Dayton v. Department of Revenue

5 Or. Tax 56
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJune 2, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Or. Tax 56 (Dayton 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
Dayton v. Department of Revenue, 5 Or. Tax 56 (Or. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

The County Assessor of Josephine County appeals from the Order No. VL 71-569 of the Department of Revenue, relating to the assessor’s power to designate land as “forest land” or to refuse such designation, under subsection (4) of ORS 321.618.

On March 10, 1970, J. H. Baxter & Co., the intervenor herein, duly filed an application for designation of land as forest land, provided by ORS 321.618(1), for the 1970-1971 assessment year. Three contiguous tax lots comprising 485.15 acres were involved. The *57 assessor designated 381.15 acres as forest land and denied application of the designation to the remaining 104 acres, divided into five noncontiguous, irregularly shaped pieces of land containing approximately four acres, four acres, eight acres, 32 acres, and 58 acres, respectively. The intervenor appealed to the Department of Revenue pursuant to ORS 306.520, contending that the entire parcel should have been designated as forest land since it is “being held for the predominant purpose of growing and harvesting trees of marketable species,” as required in ORS 321.618. In the view of the department, the question turned upon the interpretation of Property Tax Regulation R321.605(3), ¶ 4, which reads:

“The unsupported statement of an owner that land is being held for the predominant purpose of growing and harvesting trees of a marketable species is not sufficient basis for determining that such land is forest land. The land must have growing upon it at least a poor stocking (as determined by standard forestry practice) of established seedlings of a marketable species or, if trees have been harvested from the land and no such stocking is present, the owner must be making such reasonable efforts toward reforestation as are indicated by standard forestry practice.”

The department held that the “Petitioner has substantially complied with the requirements of the statutes setting down qualifications for designation.” It concludes:

“Consequently, it is the opinion of the Director that the denial of the designation to certain portions of Petitioner’s parcel on the sole basis that it did not have sufficient stocking of trees of a marketable species as required by the regulation, was in error.”

*58 Upon appeal to this court, the parties stipulated that the issues should be decided upon the basis of the transcript of testimony before the Department of Bevenue’s hearing officer, the exhibits offered and accepted by the hearing officer, the post trial memoranda filed with the hearing officer, and oral argument in the Tax Court.

In 1961, The Western Oregon Ad Valorem Timber Tax Law, OBS 321.605 et seq., was enacted. The purposes of the Act were set out in OBS 321.610. The legislature sought “to establish an equitable method of taxing timber, which is subjected to annual taxation, as well as to innumerable other expenses and risks, although it can produce revenue but once in its long life.” The historical background of the statute is well described in Bureau of Grovernmental Besearch and Service, University of Oregon, Taxation of Timber and Timberlands in Oregon (1969). The purposes, as expressed in ORS 321.610, have not been amended.

Significant amendments were made by Or Laws 1967, ch 543. This Act recognized (a) that there is a fundamental requirement imposed upon the, assessor, implicit in the appraisal procedure, to determine the true cash value of property at its highest and best use; (b) that the highest and best use of some land is for the production of timber; and (c) that there is other land which may run from excellent to marginal as to timber production but for which there is a “higher and best use” other than timber production. This second category of land is the principal subject of the 1967 amendment.

Prior to 1967, OBS 321.620(3) read:

“(3) The true cash value of forest land shall *59 be determined under ORS 308.205 [defining true cash value], except that so long as the primary use of the area involved remains forest land it shall be valued as such and noted on the assessment and tax roll as containing forest land potentially subject to increased taxes under subsection (4) of this section.”

As amended and subsequently codified as subsection (3) of ORS 321.617, it reads:

“(3) The true cash value of forest land shall be determined under ORS 308.205, except that land which has been designated as forest land under the provisions of ORS 321.617 to 321.621 shall be valued as forest land and not at a value for some higher or better use and shall be noted on the assessment and tax roll as being forest land potentially subject to increased taxes under subsection (1) of ORS 321.621.”

Another part of the 1967 amendment is found in OKS 321.618 (see footnote ). This allows an election to the *60 owner of land who desires it to be “designated as forest land” (emphasis supplied), by application to the assessor for such designation, notwithstanding the assessor’s determination of a higher and better use therefor. However, the “designation” does not automatically follow. The application requires an assertion that the land is being held or used “for the predominant purpose of growing and harvesting trees of marketable species” (paragraph (c), subsection (2), ORS 321.618) *61 and other data important to the assessor in making a determination; in addition, the statute explicitly imposes upon the assessor the duty of making an administrative determination, as follows:

“(3) * * * the determination shall be made with due regard to all relevant evidence and without any one or more items of evidence necessarily being determinative.

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Related

Multnomah County v. Department of Revenue
6 Or. Tax 325 (Oregon Tax Court, 1976)
Pratum Co-Op Warehouse v. Department of Revenue
6 Or. Tax 130 (Oregon Tax Court, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Or. Tax 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1972.