Dish Network Corp. v. Dep't of Revenue

434 P.3d 379, 364 Or. 254
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 2019
DocketTC 5007 (Control, 5050, 5140, 5201, 5239, 5267, 5293); (SC S065019)
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 434 P.3d 379 (Dish Network Corp. v. Dep't of Revenue) 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
Dish Network Corp. v. Dep't of Revenue, 434 P.3d 379, 364 Or. 254 (Or. 2019).

Opinions

"Notwithstanding [the described cap on maximum assessed value], property shall be valued at the ratio of average maximum assessed value to average real market **260value of property located in the area in which the property is located that is within the same property class, if on or after July 1, 1995:
"(A) The property is new property or new improvements to property;
"(B) The property is partitioned or subdivided;
"(C) The property is rezoned and used consistently with the rezoning;
"(D) The property is first taken into account as omitted property;
"(E) The property becomes disqualified from exemption, partial exemption or special assessment; or *384"(F) A lot line adjustment is made with respect to the property ***."

Measure 50 does not set out a specific mechanism for effecting its limitations on the assessed value of property; nor does it define many of its own terms-including the term "new property or new improvements to property."6 However, after the measure passed, the legislature enacted implementing legislation that purports to fill some of those gaps.7 The resulting statutes include one, ORS 308.146, which provides formulas for calculating the maximum three percent increase in MAV and for determining when the assessed value (AV) must equal that MAV. ORS 308.146(1) and (2).8 The same statute refers the reader to a different **261set of statutes, with different formulas or "special determinations of value" for properties that fall within six exceptions-the same six exceptions, described in the same terms, that are identified in Measure 50. ORS 308.146(3).9 One of the referenced statutes, ORS 308.156, sets out the formula that applies to four of the six exceptions (partition, rezoning, omitted property and disqualification from exemption), while another, ORS 308.153, sets out the formula that applies to the "new property or new improvements" exception. That latter statute provides:

"(1) If new property is added to the assessment roll or improvements are made to property as of January 1 of the assessment year, the maximum assessed value of the property shall be the sum of:
"(a) The maximum assessed value determined under ORS 308.146 ; and
"(b) The product of the value of the new property or new improvements determined under subsection (2)(a) of this section multiplied by the ratio, not greater than 1.00, of the average maximum assessed value over the average real market value for the assessment year.
"(2)(a) The value of new property or new improvements shall equal the real market value of the new property or new improvements reduced (but not below zero) by the real market value of retirements from the property tax account."

**262"New property or new improvements" is defined for purposes of all of the foregoing statutes, at ORS 308.149(5), as

"(a) *** changes in the value of property as the result of:
"(A) New construction, reconstruction, major additions, remodeling, renovation or rehabilitation of property;
*385"(B) The siting, installation or rehabilitation of manufactured structures or floating homes; or
"(C) The addition of machinery, fixtures, furnishings, equipment or other taxable real or personal property to the property tax account.
"(b) 'New property or new improvements' does not include changes in the value of the property as the result of:
"(A) General ongoing maintenance and repair; or
"(B) Minor construction.
"(c) 'New property or new improvements' includes taxable property that on January 1 of the assessment year is located in a different tax code area than on January 1 of the preceding assessment year."

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

DISH is a satellite television provider-it delivers television programming to its customers through satellite signals that are picked up and decoded by equipment that is contained in a box that sits on or near each customer's television set. DISH's physical property in Oregon is limited to the "set-top boxes" that it leases to its Oregon customers and some additional machinery, equipment and furnishings, worth about $23.5 million in total. Most of the property that DISH owns or uses is situated outside of Oregon.

From the time it began operating in Oregon in the mid-1990s until 2009, DISH's property in Oregon was assessed locally, by the counties in which its tangible property was located. However, by the end of that period, the Department of Revenue had concluded that DISH was using its property in Oregon in a "communication" business within **263the meaning of ORS 308.515,10 and that, therefore, its property in Oregon must be assessed by the department under ORS 308.505 to 308.665, i.e. , through central assessment. The department notified DISH of its intention to add DISH's property to the central assessment rolls as a "new" unit of property beginning with the 2009-10 tax year. In that first year of central assessment, the department calculated the real market value (RMV) of DISH's property both inside and outside of Oregon as a single unit11 and then determined that Oregon's proportionate share of that unit was $34.9 million. Then, in order to effect the limitations on the assessed value imposed by Measure 50, it applied the formula set out in ORS 308.153, which is applicable when "new property" is added to the assessment rolls. It entered the resulting AV-$34.9 million dollars-on the central assessment roll.12

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
434 P.3d 379, 364 Or. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dish-network-corp-v-dept-of-revenue-or-2019.