4 Or. Tax 475 | Or. T.C. | 1971
Decision rendered for plaintiffs July 16, 1971. This is an appeal from the Department of Revenue's Order No. VL 69-402, dated September 10, 1969, *476 affirming an order of the Jackson County Board of Equalization. The question presented is the value to be used for ad valorem tax purposes as of January 1, 1968, of the land only in two adjoining parcels, described as the Jackson County Assessor's Tax Lot 4900, Code 4-3, Section 34, Township 37 South, Range 1 West, consisting of 14.6 acres of pear orchard property and a one-acre homesite, and Tax Lot 5101, consisting of 1.97 acres of pear orchard property. The two tracts are located about four miles southwest of the City of Medford on Coal Mine Road in an agricultural area. The property was acquired by the plaintiffs in 1948 and it now contains a highly productive pear orchard, the improvement and cultivation of which have been the sole occupation of Mr. Hulburt since 1966.
For the tax year in question, the assessor increased the value of the property on the assessment rolls from $12,500 to $26,500 upon making a determination that the highest and best use of the land had changed from orchard property to "rural tract land" or "rural residential use." The plaintiffs plead that the highest and best use of the property continued to be the agricultural use of orchard land, that the property is assessed in excess of comparable property and not at its true cash value, and they pray for a reduction of the assessed value of the orchard land from $1,500 to $870 per acre and of the one-acre homesite from $4,600 to $3,600.
The testimony revealed that, in preparation of the assessment roll for January 1, 1968, for use in the tax year 1968-1969, the assessor was stimulated by the Department of Revenue, in the exercise of its supervisory powers (ORS
Both witnesses for the defendant had difficulty in defining the term "rural tract" and the evidence is contradictory. (For example, Mr. Stewart testified that he would give rural-tract status to properties such as the plaintiffs', even if it were proved that its highest and best use was agricultural; Mr. Wheeler testified to the contrary.) When questioned by the court, it appeared that the regulation of the Department of Revenue, defining "tract land"1 was unknown or disregarded by the Assessor's Office. Mr. Wheeler conceded that there was no subdivision potential in the subject property at the time.
Mr. Hulburt, one of the plaintiffs, and Mr. Duane Venekamp, the plaintiffs' principal witness (an experienced fee appraiser), made a strong showing that the subject property's highest and best use was agricultural *478 (specifically, for raising pears) by proof of the nature of the soil and terrain, good productivity and substantial income from the sale of pears, and by proving the unavailability of the property for multi-residential purposes. (The "sticky soil," essential for good pear orchard land, caused the County Sanitarian to prohibit more than one single-family dwelling on the whole acreage.)
The owners' theory of the case was that the highest and best use of the subject property was agricultural, specifically the growing of pears, that its value for tax purposes must be based on sales of comparable pear orchard property and assessed uniformly therewith; that the value of the trees must be disregarded for tax purposes, pursuant to ORS
Mr. Hulburt testified that, while none of the property was situated in any part of Jackson County's farm zone areas, he had applied for and received approval for special assessment for farm use pursuant to ORS
1. Lacking the provisions of ORS
"* * * It is the legislative intent that bona fide [agricultural] properties shall be assessed at a value that is exclusive of values attributable to urban influences or speculative purchases."
Subsection (1) of ORS
Once application for special assessment under ORS
2. In determining the special assessment for farm use, consideration must also be given to ORS
"* * * The appraiser's task is complicated by this exemption, since he must first determine the value of both land and trees or other crops growing upon it as indicated by current sales of property which, of course, include these items. An attempt must then be made to separate the value of the plants from the value of the land to the end that a bare land value results. The value thus determined has little or no relation to market value, and is often very difficult to defend. * * *"
The defendant's witnesses' testimony showed that the assessor's office had abandoned the comparison of orchard sales and was using bare land sales with some related agricultural use to establish value. The court recognizes the difficulties inherent in appraising orchard lands.2 As between the two parties, the court *481 finds the testimony of Mr. Venekamp the more acceptable. (On cross-examination, the assessor admitted that land with trees upon it was not comparable to land without trees.) Mr. Venekamp developed comparable sales indicating the true cash value of orchard land and trees to be $1,500 per acre and, for the land alone, $870 per acre. Plaintiffs' Exhibit 3 shows that the assessor's office had used $870 per acre for land, planted in pear trees, located a short distance from the subject property, thus corroborating the plaintiffs' testimony.
3. Although the plaintiffs had pleaded a value of $3,600 for the one-acre homesite and testified to a $3,000 value, there was a failure to offer testimony sufficient to move the mind of the court. In these circumstances, the presumption of assessment validity which favors the assessor has not been overcome and the assessed valuation of $4,600 must stand.
The Department of Revenue's Opinion and Order must be set aside except as to the value of the homesite. The assessor and tax collector must amend the assessment and tax rolls to show, as of January 1, 1968, that the value of the plaintiffs' pear orchard land is $870 per acre.
"4-0-1 Tract property is an improved acreage, where the highest and best use is other than farm, range or timber production, which usually offers a potential for further development."