9 Or. Tax 317 | Or. T.C. | 1983
Decision, in part, for defendant rendered March 22, 1983. The plaintiffs appealed from the defendant's Opinion and Order No. VL 82-37 affirming the determination of the *318 true cash value of Tax Lots 800, 801 and 600 as found in the Benton County tax rolls on January 1, 1980, in the amounts of $65,750, $12,640 and $29,350, respectively. Relan Colley, Esq., represented the plaintiffs and Mr. Gerald F. Bartz, Assistant Attorney General, Tax Section, appeared on behalf of the defendant.
The subject property consists of three contiguous parcels of land north of the Willamette River with Tax Lot 801 abutting the river. The three parcels are in an exclusive farm use zone and were assessed accordingly until 1980 when plaintiffs were notified that the subject property did not meet the requirements for special assessment for farm use. Deferred taxes were calculated and billed on the 1980-1981 tax roll.
Plaintiff corporation alleges that the parcel was totally exempt from tax, that, if taxable, the parcel should be valued as Western Oregon forest land at $137 per acre less a substantial reduction reflecting the effect of the easement and a farmland penalty should not have been asserted.
1. The appraisal offered by the defendant's appraiser *319
(Def Ex A, Addenda, pp 35-38), however, does contain an identical easement with the names of the plaintiff individuals as grantors written in on page one and presumably their signatures on page three of the easement and containing Exhibit A. A perusal of that copy indicates that the state, rather than proceeding under ORS
Plaintiffs' appraiser alleged that the restrictions on use contained in the easement were such that the grantors could make no economic use of the property. Defendant's appraiser alleged that the highest and best use was as a buffer for parcel 800 and as recreational property. The court is not persuaded that plaintiffs' remaining interest in the fee has a market value. The recreational use is or can be enjoyed in common with the public generally and, accordingly, even if retained by plaintiff, has no value to it or them by virtue of that fact. If parcel 801 is a buffer, it is so because of the state's easement, not because of a retained interest in plaintiffs and, accordingly, has no value to it or them. Under the circumstances, the easement owned by the state is or should be exempt but it does not follow that plaintiffs' retained interest *320
in the fee is likewise exempt. ORS
"If the property has no immediate market value, its true cash value is the amount of money that would justly compensate the owner for loss of the property."
The Oregon Supreme Court has held that in such a situation the plaintiffs' property has no true cash value for property tax purposes. Tualatin Development v. Dept. of Rev.,
4. ORS
At one point in the trial, reference was made that plaintiffs received notice that the subject property had been disqualified for special farm use assessment too late to apply for forest land assessment. However, no evidence was presented to corroborate this statement. In addition, plaintiffs' complaint incorporated the opinion and order from which the appeal is made and that opinion and order states that the petitioners were notified on January 30, 1980, that the subject property did not meet the requirement for special assessment as farm-use property. ORS
The plaintiffs' witness, Mr. Layman, alleged that the highest and best use of Tax Lot 600, on the subject date, was as a small woodlot or for limited recreational use due to flood hazard and soil type. (Pl Ex 3.) Mr. Layman alleged that the same factors, flood hazard and soil type, of Tax Lot 800 indicated that its highest and best use was to be left in the natural condition with an occasional harvest of maple and cottonwood trees its economic utility. (Pl Ex 4.)
He offered three allegedly comparable sales to support his conclusion of value for both parcels. Comparable sale No. 1 contained 30.55 acres, No. 2 had 115.14 acres and No. 3 consisted of 66 acres. The sales occurred in February 1976, July 1977, and August 1979. No adjustments were offered for time or for size. When questioned about this absence of adjustment, Mr. Layman replied that there had been little change in this type of land since 1976.
Mr. Layman alleged that the soil type of Tax Lots 600 and 800 consisted of well-drained to excessively drained sandy, silt loam. The defendant's appraiser alleged that tax lot 600 was comprised mainly of Cloquato silt loam, based on a Benton County soil survey by the United States Department of Agriculture's Soil Conservation Service, and had a high inherent soil productivity allowing high yields of a wide range of row crops. (Def Ex A, at 7.) Mr. Cook alleged that Tax Lot 800 had a lower inherent soil productivity rating based on an analysis by a soil scientist from Oregon State University but that with normal farming practices could be made to produce a wide range of row crops. (Def Ex A, at 8.)
When Mr. Layman was cross-examined regarding his allegations of soil class of the two tax lots, he replied that he used soil conservation information but made his own analysis. When questioned as to whether he did any auger work to reach his determination, Mr. Layman responded that he didn't need to because the soil was "washed" enough to see what class it was. Mr. Layman stated that appraising was "strictly an exercise of judgment."
The court agrees that property appraising is far from an exact science. Riensche v. Dept. of Rev.,
The appraisal submitted by the plaintiffs (Pl Ex 2, 3 and 4) lacks supporting evidence and detail. No information regarding adjustments was offered to explain any differences between the three offered comparable sales and the three parcels making up the subject property. The witness' testimony was equally lacking in supportive detail to show that his "judgment call" was accurate.
ORS
No costs to either party. *325