Wittemyer v. Multnomah County Assessor ( 2012 )


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  •                                  IN THE OREGON TAX COURT
    MAGISTRATE DIVISION
    Property Tax
    GEORGE WITTEMYER,                                  )
    )
    Plaintiff,                          )   TC-MD 110493C
    )
    v.                                          )
    )
    MULTNOMAH COUNTY ASSESSOR,                         )
    )
    Defendant.                          )   DECISION
    Plaintiff has appealed the real market value (RMV) of property identified in the
    assessor’s records as Account 316634, for the 2010-11 tax year. Trial on the matter was held by
    telephone on February 28, 2012. Plaintiff appeared and testified on his own behalf. Also
    testifying for Plaintiff were; Dixie Elliott (Elliott), a licensed real estate broker working for
    Coldwell Banker at the time of the trial, and John Riddell (Riddell), of JKR Construction, who
    was the contractor/builder of Plaintiff’s home. Defendant was represented by Jeff Brown
    (Brown), a state certified appraiser with approximately 20 years of appraisal experience, the past
    two years working for Defendant, and for 18 years prior to that as an independent fee appraiser.
    Plaintiff submitted a “Legal Questions Discussion” (Trial Court Brief) prior to trial, and
    Defendant timely submitted its Exhibit A. Both of these items were admitted for trial.
    Plaintiff appealed to this court the values of the subject property for the prior tax year
    2009-10, and the court determined that the values on the rolls, initially set by the assessor and
    then sustained by the county board of property tax appeals (Board), should be sustained. See
    Wittemyer v. Multnomah County Assessor, TC-MD No 100595C (Mar 2, 2012). The court in
    that decision determined that Plaintiff’s home was 74 percent complete and had a total RMV of
    ///
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                              1
    $694,570, with $215,500 allocated to the land and $479,070 to the partially completed home, and
    that there was $494,070 of “exception value” on the account.1 (Id. at 3, 10, 12.) The maximum
    assessed value (MAV) and assessed value (AV) were affirmed at $380,730.
    Trial of this matter for the 2010-11 tax year was heard days before the court’s Decision
    for tax year 2009-10 was issued. The parties in the instant appeal request the following:
    Plaintiff has requested the total RMV of $447,756 in his Complaint and $526,000 in his pretrial
    written submissions and trial testimony; Defendant has requested that the court sustain the
    current total RMV of $790,440.
    I.       STATEMENT OF FACTS
    The subject property is a custom-built two-level home with five bedrooms and five full
    bathrooms, forced air heating and cooling, a two-story brick fireplace and three modular
    fireplaces. There is a 1,038 square foot garage underneath the two-story main living area.
    Access to the home is via a long tree-lined driveway that is mostly unpaved (dirt and gravel).
    There is a chain link gate at the entrance to the property.
    The home sits on an approximately two acre, irregularly shaped lot on a hill in the Forest
    Park neighborhood of Northwest Portland. The parties agree that zoning restrictions limit the
    buildable footprint area to 5,000 square feet. The parties also agreed at trial that the home totals
    4,300 square feet.
    ///
    ///
    1
    The term “exception value” is used to describe changes in a property which increase its value over the
    prior tax year that result from new construction, reconstruction, major additions, remodeling, and as in this case,
    include the completion of a previously partially built home. See e.g., ORS 308.146(3)(a) (providing for an
    exception to the standard annual three percent increase in maximum assessed value provided in subsection (1) of
    that statute for “new property or new improvements to property;” ORS 308.149(5) (defining “new property or new
    improvements”).
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                                                2
    The home was completed in July 2009, and the home was thus 100 percent complete as
    of the January 1, 2010, assessment date for the present appeal of the 2010-11 tax year
    assessment. The value of the land and the value of the completed home are at issue in this case.
    Defendant initially determined that the subject property’s 2010-11 RMV was $790,440,
    with $215,500 allocated to the land and $574,940 to the structures. (Def’s Ex A at 2.) Those
    were the original values certified on the assessment and tax rolls, and appearing on Plaintiff’s tax
    year 2010-11 property tax statement which he received sometime in mid-October 2010. Those
    values included $149,510 of exception value (EV). (Id.) The AV certified on the rolls was
    $482,450. (Ptf’s Compl at 4.)
