Azar v. Department of Revenue

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 27, 2012
DocketTC-MD 090639C
StatusUnpublished

This text of Azar v. Department of Revenue (Azar v. Department of Revenue) 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
Azar v. Department of Revenue, (Or. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

MYRNA AZAR, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 090639C ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiff has appealed to this court seeking a deferral of the property taxes for the 2009-

10 tax year on certain real property she owns in the Oregon Coast in the city of Newport. The

property is identified in the Lincoln County assessor‟s records as Account R199172.

Trial in the matter was held in the courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court January 23, 2012,

following the court‟s issuance of an Order July 6, 2011, denying Plaintiff‟s Motion for Summary

Judgment. That order set out in some detail the statutory framework applicable to tax deferral

program. Accordingly, only the pertinent statutory provisions and salient facts adduced at trial

are set forth in this Decision.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

A. History of Tax Deferral for the Subject Property

Plaintiff filed a claim for deferral for the 2007-08 tax year in April 2007. Defendant

approved that claim by letter dated May 31, 2007. (Ptf‟s Compl at 2-4.) Later that year Plaintiff

sent a letter to Defendant requesting “to withdraw from the Tax-Deferred program.” (Id. at 5.)

Defendant apparently granted that request.

Plaintiff filed another deferral claim with Defendant in April 2008 and, on August 4,

2008, Defendant sent Plaintiff a letter reactivating the account and granting the deferral for the

2008-09 tax year. (Id. at 7.)

DECISION TC-MD 090639C 1 On January 13, 2009, Defendant sent Plaintiff a notice disqualifying the property from

the “Property Tax Deferral Program.” (Ptf‟s Compl at 10-11.) Plaintiff apparently reapplied for

deferral on or about April 10, 2009. (Ptf‟s Ex 2.) Defendant subsequently denied that

application by notice issued May 20, 2009. (Ptf‟s Amended Compl at 2.) Plaintiff timely

appealed that denial to this court.

The applications and approvals all reflect Plaintiff‟s former husband‟s address in Portland

(2261 Southeast 110th Avenue), as does Plaintiff‟s Complaint and Amended Complaint filed

with the court in 2009.

B. Facts about Plaintiff and the Property

Plaintiff is over 70 years old and in poor health. (Ptf‟s Compl at 1.) Her annual income

is less than $8,500. Id. Plaintiff has owned the subject property since sometime in the 1970s.

She acquired the property after her parents passed away.

Plaintiff has an adult son Roger, born in November 1967, who allegedly suffers from

agoraphobia.1 In 1968, Plaintiff married Raji Azar (Raji), but, according to her testimony, the

couple divorced in 1986. After the divorce, Plaintiff moved out of the couple‟s home on 2261

Southeast 110th Avenue, Portland, and into another home they owned on Southeast 92nd Street

in Portland. Plaintiff testified that “sometime later” Raji sold the home on Southeast 92nd Street,

and that she then moved back in to Raji‟s home on 110th Avenue. Plaintiff further testified that,

at that point, there was a finished room in the basement where she stayed. Plaintiff owned the

1 Although it appears likely that the son has agoraphobia, the evidence is less than conclusive. For example, Plaintiff submitted an affidavit signed by a physician that states Plaintiff has been her patient since February 2000 and that “[i]t has been noted in [Plaintiff‟s] medical history that she has one adult child, and that this adult son (a Portland resident) has had symptoms consistent with a mental disorder of severe agoraphobia, requiring her continued care/assistance.” (Ptf‟s Ex 3.) Plaintiff also submitted a declaration signed by her son, Roger Azar (Roger), that states that, “for reasons of []health” his mother Myrna Azar “must help care for [him],” and that, “[i]n 2009, [he] was generally unable to leave the house.” (Ptf‟s Ex 5.) That declaration further states that Roger “relied on [his] mother to buy groceries, run errands and take care of other tasks to ensure [he] was taken care of.” (Id.) there is also a declaration made by Roger‟s father – Plaintiff‟s former husband – Raji Azar, stating that his son is agoraphobic. (Ptf‟s Ex 6.) Finally, Plaintiff testified to her son‟s condition. However, there is no evidence that the physician had ever actually diagnosed or treated Roger for agoraphobia or otherwise substantiated that condition. And, there is no evidence that any of the other individuals is qualified to render a diagnosis of agoraphobia.

DECISION TC-MD 090639C 2 property in Newport during that entire time period. Plaintiff testified that Roger has lived with

his father in Portland for many years. According to her testimony, the reason Plaintiff stayed

primarily in her former husband‟s home in Portland for more than 20 years after the couple

divorced was because she needed to care for her adult son Roger, who “at times” cannot care for

himself because of his medical problem(s).

There are two structures on the property. One is used for the storage of seashells and the

other is the residence. Plaintiff testified at trial that the home currently needed a new roof, sheet

rock in the living room, dining room, and kitchen, and that the home needed “electrical work.”

Plaintiff further testified that the home was in that condition on January 1, 2009. Importantly,

when questioned specifically about her use of the home, Plaintiff testified that she had not slept

in the house at all in the past ten years. Moreover, the property had no electricity for at least as

far back as 2001. Plaintiff acknowledged that fact during trial. Plaintiff testified that she

obtained electricity from neighbors by use of a string of electrical extension cords. At trial

Plaintiff testified that she spent “most of her time over the last few years” in Portland taking care

of her adult son Roger.

Plaintiff testified that she “occasionally visited the [Newport] house,” which is the home

for which Plaintiff is seeking tax deferral, but that, when she was there, she stayed in a truck

parked in the driveway for many years and several years ago began staying in a Mercedes

recreational vehicle (RV) that was parked in the driveway until it was towed away by the city of

Newport in January 2010. Plaintiff also acknowledged at trial that photographs submitted by

Defendant as Exhibit A accurately depicted the condition of the home, although she questioned

when the pictures were taken. Those pictures depict a home in a seriously dilapidated condition,

with little or no furniture, accumulated garbage, and plywood nailed over the windows.

///

DECISION TC-MD 090639C 3 II. ISSUE

Although the property must be the taxpayer‟s “homestead” in order to qualify for tax

deferral, is Plaintiff, who has not lived in the home for at least ten years, nonetheless entitled to

deferral under ORS 311.670(1),2 which provides an exception where “an individual [is] required

to be absent from the homestead by reason of health?”

II. ANALYSIS

Oregon has a property tax program that allows qualifying taxpayers to defer the property

taxes on their homestead, provided they meet the age or disability requirements, as well as the

household income requirements (indexed annually), and file a timely claim for deferral. See

generally ORS 311.668.

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Related

De Haven & Son Hardware Co. v. Schultz
259 P. 778 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1927)
Sterrett v. Hurlburt
278 P. 986 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1929)

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