Wilsonville Heights Assoc. v. Department of Revenue

122 P.3d 499, 339 Or. 462, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 625
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 2005
DocketTC 4262; SC S50763
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 122 P.3d 499 (Wilsonville Heights Assoc. 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
Wilsonville Heights Assoc. v. Department of Revenue, 122 P.3d 499, 339 Or. 462, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 625 (Or. 2005).

Opinion

*464 RIGGS, J.

In this tax case, we decide whether the Oregon Tax Court erred in selecting a particular methodology for determining the assessable value of a low-income housing property for ad valorem tax purposes. The Tax Court found in favor of taxpayer, Wilsonville Heights Association, Ltd., when it deducted the value of federal restrictions on taxpayer’s low-income housing property from the property’s unrestricted value to determine the taxable interest in the property. Wilsonville Heights Assoc., Ltd. v. Dept. of Rev., 17 OTR 139 (2003). The Oregon Department of Revenue (department) appeals to this court pursuant to ORS 305.445. 1 For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decision of the Tax Court.

This court reviews Tax Court decisions for errors or questions of law or lack of substantial evidence. ORS 305.445. The following facts are undisputed. In 1985, taxpayer purchased a parcel of land in Wilsonville, Oregon, and then built on that land a 24-unit low-income housing project pursuant to section 515 of the Federal Housing Act of 1949 (515 Program). 42 USC § 1485 (1985). The 515 Program enables developers to obtain financing for such housing projects under the following terms: (1) the owner contributes five percent of the initial project cost; (2) the federal government provides the remaining costs through a guaranteed, nonrecourse loan; (3) the loan may not be prepaid for 20 years, and the owner may not refinance the project while the government’s regulatory agreement is in effect; (4) the agreement limits the rent that owners may charge and limits the tenants to those with incomes in a specified range; (5) all cash flow first must be applied to loan servicing, project maintenance and operating costs, and making required payments to a government-owned reserve account; (6) if sufficient funds remain after making all required expenditures, the owner is entitled *465 to an equity dividend payment of no more than eight percent of the owner’s initial contribution; (7) the owner’s annual income never may exceed that set equity dividend amount; (8) the government provides an interest rate subsidy so that the owner effectively pays only one percent of the loan interest; (9) the owner may transfer the property subject to governmental control of all aspects of the transaction including terms, sale price, and preapproval of the buyer; and (10) any government-approved buyer of the property receives the same loan support and is required to comply with the same program restrictions.

In this case, taxpayer’s five percent down payment was $35,500; the government guaranteed a loan for the remaining $674,500 in costs to build the project; the loan interest rate was 10.625 percent and the government paid 9.625 percent of that interest; and the taxpayer was entitled to an annual equity dividend amount of $2,840. Taxpayer received that dividend payment in only two of the first six years of operation. Additionally, during the tax years at issue in this case, there was no ascertainable market for low-income housing properties. 2

In the tax years 1992-93,1993-94, and 1994-95, the tax assessor valued taxpayer’s property at $706,900, $735,170, and $816,030, respectively. Taxpayer sought a reduction in the real market value assessment of the property for all three of those tax years. In response, the department reassessed the property at $700,000, $728,000, and $757,120, respectively. Taxpayer appealed that assessment to the Tax Court, arguing that the department failed to consider the governmental restrictions on the property when arriving at its real market value computation. Taxpayer alleged that the government’s restrictions reduced the real market value of the property to $225,000 for each of the three tax years.

*466 The Tax Court first concluded that the proper valuation of a federal low-income housing property for ad valorem tax purposes must establish the value of the property without restrictions (VPWR) and then reduce that figure by the value of the government’s restrictions or interest (VGI). Wilsonville Heights Assoc., 17 OTR at 148. The resulting figure would be the value of the taxable interest (VTI) in that property. Id.

The Tax Court then proceeded to apply the formula described. Initially, and in the absence of evidence submitted by the department, the court adopted taxpayer’s market sales figures for comparable unrestricted rental properties to determine VPWR during the three tax years at issue. Id. at 149.

The Tax Court then turned to the task of determining the value of the government’s interest, or VGI, in the project. The court first assumed that the government’s interest was “defined and protected by the restrictions on rent, operations, and other matters” and that the government, in essence, “pa [id] for” those restrictions by providing its loan support. Id. at 146. Therefore, the court concluded that the value of the government’s restrictions would be equal to the sum of the values of the government’s interest subsidization plus loan guarantee. Id. at 150. The court could determine with reasonable certainty the present value of the government’s interest subsidy payments, but found that it could not quantify the market value of the loan guarantee. Id. at 150-51. Thus, the court looked to the exchange between the government and taxpayer to obtain a figure for VGI by analogizing to the “presumed equivalency” concept from Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 1031 exchanges. 3 Id. at 151. That is, the court assumed that, in an arm’s-length transaction, taxpayer surrendered market rents to obtain the government’s *467 loan support; the present value in lost rents may be presumed equivalent to the value of the government’s loan support. Id. Because the court found taxpayer’s figures for the present value of lost rents (PVLR) to be reliable, it then substituted those known values for VGI in each tax year. Id. at 151, 153. The court thereafter concluded that the taxable interest for the years 1992-94 were as follows:

1992-93 1993-94 4 1994-95

VPWR $ 825,000 850,000 $ 860,000

- VGI (PVLR) 620,000 635,000 640,000

VTI or real $ 205,000 $ 215,000 $ 220,000

market value

Id. at 153.

The Tax Court confirmed that its use of the PVLR figure to reduce unrestricted property values in each tax year accurately depicted the market reality of the subject property because, (1) PVLR reflects that an owner’s property interest increases as the expiration of the government restrictions draws nearer; and (2) PVLR fluctuates with market rents. Id. at 151-52.

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Bluebook (online)
122 P.3d 499, 339 Or. 462, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilsonville-heights-assoc-v-department-of-revenue-or-2005.