    Plaintiff appealed all of the values to the Board, and the Board sustained the values. (Id.)
    Plaintiff timely appealed the Board’s decision to this court. In his Complaint, Plaintiff requests
    an RMV of $447,756, with $47,756 allocated to the land and $400,000 to the home. (Id. at 3.)
    At trial, as well as in his written materials submitted prior to trial, Plaintiff asserts that the RMV
    of the land is no more than $50,000 and that the RMV of the home should be the cost thereof,
    which was reportedly approximately $476,000. The sum of those two values is $526,000.
    Defendant requested that the court sustain the current $790,440 RMV on the assessment and tax
    rolls.
    Plaintiff’s first witness Elliott testified that “northwest Portland is my area of expertise,”
    and that, having recently viewed the subject property, she noted several challenges of the site
    that adversely affected its value. Specifically, Elliott testified that the steep gravel approach, the
    “tear down” condition of the structures on the adjoining properties, the several easements, the
    low light due to the north slope orientation of the site, and the lack of similar properties nearby
    were all “challenges” that heavily influenced her opinion that the land should be valued at only
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                                    3
    $50,000 to $75,000. Elliott further testified that between 2007 and 2009 there was a 25 percent
    to 28 percent decline in home values across the market. Elliot testified that she believed that
    properties in the higher price range did not sell well during this period because executives were
    not being transferred into the area. No documentary evidence was offered in support of her
    testimony.
    Riddell, Plaintiff’s builder, testified to several unfavorable characteristics of the subject
    property’s terrain and location that contributed to a year of delays leading up to the permit
    acquisition stage of the building process. Riddell testified that the unfavorable characteristics
    included: a driveway that did not meet code requirements; three environmental overlays that
    restricted the buildable footprint; and the steep slope of the lot which made it at risk for
    landslides. Riddell testified that it cost $470,000 to build the house so that should be its value,
    with perhaps some reduction to account for the fact that the home is in Riddell’s opinion
    overbuilt for the area, presumably due to the lower value structures adjacent to the subject
    property. However, Riddell also testified on cross-examination that he and Plaintiff are friends,
    and that Plaintiff helped to act as a purchaser for a home that Riddell was trying to purchase from
    a family member who refused to sell to Riddell. Riddell testified that he used lesser quality
    materials in the building process and made them look good, and that he only billed Plaintiff cost
    plus ten percent for profit.
    Plaintiff was the last witness to testify in the presentation of his case in chief. Plaintiff
    testified that he made the following total payments for building the house: $468,458 to Riddell,
    plus $1,000 to Riddell for work on the home’s septic system, and $5,800 for the architect’s
    services. Plaintiff testified that he did not help with the construction, despite his frequent
    presence at the building site to witness the home building process.
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                                  4
    Plaintiff testified that, in his opinion, it was inappropriate to compare his home to the
    comparables that Defendant chose because those comparables have access to public water,
    natural gas, high speed internet service, frontage on a paved public road, and no restrictive
    easements. As for the land RMV, Plaintiff testified that the property “is subject to an incurable
    depreciation caused by negative factors not on the property itself and that loss in value cannot be
    reversed by spending money on the [p]roperty.” (Ptf’s Compl at 3.) In support of his argument
    in his Complaint that the Portland real estate market was in decline at the time of valuation,
    Plaintiff referenced a February 1, 2012 article about the current (as of 2012) status of the entire
    Portland real estate market in the Oregonian newspaper. (Ptf’s Trial Court Brief at 3.) Elliott
    also testified that, in her professional opinion, there was a reduction in the market of between 25
    and 28 percent between 2007 and 2009.
