Cascade Manor, Inc. v. Department of Revenue

5 Or. Tax 482, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 55
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 5 Or. Tax 482 (Cascade Manor, Inc. 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
Cascade Manor, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 5 Or. Tax 482, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 55 (Or. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

Plaintiffs appealed from the defendant’s Order No. VL 73-282, dated June 5, 1973. The order denied the plaintiffs the partial exemption from taxation for *483 1972-1973 which is allowed qualified nonprofit homes for the elderly pursuant to ORS 307.370 et seq. Two questions of law are presented for determination: (1) Do the provisions of ORS 307.380 expressly require the Lane County Department of Assessment and Taxation to take affirmative action to pláce necessary claim forms in the hands of interested corporations on or before April 1 of each year? (2) Under the facts of the present case, is the Lane County Department of Assessment and Taxation estopped to deny to the plaintiffs the benefits of ORS 307.370-307.385 for the tax year 1972-1973?

The court finds the following statements to be true:

1. ORS 307.370 to 307.385, found in Oregon Laws 1969, ch 587, was first applicable to the property tax year 1970-1971. It extended to veterans and senior citizens residing in nonprofit homes for the elderly an equivalent of the property tax relief provided by ORS 307.370 to 307.385, through an abatement of the property tax of the nonprofit home which must be reflected in a diminution in the rent of the individual. A portion of taxes upon the real property and the personal property of the eligible nonprofit home is also involved.

2. ORS 307.380 (4) imposes upon the Department of Revenue a duty to determine the eligibility of a nonprofit home for the partial exemption from taxation and to furnish to the county assessor a statement certifying the qualification or nonqualification of such corporation. The plaintiffs were the only corporations in Lane County designated as eligible for the benefits of the statute, and certification to the Director of the Department of Assessment and Taxation of Lane County (hereinafter designated “assessor”) was made *484 by letters to the plaintiffs and to the assessor, dated March 3,-1970, signed by the Director of the Department of Revenue. These letters made no mention of the due date, April 1, on or before which the claims for exemption had to be filed annually with the assessor by the plaintiffs.

3. ORS 307.380 (1) requires each corporation claiming the personal property tax exemption to “file with the county assessor, on forms supplied by the assessor, a written claim therefor in duplicate on or before April 1 of each year in which the exemption is claimed, * * *. If the claim for any year is not filed within the time specified, the exemption shall not be allowed on the assessment roll for that year. * * *” (Emphasis supplied.)

4. A highly experienced member of the Lane County Assessor’s staff, designated as the “exemption clerk,” upon being apprised of the authorization of the plaintiffs to obtain the benefits of the statute, as certified in the Department of Revenue’s letter of March 3, 1970, immediately thereafter, of her own volition, as a service to the taxpayers, mailed copies, in triplicate, of the exemption forms to each of the plaintiffs for the tax year 1970-1971. Each plaintiff filled in the forms as requested, filed them on or before April 1,1970, and obtained the contemplated benefits for the corporations and for certain residents of the homes. The process Avas repeated for the tax year 1971-1972, initiated by the voluntary mailing of forms to the plaintiffs by the exemption clerk. No mailing of forms was made by the exemption clerk for the 1972-1973 tax year, the year here in question.

5. The form provided to the assessors by the Department of Revenue for the years 1970-1971 and 1971- *485 1972 contained no notice of the due date for filing the form as set forth in ORS 307.380 (1). A warning of the April 1 filing limitation first appeared on forms supplied the assessor by the Department of Revenue for the 1973-1974 tax year.

6. The assessor’s exemption clerk testified that in the spring of 1972, “* * * for some reason, probably due to the work load, I neglected to notify” the plaintiffs by sending copies of the application forms to them as she had done in the spring of 1970 and in 1971. She became aware of this fact in June 1972 when she began entering various exemptions in the assessment roll, whereupon she notified the assessor and he, in turn, after conferring with the Lane County District Attorney, orally notified the officers of the plaintiffs of their failure to file claims for the ORS 307.370 exemption.

7. Immediately thereafter, representatives of the plaintiffs went to the exemption clerk and requested the necessary forms required by ORS 307.380. Thereupon the clerk typed in, at the head of the triplicate form, the due date for filing and gave the corporation representatives the amended forms.

8. The forms were filled in by the respective corporations and filed with the assessor with reasonable diligence and speed, after which they were officially rejected by the assessor as not timely filed. The letter of rejection states: “We would strongly recommend you appeal this to the State Department of Revenue, * * *."

9. Certain eligible veterans or veterans’ widows, residing in Cascade Manor, had independently filed with the assessor the claims for veterans’ benefits *486 under ORS 307.250 et seq. It has been stipulated that these individuals had made a timely filing under ORS 307.380 (2) and that the benefits of that section must be allowed them for the tax year 1972-1973.

In answer to the first question of law presented, the court holds that the provisions of ORS 307.380 do not require the county assessor to take affirmative steps to place the claim forms in the hands of interested corporations on or before April 1 of each year. The principles set forth in Ore. Portland Cement v. Dept. of Rev., 5 OTR 218 (1973), are applicable here.

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5 Or. Tax 482, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cascade-manor-inc-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1974.