Chart Development Corp. v. Department of Revenue

15 Or. Tax 213, 2000 Ore. Tax LEXIS 27
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 5, 2000
DocketTC 4359
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 Or. Tax 213 (Chart Development Corp. 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
Chart Development Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 15 Or. Tax 213, 2000 Ore. Tax LEXIS 27 (Or. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

Plaintiff (taxpayer) appeals the 1997 assessed value of its real property located in Washington County. Taxpayer claims the assessor failed to adequately reduce the assessed value of its property to reflect a lot-line adjustment and razed *214 improvements. Taxpayer’s claims raise issues under Article XI, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution. The matter has been submitted to the court on cross motions for summary judgment.

FACTS

In 1995, the subject property consisted of 2.9 acres of land, improved with an old house and a stand-alone garage. The real market value (RMV) of the subject property on the 1995-96 tax roll was $113,310-land, $110,730-improve-ments, total-$224,040. Taxpayer purchased the property on February 6, 1996, for $422,250. On March 14, 1996, the lot lines were adjusted to reflect the sale of a 50 x 100 foot portion to a neighbor. The house was later demolished, and the land platted for subdivision into 11 residential lots.

The Washington County assessor reappraised the property for the 1996-97 tax year and determined the RMV of the land to be $207,320 and improvements (garage) $2,500. Although the garage was later demolished, the RMV of the land was trended up, resulting in a 1997-98 tax roll RMV of $285,100 for land and zero for improvements.

In the November 1996 general election, initiative Measure 47 passed, creating Article XI, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution. That section imposed a new limitation on property taxes. However, when it came time to enact implementing legislation, the 1997 Legislature found the provisions of Measure 47 to be confusing and internally inconsistent. It therefore drafted and submitted Measure 50 to the people by referendum. In a special election held in May 1997, the voters adopted Measure 50, replacing the property-tax limits of Measure 47 with new limits on assessments and tax rates. The new section 11 imposed a maximum assessed value (MAV) on each property initially measured by the property’s 1995 RMV, less 10 percent. It also limited the tax rates that could be imposed by taxing districts. Inasmuch as Measure 50 became effective immediately, a MAV had to be calculated for all property for the 1997-98 tax year.

The Washington County assessor calculated a MAV for the subject property by taking the total 1995-96 roll value of $224,040, deducting $3,367 for the lot-line adjustment and *215 then multiplying the resulting $220,280 by 90 percent (reflecting the 10 percent reduction from 1995 market value required by the provision), resulting in an assessed value of $198,250. Taxpayer claims that the improvements were razed before the July 1,1997, assessment date and therefore $110,730 should be deducted before calculating the property’s MAV. In other words, taxpayer claims that the MAV should reflect only the land (reduced by the lot-line adjustment), which would result in a MAV of $98,595 not $198,250.

ISSUE

Does Article XI, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, require a separate calculation of MAV for land and improvements?

ANALYSIS

This is the third time this issue has been brought before the court by Defendant Department of Revenue (the department). In Taylor v. Clackamas County Assessor, 14 OTR 504 (1999), the court held that Article XI, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, imposed a MAV on every assessable unit of property. In that case, the court concluded that inasmuch as land and improvements were separately assessed, a MAV must be separately calculated for each type of property. That decision was appealed by the department to the Oregon Supreme Court. However, the parties agreed to dismiss the appeal if this court would withdraw its decision so the parties could settle. The court agreed to withdraw its decision and the parties settled on terms favorable to the Plaintiffs.

In Flavorland Foods v. Washington County Assessor, 15 OTR 182 (2000), the court granted Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment, again holding that Article XI, section 11 required a separately calculated MAV for land and improvements. The appeal period for that case is still open.

Despite those prior decisions, the court does not fault the department for this third attempt. The court recognizes the significant impact of the above-mentioned holdings upon the property-tax system. It also recognizes that this issue is very close and is clouded by uncertainties and confusion initially roiled up by Measure 47.

*216 Article XI, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, is not clear. It provides no definitions and, like the prior Measure 47, has unanticipated consequences. The department has refined its arguments to the point that they are almost persuasive. The department argues that because Measure 50 replaced Measure 47, the intent was to obtain overall tax relief, not specific adjustments. The department argues that the public typically thinks in terms of the whole property rather than its separately assessed components. The department emphasizes that the statutory scheme is presumed constitutional and that the court in effect must hold ORS 308.142 1 unconstitutional if it maintains that a separate MAV is required. Also, the court’s prior holdings make the separate assessment of land and improvements a constitutionally mandated process, something that in the past has been simply a statutory requirement. As indicated, those arguments have great weight. Nevertheless, in struggling to resolve this matter, the court finds itself unable to accept the department’s position.

As pointed out in Taylor, in drafting Measure 50, the 1997 Legislature may have intended to accomplish the same result as Measure 47, but it did not use the same means. Measure 47 imposed a limit on taxes, and thereby focused on the property-tax account. Measure 50 imposes a limit on assessments. Assessments are not made on the basis of a tax account. If the legislative drafters were trying to duplicate Measure 47, one wonders why, since Measure 47 uses the term “each property,” Measure 50 used the term “each unit of property.” If “each property” referred to property by tax account, what did the drafters intend by using “each unit” of property? Could it have intended each type of property? The property-tax system that Measure 50 addressed provided for separately assessed types of property. Therefore, it would be reasonable to conclude that each unit of property meant each separately assessed unit. The department’s position would interpret the term “unit” to mean taxable unit. However, that requires adding a word, something that the courts may not do. Without adding the word “taxable,” “unit” logically refers to the assessable unit.

*217 The department contends that the court’s holdings in Taylor and Flavorland means that ORS 308.142 is unconstitutional.

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Related

Gray v. Dept. of Rev.
23 Or. Tax 220 (Oregon Tax Court, 2018)
Chart Development Corp. v. Department of Revenue
17 Or. Tax 170 (Oregon Tax Court, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Or. Tax 213, 2000 Ore. Tax LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chart-development-corp-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-2000.