Tax 265 (Or. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

Peter M. Gunnar, Judge.

This is a suit to set aside Opinion and Order No. VL 62-129, which sustained the assessed value placed by the Polk County Assessor upon plaintiffs’ lands in Polk County, Oregon, for the tax year 1961-62.

FACTS

Plaintiffs are the owners of three tracts of land, totaling in excess of 260 acres, situated in Polk County approximately three miles westerly from the City of Salem on Orchard Heights Road. A part of the subject property along Orchard Heights Road has been platted for sale.

During the initial reappraisal, the assessor classified this land as subdivision land and valued it at $106,490.90, including improvements valued at $10,450. There is no controversy concerning the improvement values. The plaintiffs contend that all the land, other than the small platted partition, should be valued as farm or agricultural land and contend for a value, including platted land and improvements, of $44,252.

*267 The evidence indicates that this large tract was not served by paved, public roads to any great extent, contained some acreage unsuited for farming or subdividing, was some distance from the present subdivision activity, had a view potential in part, and had water available. The platted portion contains about 25 building sites.

ISSUES

The contentions of the plaintiffs are:

a. That the present, agricultural use should determine the use for which the unplatted portion should be valued, rather than it being valued as subdivision property. As stated in their opening brief, “[T]he [actual] use determines the class thereof.”

b. That, in any event, the value of the property does not exceed $44,252.

Highest and Best TJse

The issue presented by the plaintiffs’ first contention is whether land may be valued at its highest and best use for tax purposes or must be valued at its present use only. Although it is assumed in the Oregon opinions that the highest and best use controls, the defendant failed to file a brief or to cite any authority in support of this principle, which appears to be of first impression.

The entire concept of value presupposes the theory of highest and best use. If a seller offers property for sale, he expects to get its value based upon its inherent qualities in the light of its situation. If a person owned a block in the center of Manhattan upon which he grew radishes and then offered it for sale, *268 lie would expect to receive more than farm acreage prices for it. The fact that he was farming it would be immaterial. Similarly, a farmer whose land is being surrounded by subdivisions can expect to sell his farm for higher than farm prices. He can expect to sell it for a price justified by that reasonable use which will realize, in the present or the immediate future, the highest return on the investment, the so-called highest and best use.

This principle is recognized universally in ad valorem tax valuation. 51 Am Jur 656, Taxation § 706; 84 CJS 795, Taxation § 411 (2) (a). In Oregon, it has been approved in the valuation of real property in eminent domain proceedings. State Highway Com. v. Stumbo, 222 Or 62, 65-6, 352 P2d 477 (1960), and the cases cited therein. Valuation decisions in eminent domain generally have a direct applicability in ad valorem tax cases. See Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. State Tax Com., 228 Or 112, 117, 363 P2d 1104 (1961), citing State Highway Comm. v. Superbilt Mfg. Co., 204 Or 393, 281 P2d 707 (1955).

The plaintiffs’ argument is that the constitution requires uniformity of taxation within the same class of property and that a property’s use determines its class. In this, the plaintiff is in error. A property’s intrinsic and extrinsic qualities determines its class. If this were not so, the hypothetical radish grower on Manhattan could avoid his fair taxation and farming would become the universal occupation of land speculators. What ad valorem taxation under our constitution seeks to accomplish generally is the taxation of all taxable property uniformly in relation to its market value. The reference to class adverts to legislative classification. Wkere there is no legislative classifi *269 cation, the character and qualities of the property, including its utility, determines its class. In 1961-62, there was no separate, legislative classification of farm lands.

Speculative Value

The valuation of property at its highest and best use does not permit speculative uses to be considered. If the property is to be valued at a use other than its present use, the use must be one to which it is available and adapted presently or within a future time so immediate that the proposed use is an element of its present value. State Highway Com’n v. Deal, 191 Or 661, 671-2, 233 P2d 242 (1951). This corollary raises an issue of fact in each case in which the highest and best use concept is applied; and, as will be seen, this case is no exception.

Presumption Rebutted

The value determined by the assessor is presumed correct. Strawn v. Commission, 1 OTR, 98, 149 (1962). This rebuttable presumption can be overcome by a preponderance of the evidence showing that the assessor’s value is incorrect.

Analysis of Evidence

The evidence supporting the assessor is ably compiled and presented. In addition to the evidentiary presumption, the defendant’s witness testified that the assessor’s valuation was the result of determining the acreage value of the land just beyond the perimeter of West Salem and extending a few miles to the west, and of applying to this value a percentage factor which, in the judgment of the appraiser, accounted for *270 the various defects of the subject property which reduced it below the average value.

On the other hand, the plaintiffs, in addition to the plaintiff Mr. Williams, whose self-serving testimony was so partisanly unreasonable as to present a jaundiced view, elicited the opinion of a respected professional appraiser, Peter Geiser, of Salem. The professional appraiser did not support the valuation sought by the plaintiffs, but gave his opinion that the property had a fair market value of $78,000.

Unlike its predecessors, whose scope of review of ad valorem property tax valuations was severely limited, it is the function of this specialized and expert court, upon such suit as this, to determine the proper assessed value of the property in dispute. Strawn v. Commission, supra. It must determine, from the preponderance of the evidence presented to it de novo, the true and correct assessed value for the property.

It is shown by the evidence, as well as the personal knowledge of the court, that the area in which the subject property lies is in a state of transition. Clearly, from the testimony of all witnesses, the soil in the area is poor. Farm land in that area. would bring only $150 an acre.

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1 Or. Tax 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-tax-commission-ortc-1963.