Demco Development Corp. v. Department of Revenue

6 Or. Tax 502
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Or. Tax 502 (Demco 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
Demco Development Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 6 Or. Tax 502 (Or. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

The defendant’s Order No. VL 75-634, dated November 14, 1975, from which appeal is taken by the plaintiff to this court, relates to real property owned *503 by the plaintiff in Benton County in the tax year 1974-1975. The property is described as a motel, restaurant, and cocktail lounge located on 3.39 acres of land in Corvallis and is identified in the county assessor’s records as Parcel No. 26000, Code Area 9-01, T 11, R 5 W, 26 D B. The issue submitted to this court is whether defendant properly dismissed plaintiff’s petition to the defendant for want of jurisdiction, on the ground that plaintiff had failed to exhaust its administrative remedies, not having appealed the assessed value of the subject property to the county board of equalization.

The County Assessor of Benton County determined that the value of the subject property should be increased as of January 1, 1974, to meet the requirements of ORS 308.205 and 308.210. The increase was of such amount as to require the county assessor to give notice to the plaintiff pursuant to ORS 308.280. This statute requires that notice shall be made by mail in the manner provided in subsection (5), which reads in part:

“(5) Notices required by subsections (3) and (4) of this section shall be mailed not later than the first Monday in May to the person to whom the property is assessed at the address appearing in the tax records. * * *” (Emphasis supplied.)

A timely notice of the change in valuation, dated April 29, 1974, was mailed by the county assessor, using a form complying fully with the requirements of ORS 308.280. The Notice was addressed to “Demco Development Corp., 1550 NW 9th, Corvallis, Ore 97330,” the latest address appearing in the assessor’s records. (It is also the address used by plaintiff in its petition to the defendant on which the present suit is based, filed with the defendant on November 13, 1974.) The assessor’s record on which the assessor’s *504 office relied is an “Assessor’s Journal Voucher,” prepared on March 15, 1973, in connection with the request of Mr. Murray Dorsey, the president of Demco Development Corporation, asking that two tax accounts constituting the subject property be combined into one. Mr. Dorsey specified that the statement of the transaction was to be mailed to Demco Development Corporation, 1550 N.W. 9th Street, Corvallis, Oregon 97330.

The testimony shows that 1550 N.W. 9th Street in Corvallis is the address of Nendel’s Inn, the motel located on the subject property, and that the office address of Demco is 1500 N.W. 9th Street which, according to the testimony, “is right next door to the motor inn.”

The Notice of Change in Assessed Valuation, addressed to Demco Development Corporation, 1550 N.W. 9th, Corvallis, was sent in a window envelope by the assessor’s office, postmarked May 3, 1974. The envelope was placed in evidence and reveals a penned “slash mark” through the window, followed by the words in the same or similar ink “Not here.” (There appears to be no way to determine who wrote the two words.) Above the window of the envelope are two stamped imprints, unquestionably placed on the envelope by the post office. One impression shows a hand with the index finger pointing to the assessor’s return address and the statement, “Beturned to sender.” The second stamped impression contains a number of statements, preceded by “boxes,” with an inked check mark preceding the word “Unclaimed.” Another stamp on the envelope reads: “Rec’d May 9 ’74 Benton County Assessor.”

No testimony was offered to show why the plaintiff used the street number of the motor inn for delivery of its mail instead of the number of its nearby *505 office. The court infers that the corporation made some one or more clerks of the motel its agent or agents for the receipt of the corporation’s mail, but there is no specific testimony in the record.

Mr. Roy Fordham, of Hillsboro, Oregon, a certified public accountant who is a stocldiolder in Nendor, Inc., the owner and operator of Nendel’s Inn, 1550 N.W. 9th Street, Corvallis, Oregon 97330, and also the accountant for the plaintiff corporation, agreed that 1550 N.W. 9th Street, Corvallis, was the proper address for the assessor’s office to use in mailing notices to the taxpayer. He testified that none of the corporation’s officers or agents had received the notice of change in assessed valuation and gave this as the sole reason why the owner never appealed the increase in assessed value to the county board of equalization. The corporation’s first actual notice of the increase was the tax statement received early in November 1974.

Upon being questioned as to whether he had checked with the office personnel at 1550 N.W. 9th Street (Nendel’s Inn) as to whether any of them recall having received this notice, Mr. Fordham stated:

“A The ones that were there at — when I found out about it, I didn’t know that they had a notice so I could not check with them so I don’t know where — who received the notice that was — I see a copy of a returned envelope [Dft Ex B, above described] and I don’t know who wrote that [‘Not here’] on there. It could be any desk clerk; it could be anybody. I have no knowledge of who did it.
“Q Then you have — then you actually don’t have — then you have no knowledge as to who the personnel were at the 1550 address during this time? In particular, the first part of May of 1974?
“A The first part of May in ’74, our manager *506 was a man by the name of Robert Schiller that had just started to work there on the 1st of April and he was there from April 1st until about the 20th of August.”

A question was thus raised but not answered as to whether the corporation’s agent to receive mail had actually received the notice and returned it, unopened, to the post office.

In addition to arguing the lack of notice under ORS 308.280, the plaintiff urges the theory of “quasi estoppel” as being applicable to preserve its rights. (See Rogers et al v. Dept. of Rev., 6 OTR 139 (1975).)

Mr. Fordham testified that, after learning that the assessed value had been increased, as shown by the tax statement, he immediately arranged a meeting in the assessor’s office to learn what remedies were available to the plaintiff. A part of the testimony in this matter was as follows:

“Q Mr. Fordham, you testified to having a meeting at the assessor’s office where you were advised that your remedy in this matter was to appeal to the Department of Revenue. Do you— do you recall any of the specifics of that — what that advice was?
“A Just what I stated that I — I met with Mr.

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Related

Demco Development Corp. v. Department of Revenue
570 P.2d 64 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Or. Tax 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demco-development-corp-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1976.