Yamhill House, LLC v. Multnomah County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMay 18, 2015
DocketTC-MD 140156D
StatusUnpublished

This text of Yamhill House, LLC v. Multnomah County Assessor (Yamhill House, LLC v. Multnomah County Assessor) 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
Yamhill House, LLC v. Multnomah County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

YAMHILL HOUSE, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 140156D ) v. ) ) MULTNOMAH COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION

This Final Decision incorporates without change the court’s Decision, entered

April 29, 2015. The court did not receive a statement of costs and disbursements within 14 days

after its Decision was entered. See TCR-MD 16 C(1).

Plaintiff appeals the Multnomah County Board of Property Tax Appeals (BOPTA) order,

dated March 11, 2014, determining that the 2013-14 real market value of property identified as

Account R193328 (subject property) was $891,960. A telephone trial was held on

January 13, 2015. Randal Acker, Attorney at Law, appeared on behalf of Plaintiff. Jon Deskin

(Deskin), State General Certified Appraiser, testified on behalf of Plaintiff. Barry Dayton

(Dayton), Property Appraiser III, appeared on behalf of Defendant. Scott Elliott (Elliott),

County Property Appraiser 3, testified on behalf of Defendant.

The court sustained Defendant’s objection to Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, an appraisal report

prepared by Pamela Swartz (Swartz’s report), because Swartz did not testify. Plaintiff’s Exhibit

2, Deskin’s limited report (Deskin’s report), was admitted over Defendant’s objection. At the

time that Defendant offered Exhibit A, Plaintiff objected, stating a lack of foundation and

Defendant withdrew its request to admit its Exhibit A. Defendant failed to subsequently offer its

Exhibit A.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 140156D 1 I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Deskin, who stated that he has been a real estate appraiser for more than forty-two years,

testified that the subject property is located in an urban neighborhood in uptown Portland and is

“zoned RH, which is a high density, multi-growing residential zone within the city of Portland.”

(See Ptf’s Ex 2 at 3, 11.) Deskin testified that the subject property is a “duplex and has even

been approved to be * * * a triplex.” Deskin testified that the subject property’s commercial

neighborhood includes a four-plex, a hotel, a high-rise, a large multi-family complex,

restaurants, and shops.

Elliott, who stated that he has appraised thousands of properties and is currently a county

appraiser, testified that the subject property was built in 1882 as a single-family residential home

and was “built with high-quality materials, architecture, and craftsmanship” that would be

“difficult to impossible to replace today.” Elliott testified that according to “City of Portland

historical records,” the subject property is an “outstanding and pristine example of a fully

developed Queen Anne-style home” with “two stories, a finished attic, and an unfinished

basement.” Elliott testified that “[t]he first and second level” total “3,600 square feet of owner-

occupied space[,]” while a tenant occupies the finished attic area. Elliott also testified that the

subject property “meets the requirements of the National Register of Historic Places,” and recited

several of the subject property’s characteristics: “eyebrow windows,” which are “very rare to

find,” and antique stained glass windows; “superior curb appeal;” and “superior quality

construction.”

Elliott testified that “the period appeal has been preserved” in the subject property’s

interior, stating that “the entire main level shows very extensive use of large or heavy crown

moldings, chair railings, ceiling beams, pocket doors, and fireplace mantels, et cetera. Generally,

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 140156D 2 this level of extensive woodworking [is] extremely rare in modern homes and generally only

found in homes built many decades ago.” Elliott testified that “[t]he kitchen has undergone an

extensive remodel using high quality materials.” Elliott testified that “[o]ne of the full baths has

a claw tub, an antique pedestal sink, and it’s been well maintained to period style.”

A. Highest and Best Use

Deskin testified that the subject property is a “legal duplex; a duplex or multi-family

property is the highest and best use.” (See Ptf’s Ex 2 at 11.) Deskin testified that on the

assessment date, the main unit was owner occupied and the other unit was income producing.

Elliott testified that the subject property is a single-family home with an accessory

dwelling unit. Elliott testified that the definition of an accessory dwelling unit is “additional

living quarters that are independent and smaller than the primary dwelling unit. The spaces are

often self-contained with their own entrance[s], and they typically have their own kitchens and

bath[s].” Elliott testified that accessory dwelling units can differ from duplexes “in terms of

design and legal treatment,” stating “a duplex typically offers two roughly equivalent dwellings

within a single building * * * whereas an [accessory dwelling unit] is usually significantly

smaller and less prominent architecturally than the primary dwelling.” Deskin testified that the

difference between a duplex and a single-family residence with an accessory dwelling unit is

“purely semantics.” Elliott testified that all four elements of the highest and best use test are met

by a single-family residential home with an accessory dwelling unit.

Deskin testified that he found no definition “for an accessory dwelling unit in conformity

with a single-family residence” in the Dictionary of Real Estate Appraisal, Third Edition.

Deskin testified that it is “all lumped under the category of duplex,” which is “a house containing

two separate dwelling units side-by-side, or one above the other; it also describes apartments that

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 140156D 3 occupy two levels or a portion of.” Deskin testified that having the subject property as a “single-

family residence with an accessory dwelling unit goes against everything that the RH high-

density residential zone is about.” Deskin testified that his “opinion of highest and best use is

predicated on the RH zoning and most probable use of the property * * *.” (See Ptf’s Ex 2 at

11.) When asked if there were any single-family residences with accessory dwelling units in

immediate proximity to the subject property, Deskin replied that, “to my knowledge, there were

none existent in this neighborhood and everything in the area is of the high density, multi-family

dwelling unit category.”

Elliott testified that an investor’s “primary motivation is to generate income on a

property” and “[o]ften, income-producing properties are maintained at minimum levels.” Elliott

testified that in his career, he has “never seen anything of the quality” of the subject property’s

“owner-occupied area used by a rental investor.” In reference to rental properties, Elliott

testified that he “often finds that interior amenities generally are of lower quality and maintained

with lower quality materials to maximize return. This is not the case with the subject property.”

He testified that “[w]ith tenants, these amenities would be more likely to become worn,

damaged, altered, or destroyed, and ultimately diminish the overall intrinsic historical value of

the home. In my opinion, no investor could charge enough rent for such risk.” Deskin testified

that the quality of materials used does not “exclude a structure from being a duplex,” and that

units in a duplex can be of “varying sizes, they do not have to be equal in size.” In response,

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