Department of Revenue v. Clark

17 Or. Tax 218, 2003 Ore. Tax LEXIS 171
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2003
DocketTC 4604, TC 4605.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 Or. Tax 218 (Department of Revenue v. Clark) 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
Department of Revenue v. Clark, 17 Or. Tax 218, 2003 Ore. Tax LEXIS 171 (Or. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

HENRY C. BREITHAUPT, Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case involves the 1999 Oregon personal income tax liability of taxpayer. Taxpayer also requests an order reversing certain actions of the Department of Revenue (the department) regarding withholding exemption certificates filed by taxpayer with his employer. Finally, taxpayer challenges an award of $5,000 in damages made against him under ORS 305.437 1 by the magistrate who first heard the *220 case. As to those claims, the department filed a Motion to Dismiss; Motion for Frivolous Appeal Damages; and Motion for Attorney Fees.

For its part, the department has, in a separate filing now consolidated, asserted that the magistrate erred in not awarding attorney fees to it under ORS 20.105. On that claim, the department filed a Motion for Summary Judgment.

II. ANALYSIS

A. 1999 Tax Liability: Motion to Dismiss

As this court observed on an earlier occasion involving taxpayer, to survive a motion to dismiss, taxpayer must identify an adequate statutory or constitutional basis for his position and allege such facts as may be necessary to bring himself within the legal doctrine he identifies. Clark v. Dept. of Rev., 16 OTR 51 (2002), aff'd, 335 Or 419, 69 P3d 718 (2003). 2

Here, taxpayer claims that some combination of common law, Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 1341, 42 USC section 1981, and section 23 of the 1939 IRC, allows him a deduction of his “compensation for personal services actually rendered,” such that, in calculating his income tax liability, he may deduct the amount of compensation he received.

Taxpayer has no common-law immunity, because his liability for income tax, or exemption therefrom, is entirely a matter of statute. Perhaps that is why taxpayer’s claim of common-law immunity has been supported by no citation to Oregon case law. 3

Taxpayer claims that 42 USC section 1981 provides an exemption or deduction from income taxation for his *221 wages. The court has reviewed that statute and sees nothing in it that even remotely supports taxpayer’s claim. The statute was originally part of post-Civil War reconstruction legislation and is essentially an anti-discrimination statute with no application to substantive tax provisions.

Section 23 of the 1939 IRC was the predecessor to what is now IRC section 162. Each statute provides (or provided) a deduction in respect of “compensation for personal services actually rendered.” Taxpayer conveniently ignores the fact that the deduction is provided to the payor of such compensation, not the payee. Taxpayer’s attempt to have those statutory provisions apply to the payee of compensation is wholly without merit. 4

IRC section 1341 is a relief provision designed to address the situation where a taxpayer includes income in one year because of an apparent right to such income, and in a later year determines such income was not properly that of taxpayer. In such instances, the statute provides a method for calculating tax liability in the later year if a deduction is allowed in that year. That statute does not apply to taxpayer’s situation because he is not claiming a deduction in 1999 for income included in a prior year return to which he was not, in fact, entitled.

Taxpayer has provided no legal basis for his claim with respect to 1999 income tax liability. 5

B. Withholding: Failure to State a Claim

Taxpayer, again employing limited and selective focus to justify an attractive but unreasonable conclusion, seizes upon the language of ORS 316.167(2), which provides:

*222 “Except in the case of an agricultural employee, the amount withheld shall be computed on the basis of the total amount of wages and the number of withholding exemptions claimed by the employee, without deduction for any amount withheld.”

Taxpayer has repeatedly asserted that the statute provides for employee control of the withholding function insofar as it states that withholding is to be based on the “number of withholding exemptions claimed” by the employee. Id. Taxpayer ignores, however, the provisions of ORS 316.162(2), which defines the phrase “number of withholding exemptions claimed” as used in ORS 316.162 to 316.212 as meaning:

“the number of withholding exemptions claimed in a withholding exemption certificate in effect under ORS 316.182, except that if no such certificate is in effect, the number of withholding exemptions claimed is considered to be zero.”

For taxpayer’s logic to prevail, he had to have an exemption certificate in effect. The facts he has provided indicate he claimed total exemption from withholding. Pursuant to rules promulgated under ORS 316.182, in cases where total exemption from withholding is claimed, 6 the employer is required to submit a copy of the certificate to the department. OAR 150-316.182. That was done here. Under that rule, the department is then permitted to make a change in the withholding certificate based on available information, following which it is required to notify the employer and employee of its actions. Id. The rule then provides that the employee “may appeal the action of the department as otherwise provided by law.” OAR 150-316.182(5).

Those rules promulgated by the department under ORS 316.182 are within the scope of that statute, reasonable and valid. The statute does not specifically delineate rules on treatment of certain withholding certificates. However, the provisions of the department’s rule are consistent with the statutory concern expressed in ORS 316.182 and ORS 316.177

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Or. Tax 218, 2003 Ore. Tax LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-revenue-v-clark-ortc-2003.