Yarbrough v. Marion County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 2012
DocketTC-MD 110323N
StatusUnpublished

This text of Yarbrough v. Marion County Assessor (Yarbrough v. Marion 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
Yarbrough v. Marion County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

JACK YARBROUGH, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 110323N ) v. ) ) MARION COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiff appeals the real market value of property identified as Account M131561

(subject property) for the 2010-11 tax year. A trial was held on November 7, 2011, in the Tax

Courtroom, Salem, Oregon. William L. Ghiorso, Attorney at Law, appeared on behalf of

Plaintiff. Plaintiff testified on his own behalf. Rick Nasset (Nasset), licensed real estate broker,

also testified on behalf of Plaintiff. Scott Norris, Assistant County Counsel, appeared on behalf

of Defendant. Rob Witters (Witters), Senior Residential Appraiser, testified on behalf of

Defendant. Nasset prepared a broker’s price opinion for the subject property. However, the

broker’s price opinion was not timely exchanged under Tax Court Rule-Magistrate Division 10

C and was not received into evidence. Defendant’s Exhibit A was received without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

The subject property is a double-wide manufactured home built in 1990 that is 1,063

square-feet with three bedrooms and two bathrooms and is located in Keizer, Oregon.1 (Def’s

Ex A at 1-2.) Nasset testified that he visited the subject property but did not inspect the interior.

He testified that he considered the subject property to be in average condition.

///

1 Plaintiff testified that the subject property is 1,066 square-feet. Nasset and Witters both testified that the subject property is 1,063 square-feet.

DECISION TC-MD 110323N 1 A. Subject property condition

Plaintiff testified that there was a severe leak caused by the hot water heater that flooded

the subject property with two inches of water and caused water damage to the floors. He

testified that the floors of the subject property have been in disrepair since the flood. Plaintiff

testified that no repairs were made to the subject property between 2009 and 2010. He testified

that the subject property suffers from rot around the siding, trim, and windows. Plaintiff testified

on rebuttal that the subject property’s carpets were dried on the floor using a special vacuum and

dehumidifier. He testified that he put a new roof on the subject property “about a year and a half

or two years ago.” Plaintiff testified that the roof of the subject property was never a problem;

the new roof was provided as repayment for a debt owed to Plaintiff by a roofing company.

Witters stated that, “[a]ccording to the appraiser’s notes within the subject property’s file,

as of January 15, 2008, the carpet and padding had been removed from the home. The skirting

had also been removed and repairs appeared to be under way.” (Def’s Ex A at 12.) “During a

follow up visit, dated July 21, 2008, the appraiser noted damaged gypsum, particle board

subfloor, and the bathroom connected to the main bedroom as being spongy. The same appraiser

then visited the property December 4, 2008. Notes from the visit included tenant occupied, fresh

exterior paint, new roof, and the replacement of the skirting. At that time, the appraiser

determined the condition issues of the [subject property] had been repaired.” (Id.) Witters

testified that the subject property “was considered to be rehabbed and in average condition as of

October 2009. An appraiser reappraised the area September of 2010 and considered the property

[to] be in average condition. No damage was evident.” (Id. at 2.) Witters testified that the

appraiser who visited the subject property in 2009 and 2010 and determined that the water

damage had been repaired was Kara Driskell (Driskell), who was not available to testify at trial.

DECISION TC-MD 110323N 2 He testified that Driskell did not provide notes concerning the interior of the subject property

from her September 2010 visit.

Witters testified that he drove by and viewed the exterior of the subject property in

October 2011. He testified that Defendant does not always receive access to the interiors of

properties and it is necessary to make an educated guess as to condition. Witters testified that he

believed that the carpeting and padding in the subject property were replaced, although he was

not certain. Plaintiff testified in response that insulation was mistaken for carpeting by

Defendant. (See Def’s Ex A at 3.) He testified that the fact that the skirting was removed from

the subject property does not mean that the floors were repaired. Plaintiff testified that the

subject property was washed, not painted as Defendant’s appraiser had reported. He testified

that tenants rented the subject property at the time of the flood in 2008; they received a discount

because the door and deck were “unusable.” Plaintiff testified that the tenants occupying the

subject property in 2008 left due to a change in employment. He testified that the subject

property was rented on January 1, 2010, for about $600 to $650, but was not rented as of the trial

date.

B. Subject property valuation

Nasset testified that he completed a broker’s price opinion for the subject property based

on data that he collected from the regional multiple listing service using the parameters of

location, size, and age. He testified that he did not find any properties smaller than the subject

property that were not also much older. Nasset testified that prices for manufactured dwellings

ranged from $2,000 to $40,000. He testified that he sought to bracket the subject property with

respect to size and age. Based on those sales and listings, he testified that he determined an “as-

is value” of $13,000 for the subject property “as of the time [he] did this report.” Nasset testified

DECISION TC-MD 110323N 3 that he determined a two to three percent decline in the market and, factoring in that market

decline, he concluded a value of $14,500 for the subject property as of January 1, 2010. Nasset

testified that manufactured dwellings not affixed to land depreciate faster than those that are

affixed to land; he likened them to cars. Nasset testified that the market for manufactured

dwellings has declined but not as severely as the market for “stick homes.” Plaintiff testified that

there is no market for manufactured dwellings more than 20 years old, noting that many

manufactured home parks have restrictions with respect to the age of properties in the park.

Witters testified that he identified five comparable sales of manufactured homes, four of

which were sales of homes situated in parks “with no land associated with them.” (See Def’s Ex

A at 5-7, 8.) He testified that sales of manufactured homes in parks are most comparable to the

subject property because land is not included in the sale price, nor are costs associated with

transporting and setting up the homes. Witters testified that he adjusted for market conditions by

0.5 percent “per month change in value.” (See id. at 8.) He testified that comparable sales 1 and

4 were adjusted for less than average conditions, size differences, and number of bedrooms. (See

id. at 5, 6, 8.) Witters testified that comparable sale 2 was adjusted for the cost of having to

move the property from one site to another, as well as time, condition, and size. (See id. at 5, 8.)

Witters testified that he determined a value range of $17,167 to $25,824 for the subject property

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Yarbrough v. Marion County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarbrough-v-marion-county-assessor-ortc-2012.