Hahn v. Department of Revenue

9 Or. Tax 25, 1981 Ore. Tax LEXIS 4
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1981
DocketTC 1464
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Or. Tax 25 (Hahn v. Department of Revenue) 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
Hahn v. Department of Revenue, 9 Or. Tax 25, 1981 Ore. Tax LEXIS 4 (Or. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

The plaintiff has appealed from defendant’s Order No. 180-74, dated November 3,1980, executed by the Director of the Department of Revenue. The order denied the plaintiff an income tax deduction in the sum of $3,400, claimed under the provisions of ORS 316.067(l)(c), for each of the tax years 1977 and 1978. The sole issue presented is a legal one, the *26 construction of ORS 316.067(1)(c), and the matter was submitted to the court by counsel through written arguments.

The pertinent parts of ORS 316.067 read as follows:

“(1) There shall be subtracted from federal taxable income:
<<* * * * *
“(c) Amounts received in the taxable year in compensation for personal services rendered in prior years, from a pension, annuity, retirement or similar fund under a public retirement system established by the United States, including the retirement system for the performance of service in the Armed Forces of the United States, or by this state or any municipal corporation or political subdivision of this state (but excluding the Public Employes’ Retirement System established by ORS chapter 237). In the case of a public retirement system established by the United States, including the retirement system for the performance of service in the Armed Forces of the United States, the maximum amount excludable from taxable income from such pensions or annuities shall be in the amount of $3,400. However, if the retiree is under 62, the $3,400 subtraction is reduced dollar for dollar to the extent of any earned income, as defined in subsection (3) of this section, received during the taxable year. If the retiree receives $25,000 or more of household income, as defined in ORS 310.630, the subtraction is zero.”

The plaintiffs deceased husband was, for many years, an employee of the federal government. Because of his entitlement to a federal pension, the plaintiff, following her husband’s demise, receives an annuity from the United States government. The last sentence of ORS 316.067(l)(c), supra, provides: “If the retiree receives $25,000 or more of household income, as defined in ORS 310.630, the subtraction is zero” (i.e., the $3,400 exemption is denied). The plaintiff does receive $25,000 or more of “household income.”

The opinion of the Director, Department of Revenue, sets out the reasons for his denial of the exemption to plaintiff and the department’s problems with the statute:

“The petitioner contends that she is neither the retiree who earned the annuity nor is she retired at all and that the *27 last sentence of the subsection of paragraph (c) is not applicable to her.
“It is the position of the Audit Division [of the Department of Revenue] that the $3,400 which is excludable is an amount received in compensation for personal services rendered in prior years, and the petitioner rendered no personal services to the government. However, the Audit Division permits a surviving spouse to stand in the shoes of the retiree in order to be eligible for the exclusion. Because of that, the surviving spouse should also stand in the shoes of the retiree for purposes of the up to $25,000 income limit, which if exceeded, eliminates the exclusion.
“There are several ambiguities in the statute. Before the 1975 [1977?] 1 addition of the last sentence in the portion of the statute quoted above, a question had arisen with respect to the meaning of the first sentence. In an informal opinion rendered October 29,1976, an affirmative answer was given to the question of whether a portion (then $2,400) of the Civil Service Retirement Act benefits received by the survivor of a retired federal employee could be subtracted from federal taxable income. The ambiguity in the statute lay in the requirement that the amounts be received ‘in compensation for personal services rendered in prior years.’ Posed in terms of the instant case, is the petitioner entitled to the $3,400 exclusion when she did not render personal services in prior years for which she received a pension? A literal reading of this sentence would have required the Department to deny the $3,400 exclusion in the first instance, eliminating any question as to the effect of the 1975 [1977?] amendment. The 1976 informal opinion referred to a predecessor statute in effect in 1969, ORS 316.110(13), which provided for an exclusion as follows:
“ ‘. . . Income received in the tax year from pensions and annuities under a public retirement system but only to the extent that such income does not represent compensation for personal services rendered during the tax year ....’”
Attention was called to the fact that an earlier opinion in 1969 had held the 1969 exclusion would apply to a federal civil service pension paid to a widow of a deceased federal employee. The 1976 opinion mentioned that the Personal Income Tax Act of 1969 repealed ORS 316.110(13) and *28 substantially re-enacted the present statute. The 1976 opinion also mentioned that survivor benefits are a common and integral feature of public retirement systems and that under the federal Civil Service Retirement Act the annuity of a retiring married employee is automatically reduced in order to provide benefits for the surviving spouse unless an election is made in writing to the contrary. The 1976 informal opinion was adopted as the policy of the Audit Divsion and, notwithstanding the literal meaning indicating that the widow could not receive the exclusion because she did not render compensation for personal services in prior years to the pension paying body, she was entitled to the exclusion. In other words, the surviving spouse stood in the shoes of the retiree.
“An examination of the legislative history of the 1975 [1977?] amendment casts no light upon the problem raised in this case. However, a second ambiguity exists in the 1975 [1977?] amendment. In reducing the exclusion to zero where household income of $25,000 or more is received, the legislature used the words ‘the retiree.’ One possible interpretation is that the legislature, by use of the definite article ‘the’ was referring back to the first sentence as only applying to retirees, so that the Department’s inteipretation of allowing a surviving spouse to stand in the shoes of the decedent retiree was incorrect.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Or. Tax 25, 1981 Ore. Tax LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahn-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1981.