    Defendant’s appraiser Brown submitted an appraisal report in which he indicates that he
    considered the three standard approaches to value (income, cost, and sales comparison), but
    determined that the sales comparison approach was the most reliable method for valuing the
    property and that that was the only approach he developed. (Def’s Ex A at 4.) Under that
    approach, Brown compared four recent sales of “comparable * * * [properties that] bracket the
    subject property in all of the most critical areas; gross living area square footage, basement
    square footage, age and site size.” (Id.) Brown’s adjusted sales comparables range from a low
    of $783,900 to a high of $1,042,300. (Id. at 4-6.) Brown’s appraisal adjusted the value of the
    comparables according to differences in condition, number of bathrooms, gross living area and
    basement square footages, garage spaces, and lot size. (Id. at 3-6.) Brown only applied an
    adjustment to the land on one of the four comparables, subtracting $100,000 from comparable #3
    for lot size difference, that property being 5 acres in size compared to the subject at 2.09 acres.
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                                5
    (Id. at 3, 5.) Brown testified that he did not inspect any of the four comparables that he used for
    the analysis, which is contrary to standard practice in appraising property.
    II.      ANALYSIS
    A.         The law
    The issue in this case is the RMV of Plaintiff’s home for the 2010-11 tax year. The
    assessment date was January 1, 2010. ORS 308.007; ORS 308.210.2
    Oregon law defines RMV for property assessment and taxation purposes as “the amount
    in cash that could reasonably be expected to be paid by an informed buyer to an informed seller,
    each acting without compulsion in an arm’s-length transaction occurring as of the assessment
    date for the tax year.” ORS 308.205(1). The RMV of property “shall be determined by methods
    and procedures in accordance with rules adopted by the Department of Revenue.” ORS
    308.205(2). OAR 150-308.205-(A)(2)(a) specifies the particular fashion for determining the
    RMV of property, and the methods are referred to as: (1) the cost approach; (2) the sales-
    comparison or market approach; and (3) the income approach. Allen v. Dept. of Rev., 
    17 OTR 248
    , 252 (2003). The parties must consider each approach to determine the RMV of the
    property, but the resulting RMV need not be the result of all three of those approaches. OAR
    150-308.205-(A)(2)(a).
    Although there are three recognized methods for valuing property, the sales comparison
    approach is typically the most appropriate for valuing residential property. Ward v. Dept. of
    Revenue, 
    293 Or 506
    , 511, 
    650 P2d 923
     (1982) (citations omitted). The sales comparison
    approach is defined as:
    “[t]he process of deriving a value indication for the subject property by comparing
    similar properties that have recently sold with the property being appraised,
    2
    All references to the Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) and Oregon Administrative Rules (OAR) are to 2009.
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                                       6
    identifying appropriate units of comparison, and making adjustments to the sale
    prices * * * of the comparable properties based on relevant, market-derived
    elements of comparison.”
    Appraisal Institute, The Appraisal of Real Estate 297 (13th ed 2008).
    The sales comparison approach is typically most useful in determining the subject’s value
    “where there are sufficient recent, reliable transactions to indicate value patterns or trends in the
    market.” Id. at 300. However, for newly constructed property such as a subject in this case, the
    cost approach is a well accepted method for valuing a property, provided sufficient substantiated
    cost data is available and presented to the court. “The cost approach is particularly useful in
    valuing new or nearly new improvements.” Magno v. Dept. of Rev., 
    19 OTR 51
    , 55 (2006).
    “The [cost] approach is especially persuasive when land value is well supported and the
    improvements are new or suffer only minor depreciation and, therefore, approximate the ideal
    improvement that is the highest and best use of the land as though vacant.” Appraisal Institute,
    The Appraisal of Real Estate 382 (13th ed 2008).
    “[A]ctual costs are relevant and often persuasive, but not controlling. That is
    because the task is to determine market value and, although different contractors
    may build the same [property] for differing amounts, the completed [property]
    may sell for the same amount of money regardless of how much it cost to build.”
    Murray v. Tillamook County Assessor, TC-MD No 090154C, WL 602442 at *2 (Feb 19, 2010).
    The party seeking affirmative relief has the burden of proof and, initially, the burden of
    going forward with the evidence. ORS 305.427. The burden of proof in the Oregon Tax Court
    is a “preponderance” of the evidence. 
    Id.
