Boardman Acquisition, LLC v. Department of Revenue

393 P.3d 1147, 361 Or. 440
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 2017
DocketTC-RD 5209, 5249; SC S063682
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 393 P.3d 1147 (Boardman Acquisition, LLC v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boardman Acquisition, LLC v. Department of Revenue, 393 P.3d 1147, 361 Or. 440 (Or. 2017).

Opinion

*442 BALMER, C. J.

This case involves ad valorem property taxes. The land at issue had been exempted from some property taxes because it was specially assessed as nonexclusive farm use zone farmland under ORS 308A.068 (2013). 1 As we will explain, when that special assessment ends, the property ordinarily has an additional tax levied against it. The question here is whether an exception created by ORS 308A.709(5) applies to excuse the payment of that additional tax. The Tax Court agreed with the Department of Revenue and concluded that the exception was not available. Boardman Acquisition LLC v. Dept. of Rev., 22 OTR 183 (2015). The Port of Morrow appeals. As we will explain, we conclude that the statutory text on which this case turns— “the date the disqualification [from special assessment] is taken into account on the assessment and tax roll,” ORS 308A.709(5)—means the date the disqualification becomes effective on the assessment and tax roll. As a result of that holding, we affirm.

I. OVERVIEW OF LAW

Before considering the facts at issue here, it is helpful to first outline farmland special assessments generally. At its core, the farmland special assessment changes how the land is valued for tax purposes. Ordinarily, “[t]he real market value of property is the starting point for determining the amount of property tax.” Dept. of Rev. v. River’s Edge Investments, LLC, 359 Or 822, 825, 377 P3d 540 (2016) (citation and footnote omitted). In the case of farmland, however, the legislature explained that it did not want farmland to be valued at its real market value using “market data from sales for investment or other purposes not connected with bona fide farm use,” because doing so would “encourage [] the conversion of agricultural land to other uses.” ORS 308A.050. Accordingly, the legislature stated that it intended that “bona fide farm properties be assessed for ad valorem property tax purposes at a value that is exclusive of values attributable to urban influences or speculative purposes.” Id.

*443 To carry out that purpose, the legislature directed that property that qualifies for the farmland special assessment be valued using the income approach, not by examining comparable sales. See ORS 308A.092(2) (“The values for farm use of farmland shall be determined utilizing an income approach [.] ” with the capitalization rate derived from loans on farm properties.). The special assessment thus allows a taxpayer to avoid some property taxes, because the property is valued for tax purposes at less than its real market value.

The avoided taxes remain a potential liability on the property, however, should the land lose its qualification for the special assessment. When specially assessed property is disqualified, the taxes that had been avoided for up to five years (in the case of farmland not zoned exclusively for farm use) are added to the next assessment and tax roll. ORS 308A.703(2), (3)(d)(A) (specifying period is lesser of five years or the actual period the land qualified for special assessment). 2 The statutes describe the avoided taxes added onto the roll as the “additional tax.”

The additional tax is not assessed in some limited circumstances. This case turns on whether the exception set out in ORS 308A.709(5) applies to the land at issue here. *444 ORS 308A.709, which lists the situations in which the additional tax is eliminated, provides:

“Notwithstanding that land may have been disqualified from special assessment, no additional taxes may be imposed under ORS 308A.703 if, as of the date the disqualification is taken into account on the assessment and tax roll, the land is any of the following:
«‡‡‡‡⅜
“(5) Public property that was leased or rented to a taxable owner as described in ORS 307.110 at the time of disqualification, and the reason for the disqualification was the termination of the lease under which the land was assessed.”

This case turns on which particular date is meant by the phrase “the date the disqualification [was] taken into account on the assessment and tax roll.” The port argues that, on that date as correctly understood, the property was still owned by the port and therefore was “public property.” Because the other conditions of the statute also had been met, the port asserts that under the statute, “no additional taxes may be imposed.” The department counters that the port incorrectly identifies the date on which the disqualification was taken into account on the assessment and tax roll. As of the correct date, the department argues, the property was owned by a private entity and was no longer “public property.” For that reason, it asserts, the additional tax was properly imposed.

II. FACTS

The Tax Court granted summary judgment in favor of the department based on stipulated facts, which we summarize here. At issue are taxes on two adjacent lots for the tax year 2013-14. For at least five years before that time, the Port of Morrow had owned that property and had leased it to a tenant. The tenant was subject to property tax. See ORS 307.110. The tenant qualified the property for special assessment as nonexclusive farm use zone farmland under ORS 308A.068.

Effective August 6, 2012, the port and the tenant cancelled the lease. The port notified the county assessor of *445 the lease termination on August 7. In doing so, it asked the county assessor to disqualify the property from special farm use and special assessment. See ORS 308A.116(l)(a) (specially assessed property may be disqualified on “request” of the taxpayer). The assessor’s staff responded by email the same day:

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Related

D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments v. Dept. of Rev.
371 Or. 384 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2023)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
393 P.3d 1147, 361 Or. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boardman-acquisition-llc-v-department-of-revenue-or-2017.