Department of Revenue v. Universal Foods Corp.

862 P.2d 1288, 318 Or. 78, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 162
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1993
DocketOTC 2944, 2945; SC S39692
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 862 P.2d 1288 (Department of Revenue v. Universal Foods Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme 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. Universal Foods Corp., 862 P.2d 1288, 318 Or. 78, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 162 (Or. 1993).

Opinion

*80 FADELEY, J.

This case involves the authority of the Oregon Department of Revenue (the Department) to issue an administrative subpoena for the purpose of investigating facts related to the Department’s duties.

In March 1990, a subpoena was issued under ORS 305.190(1). The administrator of the property tax division of the Department signed the subpoena as the official issuing it. It was entitled in the name of the Department of Revenue, was addressed to “C.T. Corporation System - Registered Agent for Universal Frozen Foods Corporation,” and was served in Oregon on C.T. Corporation System. It requested production of documents relating to defendants’ acquisition of potato processing plants physically located in Idaho, Washington, and Minnesota. Also requested were documents regarding operations at those plants for the year in which they were purchased and for the two prior years. None of the plants or the requested documents were located in Oregon. Universal Foods Corporation is a Wisconsin corporation authorized to do business in Oregon. Universal Frozen Foods Co. is an Oregon corporation and is a wholly owned subsidiary of Universal Foods Corporation. The subsidiary operated in Oregon and filed state income tax returns. The data sought was to be used to help establish real market values of third parties’ potato processing plants in Oregon.

Defendants did not comply with the subpoena for various reasons. The Department sought enforcement of the division administrator’s subpoena by application for a Tax Court order as provided in ORS 305.190(2). 1 That application *81 resulted in an order that defendants comply with the subpoena, subject to confidentiality determinations to be made later by the Tax Court.

Defendants then attempted to appeal that order to this court. The appeal was dismissed in Dept. of Rev. v. Universal Foods Corp., 311 Or 537, 815 P2d 1237 (1991), on the ground that there was not yet an appealable judgment because no final enforcement order concerning specific documents had been entered.

Thereafter, defendants filed a “supplemental motion for relief from subpoena enforcement” in the Tax Court. That motion asserted that “[p]laintiff was without authority to issue * * * the subpoenas upon defendants,” citing ORS 305.190(1). The Tax Court limited the volume and scope of production ordered, authorized production at one of defendants’ existing operating locations outside Oregon rather than requiring defendants to bring the documents to Oregon, and assured protection of the confidentiality of all valuation data that could be of potential interest to defendants’ business competitors. 2 Nonetheless, defendants continued their refusal to comply with the court’s order to disclose the information sought by the administrative subpoena.

The Tax Court rejected defendants’ contention that the subpoena was issued without authority. That court found defendants in contempt for their continuing failure to comply with the court’s order enforcing the subpoena. 3 The court *82 imposed a remedial sanction of “$500 per day, beginning September 16, 1992, and continuing every day thereafter, except for any appeal period, until defendants deliver unto plaintiffs possession the documents covered by the court order [i.e., the subpoenaed documents, as restricted and modified by various orders of the Tax Court].” As noted, the Tax Court stayed imposition of the sanction during the pendency of this appeal from its judgment of contempt.

AUTHORITY TO ISSUE

Defendants rely on ORS 305.190(1) to support their contention that the subpoena was issued without authority. Defendants argue specifically that there are no relevant “resolutions or rules of the department” and, thus, the subpoena could not have been issued “in conformity to” either resolutions or rules of the Department. The Department admits that there are no resolutions or rules relating to issuance of the subpoena in this case. The Department’s brief states: “[N]ever in alb its years of issuing subpoenas under ORS 305.190, has the department believed it necessary to repeat or embellish the guidance found in ORS 305.190 for exercise of its subpoena power. The department’s power to issue subpoena’s under ORS 305.190 is quite capable of exercise without further interpretation.” The Department’s brief also states: “Until the adoption of OAR 150-305.190, in January 1991 [after the subpoena was issued in this case], the department had not found it ‘proper’ to adopt rules under ORS 305.190. ”

The Tax Court interpreted the words found in ORS 305.190(1) — that subpoenas issue “in conformity to the resolutions or rules of the Department” — not to require that there be either a resolution or a rule concerning an investigative subpoena as a necessary condition precedent to issuance of a subpoena. The phrase at issue originated in Oregon Laws 1909, chapter 218, section 37. Chapter 218 was a complete new act covering administration of the state’s tax system. Section 37 empowered a board of tax commissioners to require, by subpoena, production of any books or papers in the hands of any persons, company, or corporation, whenever necessary in the prosecution of any inquiries officially deemed necessary, just as ORS 305.190(1) provides that the *83 Director may do today. Oregon Laws 1913, chapter 193, section 1, changed the board’s name to “a State Tax Commission. ’ ’ Failure to comply with a subpoena was declared to be a misdemeanor. Id. § 37. 4

The State Tax Commission originally included the Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and two other commissioners. Together, the commissioners — a majority of whom were directly accountable to the people as elected officials — were the heads of the state’s taxation agency. Oregon Laws 1969, chapter 520, abolished the office of commissioners and provided that a Director of the Department of Revenue be the successor to the commissioners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
862 P.2d 1288, 318 Or. 78, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-revenue-v-universal-foods-corp-or-1993.