     A “[p]reponderance of the evidence means the greater
    weight of evidence, the more convincing evidence.” Feves v. Dept. of Revenue, 
    4 OTR 302
    , 312
    (1971) (citation omitted). This court has previously noted that value is a range rather than an
    absolute. Price v. Dept. of Rev., 
    7 OTR 18
    , 25 (1977). Moreover, the legislature has given this
    court jurisdiction “to determine the real market value or correct valuation on the basis of the
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                                  7
    evidence before [it], without regard to the values pleaded by the parties.” ORS 305.412. The
    value of property is ultimately a question of fact. Chart Development Corp. v. Dept. of Rev., 
    16 OTR 9
    , 11 (2001) (citation omitted); Sahhali South v. Tillamook Cty. Assessor, TC-MD
    090541C at 6 (Dec 30, 2010).
    This court has stated that “it is not enough for a taxpayer to criticize the county’s
    position. Taxpayers must provide competent evidence of the [real market value] of their
    property.” Woods v. Dept. of Rev., 
    16 OTR 56
    , 59 (2002), citing King v. Dept. of Rev., 
    12 OTR 491
     (1993). Competent evidence includes “appraisal reports and sales adjusted for time,
    location, size, quality, and other distinguishing differences, and testimony from licensed
    professionals such as appraisers, real estate agents, and licensed brokers.” Stearns v. Multnomah
    County Assessor, TC-MD No 110252D, WL 877016 at *2 (Mar 13, 2012) (emphasis added).
    Further, “[t]estimony alone cannot stand in the place of competent evidence, such as an appraisal
    report and other documents * * * to determine the subject property’s real market value as of the
    assessment date.” 
    Id.
    B.     The evidence
    1.      Improvement RMV
    Plaintiff chose to testify to the actual costs of building his home to substantiate his
    argument that Defendant’s appraisal overvalues the RMV of the subject property. Plaintiff
    testified to paying Riddell $468,458 for the construction and materials, $1,000 for additional
    work on the home’s septic system, and $5,800 for the architect’s services, for a total cost of
    approximately $476,000. However, none of the proffered sums were supported by documentary
    evidence of cost records such as canceled checks or bank records, nor were written bids or
    contracts provided to the court. No explanation was given for the lack of substantiation. When
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                             8
    arguing that even the cost methodology overvalues the house until the actual total costs are
    reduced by the house’s lack of access amenities, like high speed internet and natural gas service,
    Plaintiff again failed to offer any documentary evidence to support his argument that the absence
    of these amenities should amount to specific reductions in the value of the subject property.
    Plaintiff also identified items in Defendant’s appraisal that he regarded as errors, such as
    the percentage of driveway that was paved and whether the house had a deck or a patio.
    Unfortunately, Plaintiff offered no testimony or evidence to quantify what change in value these
    possible inconsistencies in Defendant’s appraisal might have on Defendant’s ultimate value
    determinations, and the lack of evidence prevents the court from crediting Plaintiff’s arguments
    for a reduction in value.
    While not offered as a formulaic analysis of comparable property sales, Plaintiff made
    reference in his Trial Court Brief to a property located near the subject property, at 1252 NW
    Greenleaf Road. (Ptf’s Trial Court Brief at 3.) Plaintiff asserted that the dramatic price
    reductions in the listing history even though “[the comparable property] lack[s] the negatives of
    [the subject property] and enjoy[s] all the positives that P[laintiff’s] [l]and lacks” suggests that
    the subject property was overvalued in comparison. (Id.) This property adds little or nothing to
    the analysis of the subject property’s RMV because the Greenleaf Road property sale occurred
    roughly a year after the assessment date. Furthermore, Plaintiff made no attempt to adjust for
    large physical differences in the characteristics of the comparable property.
    Defendant produced an appraisal of the home by conducting a comparable sale analysis
    that involved four comparable properties located near the subject property. (Def’s Ex 1 at 4.) To
    compensate for the different attributes of these comparables, Brown made adjustments for
    location and zoning of the properties. (Id at 3-4.) To mitigate the other differences in the
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                                 9
    comparables relative to the subject property, Brown utilized a three-layer regression analysis,
    individual matched pair sales analysis, and his own professional experience. (Id.) Brown’s
    analysis may not fully quantify the unique negative attributes of the home’s location that Plaintiff
    raised in his case in chief, and therefore may result in a slightly higher RMV than the testimony
    offered by Plaintiff’s witnesses seemingly warrants. Nevertheless, Plaintiff did not produce
    substantial, competent evidence, in the form of an appraisal or documentary market evidence,
    that would carry his burden of proof. In the absence of competent evidence from Plaintiff, and
    finding Defendant’s valuation process generally credible, the court finds that the RMV of the
    home should be sustained at $574,940.
