Dept. of Rev. v. Butte Creek Associates II

19 Or. Tax 110, 2006 Ore. Tax LEXIS 136
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 20, 2006
DocketTC 4676.
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Or. Tax 110 (Dept. of Rev. v. Butte Creek Associates II) 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
Dept. of Rev. v. Butte Creek Associates II, 19 Or. Tax 110, 2006 Ore. Tax LEXIS 136 (Or. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

I. INTRODUCTION
This matter comes before the court on a Motion for Reconsideration of the court's earlier opinion in this case,Dept. of Rev. v. Butte Creek Associates I, 19 OTR 1 (2006) (Butte Creek I), filed by Plaintiff (the department) under Tax Court Rule 80. Defendant (taxpayer) filed a response and oral argument was held on the matter.

II. FACTS
In Butte Creek I, the court considered the proper way to determine the specially assessed value (SAV) of a low-income housing property under ORS 308.712(1)(a).1 In its motion, the department does not challenge any part of the court's opinion except the court's holding that the effective tax rate for taxpayer's property, as described in OAR 150-308.712(3)(h)(C),2 is 1.7%. See Butte Creek I,19 OTR at 16-18. That rate, as stated in the court's original opinion, was derived by dividing the amount of taxes billed in Jackson County (the county) for tax year 2002-03 by the assessed value (AV) of all property in the county. Id. The department argues, as it did before, that the effective tax rate, for purposes of determining the SAV of taxpayer's property, is not 1.7%, but rather 1.39%. That value is derived from multiplying the nominal tax rate of 1.7% by the stipulated changed property ratio (CPR) of .82. Taxpayer urges the court to adhere to its prior holding.

III. ISSUE
Under ORS 308.712(1)(a) and OAR 150-308.712(3)(h)(C), what is the proper method of calculating the effective tax rate for taxpayer's property? *Page 113

IV. ANALYSIS
In Butte Creek I, the court noted that the phrase "effective tax rate" is not located in ORS 308.712(1)(a), but rather in OAR 150-308.712(3)(h)(C), which states: "To the selected [capitalization] rate, add the effective property tax rate for the code area where the property is located. This is the overall rate to use for capitalization." 19 OTR at 15. The court then described the parties' dispute over the phrase as one focused on interpretation, concluding that "the court must uphold the department's interpretation of OAR 150-308.712(3)(h)(C) so long as that interpretation is plausible and not inconsistent with applicable law." Id. at 16. Ultimately, the court concluded that the department's proffered method of calculating the effective tax rate, and its corresponding rate of 1.39%, was implausible, and held that the proper method of calculating the effective tax rate, advocated by taxpayer, led to a rate of 1.7%.Id. at 18. The court now reexamines that conclusion.

As the court stated in Butte Creek I,

"The purpose of adding the effective tax rate to the capitalization rate is to account for the fact that property taxes are not included in the NOI stipulated to by the parties. That is because the goal of discovering the SAV is to determine the amount of property taxes owed on the property. It is, of course, impossible to factor property taxes into the NOI without knowing the amount of those taxes. Nonetheless, property taxes must be included in the valuation somewhere because they reduce the property's income. With that background in mind, it must be remembered that properties in Oregon are not generally taxed on their [real market value (RMV)], or even on their SAV, but on their AV. Accordingly, as both parties admit, some adjustment must be made to the millage rate, if it is calculated in terms of RMV or SAV, to account for the difference between RMV and SAV, on the one hand, and AV on the other hand."

Id. at 15-16 (citations omitted).

The court then described "two plausible ways of making the adjustment necessitated by Measure 50." Id. at 16. *Page 114

"One method would be to calculate a tax rate by dividing the tax collector's RMV into the amount of taxes billed for the tax year. That tax rate would then need to be adjusted in order to achieve the effective tax rate, for instance by multiplying it by the CPR. A second method would be to calculate the effective tax rate directly by dividing the tax collector's AV, and not the RMV, into the amount of taxes billed for the tax year. That approach sidesteps the need for an additional adjustment because it already accounts for the Measure 50-created difference between RMV and AV, the same difference reflected in the CPR."

Id. at 16-17 (citation and footnote omitted).

The department argues that the court erred in describing those two methods for making the Measure 50 adjustment. Specifically, the department contends that the court mixed up the two methods, and that a tax rate calculated with respect to RMV would not need a CPR adjustment, but that a tax rate calculated with respect to AV, as the 1.7% rate in this case was, would need such an adjustment.

1-5. The court agrees with the department that its earlier opinion was incorrect in this regard. In explaining why, the court finds it helpful to discuss in some detail the effects Measure 50 wrought on Oregon's property tax system. Before Measure 50, real property in Oregon was taxed based on its RMV.Hope Village, Inc. v. Dept. of Rev., 17 OTR 370, 376 (2004). After Measure 50, real property in Oregon is taxed based on a different regime. See id. (explaining the new regime). In short, under the Measure 50 regime, two figures control property taxation: RMV and MAV. The lower of those two figures is the AV of a property, its basis for taxation. ORS 308.232; ORS308.146(2). RMV is measured today basically in the same way that it was measured before Measure 50, according to market trends and traditional methods of valuation. See ORS 308.205 (defining RMV). MAV, however, is a different matter; it is a concept newly created and defined by Measure 50. Measure 50 provided that every property in Oregon would have an initial MAV for tax year 1997-98 that equaled 90% of its RMV for tax year 1995-96. Or Const, Art XI, § 11(1)(a). For all subsequent tax years, a property's MAV would not increase by more than three percent. Or Const, Art XI, § 11(1)(b). Whereas a property's RMV rises and falls with *Page 115 market trends, its MAV generally increases slowly and steadily from a specially designated starting point, although it may at times remain flat. See ORS 308.146(1) (defining MAV). The difference between RMV and MAV can generally be captured by the CPR, at least in aggregate terms. See ORS 308.153(1)(b) (defining CPR as "the ratio, not greater than 1.00, of the average [MAV] over the average [RMV] for the assessment year").

6-9. Measure 50 also mandated that any special assessment statutes the legislature might craft be so crafted that they reflect the principles embodied in the concepts of RMV and MAV. Or Const, Art

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Related

Wilsonville Heights Assoc. v. Department of Revenue
122 P.3d 499 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2005)
Waldo Block Partners v. Motion for Summary Jud.
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Hope Village, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
17 Or. Tax 370 (Oregon Tax Court, 2004)
Dept. of Rev. v. Butte Creek Associates I
19 Or. Tax 1 (Oregon Tax Court, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
19 Or. Tax 110, 2006 Ore. Tax LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dept-of-rev-v-butte-creek-associates-ii-ortc-2006.