Butte Dev. Co. v. Linn County Assessor, Tc-Md 070746c (or.tax 7-31-2008)

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 31, 2008
DocketTC-MD 070746C (Control), 070747C; 070748C.
StatusPublished

This text of Butte Dev. Co. v. Linn County Assessor, Tc-Md 070746c (or.tax 7-31-2008) (Butte Dev. Co. v. Linn County Assessor, Tc-Md 070746c (or.tax 7-31-2008)) 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
Butte Dev. Co. v. Linn County Assessor, Tc-Md 070746c (or.tax 7-31-2008), (Or. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTION TO STRIKE
I. INTRODUCTION
This matter is before the court on Defendant's request to strike the 2006-07 tax year from the above-captioned appeal. Oral argument was heard in the courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court in Salem on April 16, 2008. Plaintiff was represented by Kevin Lafky, Attorney at Law, Lafky Lafky. Defendant Linn County Assessor was represented by Gene Johnston (by written motion only), and Defendant-Intervenor Department of Revenue was represented by Joseph A. Laronge, Assistant Attorney General, Oregon Department of Justice. For ease of reference, the parties will be referred to as taxpayer, assessor, and department.

II. STATEMENT OF FACTS
The appeal involves certain taxable property owned by taxpayer and identified in the assessor's records as Accounts 5492, 4495, and 5484 (collectively the subject property). For the 2005-06 tax year, the assessor set the assessed value (AV) of the subject property at $951,611. The following year (2006-07), the assessor substantially increased the AV of that property, setting *Page 2 the new combined AV at $2,362,254, an increase of approximately $1.4 million. (Def-Intervenor's Br at 1-2.)1 That AV increase resulted in a substantial increase in property taxes. Those increases (value and taxes) were reflected in the assessor's annual property tax statements, which were sent to taxpayer in October 2006. Taxpayer disagrees with those values, but did not file a petition with the county board of property tax appeals (board) to seek a reduction in value, as provided in ORS 309.026 and ORS 309.100.2

Approximately nine months later, on July 19, 2007, the assessor issued three value correction notices (one for each account) for the subject property, covering the five tax years prior to tax year 2006-07. Those retroactive corrections, which were based on omitted property assessments, substantially increased the AV for tax years 2001-02 through 2005-06, inclusive. For example, the combined increase in AV for the 2005-06 tax year was approximately $1.53 million, with the AV increasing from $951,611 to $2,482,139.3 Similar increases were made for the earlier tax years.

On September 24, 2007, roughly two months after the county issued the omitted property assessments, taxpayer filed three pro se Complaints with this court. Those complaints indicated that taxpayer was appealing "2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006." Taxpayer submitted the omitted property assessment notices with those Complaints. Approximately two weeks later, on October 5, 2007, taxpayer, by and through its counsel, filed three Amended Complaints. Those Complaints indicated that the tax years being appealed were "2001-02 thru 2006-07." *Page 3

On October 29, 2007, the county filed three Answers, one for each case number assigned by this court to the three appeals (070746C, 070747C, and 070748C). Each of those Answers, signed by Gene Johnston, requested that the court "[s]trike tax year 2006 from th[e] appeal." The department, in its Answers, requested "a judgment sustaining the assessed value corrections for the tax years at issue." The basis for the assessor's request to strike the 2006-07 tax year is Plaintiff's failure to petition the board before appealing to the Tax Court.

III. ISSUE
Should the 2006-07 tax year be stricken from taxpayer's complaint?

IV. ANALYSIS

A. Statutory Overview of Property Tax System

Under ORS 307.030, "[a]ll real property within this state and all tangible personal property situated within this state, except as otherwise provided by law, shall be subject to assessment and taxation in equal and ratable proportion." Under ORS 308.210, the assessor is required to "proceed each year to assess the value of all taxable property within the county," and to "maintain a full and complete record of the assessment of the taxable property for each year as of January 1, at 1:00 a.m. of the assessment year * * *." (Emphasis added.) ORS308.007(1)(a), which incorporates by reference ORS 308.210, provides for a January 1 assessment date each calendar year. Subsection (2) of ORS308.007 provides that "the assessment year beginning January 1 corresponds to the tax year beginning July 1 of the same calendar year." The tax year is a fiscal year that runs for "a period of 12 months beginning on July 1." ORS 308.007(1)(c). By virtue of those statutory provisions, the assessor must value and tax property each year by determining the value of the property on January 1 for the tax year that begins six months later on July 1. *Page 3 Under ORS 311.250, the tax collector is required to mail property tax statements each year "on or before October 25." The taxpayer must pay at least one-third of the taxes due by the following November 15. ORS311.505(1).

Pursuant to the statutory framework set forth above, the county determined the value of taxpayer's property for the 2006-07 tax year as of January 1, 2006. That tax year began on July 1, 2006, and tax statements were mailed sometime in October before the October 25, 2006, deadline. Taxpayer had until November 15, 2006, to pay at least one-third of the taxes due. It appears that taxpayer has paid those taxes. However, taxpayer did not appeal the tax year 2006-07 value increases to the board before the December 31, 2006, statutory deadline set forth in ORS 309.100(2), as discussed below.

B. Appealing Current Year Assessments

ORS 309.026 provides generally for petitions to the board where a taxpayer seeks a reduction in assessed value, real market value, and, in some instances, maximum assessed value. ORS 309.100(2) provides that petitions filed under ORS 309.026 "shall be filed with the clerk of the board during the period following the date the tax statements are mailed for the current tax year and ending December 31." (Emphasis added.)

ORS 305.275 authorizes a taxpayer aggrieved by an order of the board to appeal to the Magistrate Division of the Oregon Tax Court. ORS305.275(3) specifies that "[t]he appeal under this section is from an order of the board as a result of the appeal filed under ORS 309.100." The board's order must be appealed to the Tax Court "within 30 days after the * * * date of mailing of the order[.]" ORS 305.280(4).

The import of those provisions is that a taxpayer unhappy with the values appearing on the current year tax statements may petition the board for a reduction in value and, if unhappy with *Page 4 the board's determination, may appeal that decision to the Magistrate Division of the Oregon Tax Court.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mittleman v. State Tax Commission
2 Or. Tax 105 (Oregon Tax Court, 1965)
U.S. Bancorp & Subsidiaries v. Department of Revenue
15 Or. Tax 13 (Oregon Tax Court, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Butte Dev. Co. v. Linn County Assessor, Tc-Md 070746c (or.tax 7-31-2008), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butte-dev-co-v-linn-county-assessor-tc-md-070746c-ortax-7-31-2008-ortc-2008.