    2.      Land RMV
    Elliott testified on Plaintiff’s behalf regarding several challenges that lower the value of
    the subject property, including the steep terrain of the lot, the “tear-down” condition of the
    neighboring structures, the difficult-to-navigate driveway, and the property’s low availability of
    sun light. Elliott also testified that the dissimilar properties, those of lower quality and condition
    that comprise most of the neighborhood, act to lower the subject property’s value. As a result,
    Elliott recommended the land be valued at no more than $50,000 to $75,000, less than half of the
    $215,500 land value affirmed by the Board. Despite offering expert testimony about the
    characteristics of the subject property and the market conditions around the time of assessment,
    Elliott’s professional opinions were not supported by any documentary evidence.
    Riddell’s testimony also underscored the defects of the land. Riddell testified that the
    unfavorable characteristics included a driveway that did not meet code requirements, three
    environmental overlays that restricted the buildable footprint, and the steep slope of the lot which
    made it at risk for landslides. Although Riddell testified that it cost $470,000 to build the house
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                              10
    and therefore that amount should be its value after a reduction for overbuilding, Riddell never
    offered a final valuation figure. He also never proposed a formal methodology to allow the court
    to calculate a value for the land, nor did he purport to have qualifications that could have
    substantiated his opinion of value. During cross-examination, Riddell also testified that he and
    Plaintiff are friends, and that Plaintiff helped him purchase a home by acting as the buyer of a
    home that Riddell was trying to purchase from a family member who refused to sell to Riddell,
    with Plaintiff then “selling” the home to Riddell. Riddell’s business dealings and personal
    friendship with Plaintiff further undermine the objectivity of his testimony, and the court gives it
    little weight beyond his observations about the difficult circumstance under which the home was
    built.
    Although the court finds portions of the testimony from Elliott and Riddell persuasive,
    the court received no evidence of market data quantifying the impact of the defects on the value
    of the land. Plaintiff’s conspicuous lack of market data leaves the court with inconclusive proof
    to warrant an adjustment to an otherwise credible appraisal conducted by Defendant. It is not
    disputed that Elliott is an experienced real estate broker and that Riddell is an experienced
    builder; rather, as referenced above, expert testimony lacking the support of relevant and reliable
    documentary evidence does not rise to the level of a preponderance of the evidence necessary to
    carry Plaintiff’s burden of proof. Stearns, TC-MD No 110252D, WL 877016 at *2 (March 13,
    2012).
    Based on the trial record and the exhibits submitted, the court finds Plaintiff failed to
    meet his burden of proof. Accordingly, the court finds the $215,500 RMV on the rolls for
    Plaintiff’s land should be sustained.
    ///
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                               11
    III.    CONCLUSION
    After carefully considering the matter, the court concludes that Plaintiff has failed to
    carry his burden of proof, and that the values on the rolls will be sustained. Now, therefore,
    IT IS THE DECISION OF THIS COURT that Plaintiff’s appeal is denied.
    Dated this      day of July 2012.
    DAN ROBINSON
    MAGISTRATE
    If you want to appeal this Decision, file a Complaint in the Regular Division of
    the Oregon Tax Court, by mailing to: 1163 State Street, Salem, OR 97301-2563;
    or by hand delivery to: Fourth Floor, 1241 State Street, Salem, OR.
    Your Complaint must be submitted within 60 days after the date of the Decision
    or this Decision becomes final and cannot be changed.
    This document was signed by Magistrate Dan Robinson on July 24, 2012. The
    Court filed and entered this document on July 24, 2012.
    DECISION TC-MD 110493C                                                                            12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: TC-MD 110493C

Filed Date: 7/24/2012

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/11/2024