Department of Revenue v. Umatilla County

10 Or. Tax 309
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1983
DocketTC 2519
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 Or. Tax 309 (Department of Revenue v. Umatilla County) 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. Umatilla County, 10 Or. Tax 309 (Or. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

*310 CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

Plaintiff seeks to have a portion of defendant’s 1986-1987 property tax levy declared void for failure to comply with the Local Budget Law. (ORS 294.305 to 294.520, 294.555 and 294.565.) The parties have stipulated to certain documents being submitted to the court as evidence. Each of the parties has filed a motion for summary judgment and submitted a brief in support of its motion. The court heard oral arguments on the motions on November 18, 1986, and has accorded this case priority as directed by ORS 294.520.

The facts are undisputed. On May 10, 1986, defendant published a summary of its 1986-1987 proposed budget in the amount of $11,593,788. The proposed budget called for a tax levy of $3,611,458, of which $154,493 exceeded defendant’s tax base and required voter approval. The excess levy of $154,493 was voted on on June 24, 1986, and defeated. About this time, county officials discovered that defendant would have a $400,000 shortfall for the fiscal year then ending. As a result, although defendant reduced its 1986-1987 budget to $11,429,466, it was now necessary for the defendant to levy $355,064 in excess of its tax base. On August 12, 1986, the excess levy of $355,064 was approved by the voters. Defendant subsequently adopted a resolution declaring its 1986-1987 tax levy and filed its notice of levy with the Umatilla County Assessor.

In the course of fulfilling its responsibility to supervise local budgets and tax levies, the Department of Revenue reviewed defendant’s levy and found that the levy exceeds the amount set forth in defendant’s original and only published budget. This is contrary to ORS 294.435, the relevant portion of which states:

“[A]nd the amount of the total ad valorem taxes to be certified by the municipal corporation for levy for all funds shall not exceed the amount shown in the budget document as published in accordance with ORS 294.421, prior to the budget meeting, unless the amended budget document is republished as provided by ORS 294.416 or 294.418 and 294.421 for the original budget and another public hearing is held as provided by ORS 294.430(1).”

Defendant had not republished the amended budget *311 or held another public hearing as required. It should be noted that defendant’s levy exceeded the amount of levy in the published budget by $200,571. Consequently, plaintiff notified defendant that it should revise its notice of levy to the assessor. Defendant refused to do so, and plaintiff filed its complaint, asking the court to declare as void that portion of the levy ($200,571) not in compliance with the Local Budget Law. By stipulation of the parties, pending the outcome of this case, the court entered an order directing the assessor to extend on the tax roll only that portion of the certified levy as is not in dispute.

Defendant readily acknowledges that it failed to comply with the requirement of ORS 294.435. Defendant contends however that the basic purposes of the statute have been accomplished. Defendant points to the extensive newspaper publicity given the county’s financial problems and the need for voter approval of the levy. Defendant has asked the court to find that defendant’s budget and levy were prepared in “substantial compliance” with the Local Budget Law.

ORS 294.485, after providing for appeals to the Oregon Tax Court, provides in subsection (3) that:

“If the court finds that the budget and the tax levy in question were not prepared and made in substantial compliance with ORS 294.305 to 294.520, 294.555 and 294.565, and any other applicable law relating to the making of tax levies, it shall declare void or modify any such tax levy and shall direct that such action be taken, all as in the circumstances it shall deem appropriate.”

As previously noted by this Court in Gibbons v. UCPUD, 9 OTR 176, 181 (1982):

“ ‘Substantial compliance’ is a dilution of the mandate of compliance which is occasionally accepted by the courts. This is dangerous ground on which to tread.”

The ground is dangerous for two reasons. First, the doctrine of substantial compliance in effect says that some parts of a statute are not important. Substantial compliance does not directly deal with the question of meaning or intent. A statute might be perfectly clear as to its meaning. Rather, the doctrine asks the question of whether certain conduct. *312 which has been taken will be accepted as meeting the conditions of the statute even though it does not. For the most part, it is a question dealing with the form of performance as opposed to the substance intended. Since any departure from the statute impinges on the principle of separation of powers, courts should apply the doctrine with great caution.

A second reason for seeing the doctrine as dangerous is the absence of clear limits on its application. Whether a statutory condition must be complied with depends upon the purpose and subject of the statute. The case of Witham v. McNutt et al, 186 Or 668, 208 P2d 459 (1949), dealt with notices required under an election law statute. There the Supreme Court considered five previously applied versions of the substantial compliance rule and reviewed numerous election law cases in which substantial compliance was claimed. Citing changed conditions, the court adopted the position that substantial compliance will be found if the failure to comply would not have changed the outcome of the election.

In the oft-cited case of Stasher v. Harger-Haldeman, 58 Cal 2d 23, 22 Cal Rep 657, 660, 372 P2d 649, 652 (1962), the court found that an automobile conditional sale contract that failed to comply with the exact statutory wording nevertheless substantially complied with the statute. The fact that plaintiff was seeking to recover all her payments after driving the vehicle 63,000 miles during two and one-half years must have influenced the court. The court defined substantial compliance as “actual

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Related

Collier v. City of Shady Cove
14 Or. Tax 355 (Oregon Tax Court, 1998)
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Bluebook (online)
10 Or. Tax 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-revenue-v-umatilla-county-ortc-1983.